- 3 VOL. LXXIX NO. 87 LIQUOR STORE MOVES Bank Of Nova Scotia Plans New Building A new Bank of Nova Scotia building with a banking area much larger and more modern | than in the present will be constructed here on the site of the present branch, it | was announced. yesterday by | Harry H Ngee, manager. —._| The new bank will fake in not only the site of the present one, but also the area covered by the —pank-owned=buikiing now hous- - ing -Giggey’s Pharmacy and FBI SO nope et i-t’'s Good’ For The Island The Guardian Is For It structure | retail store. ames series eters nae 1 » Anthorized 22 Second ‘Class Man hy the Post Office Department, a for P ¢ Ottawa an zyment Of Pastage iz Cash. | Europe Is Held In Winter Grip _ LONDON (AP) — Snow oak cold winds képt Europe in the grip of winter Wednesday. In London, the 42-degree made it one of the coldest ae | April days in 25 years. Snow hit Scotland and eastern England Blizzards. brought chaos te. road and rail traffic in many iness in the Shaw Building on parts of Denmark. ‘Great’ George Street which now 1m southern Sweden it ‘was houses the Liquor .Commission the coldest spring day on recprd | sifiée 1867. | ‘The lease held by the com-. Much of northern West Ger-. mission on this site has expired many ‘was covered with one to ‘and ‘new quarters are help three °inches of snow. |constructed-on the east side_of | One -yf-the-few warm—spots | Queen Street on a vacant lot jp Europe was Yugoslavia. .adjacent to the old Monastery waarm spring sunshine brought | the streets of | of the Precious Bload. | t ~This new building1t-is-under- Relers Dee stood, is being erected by Allied into ~—-should-—~have-- “Covers Prince: Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, French Pre Policy | CANADA," THU RSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966. kes} ¢ Guart ian sc tempat rant en eel co with “a few sot_woae SEVEN CENTS WEATHER cloudy light. Low - high 28 and +5. Friday periods: £0 PAGES - NATO: Wi drawal perhaps part of the land in back | Estates: Inc. to. the specificas = 89° £=@ | ee eel” eeeelC (Ca ICATA NTA ULC UTC LiNnAnnMi . = of the latter. +tions.of -the Liquor Commission. Tankers Spark Work if expected to stare in) +-and—will—be—used—by--the . ad wo ace eee July with the buildings now oc- | 0.4 rental Bee i ee Guessing me : cupying the sites to‘be demolish- | Similar to that of the other new | PARIS (ReuterX) —- Premier gime, and of bringing Western ed:—The—present—branch—is—ap-+ proximately 45 vears old and it is felt nolonger_ provides , Customers with the service they H—1s--possible—the new building. “‘helieved to be one | storey high, may have a mez- zanine, but this could not be de- store_in Royalty Mall. By-JAMES- BROWN Like the ‘latter if will be mod- BEIRA, Mozambique, (Reut- ern in every respect with ap- ers)-Two tankers which have | proximately 3,000 square feet of caused an international furore | Space fora —sales--area—on-the~ hy —earrying ground level and an equal am- destined .for Britain's break- ount of storage space in the base- away African colony of Rhode- jment. A push button. conveyor sia_have’ kept -up the guessing ~o f1— apparently-}- (Georges Pompidou ~ said Wed=) inesday France decided to with-| |draw from NATO's _ integrated military system because the sysstem helped perpetuate the ee war. : Pompidou added that the day and—Kastern- Burope together. "Hostile to any hegemony, we do not intend to favor a Soviet hegemony—any more than our position regarding the ‘war in Viet Nam tends to favor the - Chinese hegemony in that part of the .world.” termined yesterday. as: plans! system will take supplies from game about their next moves | will come when the U.S. will : ; : ; a ’ A group of opposition deputles pith Sener = sramiine: eee ae le cee eee Greek : registered. Mos Pearse apie. cM nee tabled 7. censure ties Hon. | neede customer CON nela, diverted from here by an way changes our. sentiments attacking the government for its NEW LIGUOR STORE It is expected to take about 18 months to complete with the staff moving in sometime in “December 1967. In th meantime the bank will conduct its bus- veniences from adequate space|armed boarding party from a to the most modern lighting and Royal Wicate | merchandise display incorporated in the building | african port of Durban Wednes- which is expected to be ready “day after lying offshore for 36 | fog occupancy sometime in July * hours ot this year: , It was not known feaiediatade Braves Ordered To Milwaukee — By KEN aia MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) |whether she will discharge her /15,000-. tons of crude oil there. Manuela’s ship, the 189-mile pipeline which sup- plies land-locked Rhodesia. _| The ruling, which is virtually Von. Luckner - certain to be appealed, comes Navy frigate . Sunday, are being pulled into harbor at the South- sti |toward the American people.’’. | The French premier, opening a three’ + day debate in the Na- tional Assembly on the govern- ment's policies on NATO and other issues, said. France in- tends Western Europe to be the, partner —. not the adversary— | of Eastern Europe. grated military organization could drag France into a war) not its own. . The future of Europe and || world peace depends on rap- | ‘prochement’ between East and | -NATO policy. The assembly presidential committee set {Tuesday for debateon the mo- tion, with a vote that night. The motion claims that de Gaulle has isolated France by deciding to withdraw French forces from NATO without con sulting. the--French_government_ The sister. ior Parliam ent .or negotiating loanna V, still ‘is docked at FEARS INVOLVEMENT ‘with all its NATO partners. It \Beira, so far making no move He also. reiterated French has’ virtually no chance of he-- |to discharge her oil eargo into statements that NATO's te-'ing passed by the assembly, iwhere the Gaullists and their | supporters have a latye major- lity. Foreign Minister Maurites |Couve de Murville is slated to | speak during today’s. Session as West Europe and France “feels | wot] as such opposition figures Atlanta Braves must ret d m eturn to a day after the Braves opened’ that she is contributing to the | .. jot - winger Francois Mit- ~ Milwaukee--unless the National their “1966 National League “sea- League. agrees by May 16 to | ——give- theWisconsin~ tity a expansion franchise, a. Wiscon- | Bin circuit judge ruled Wednes- day night. Judge Elmer W. Roller’s or- before | son _in Atlanta ans Tuesday night. WORKED IN CHAMBERS “Fhe 64-year-old _ jurist, 50,000 had been closeted im his cham- | Dies At 84-1. MALMOF, Sw-eden (AP)—| iCount. Felix von Luckner, | famous German Sea Devil of} |Wednesday. He was 84. “Quebec Hotel who ithe First World War, died here | three- | ‘Board of Trade annual ‘‘cham- ber of Commerce Week"' ban- quet was held in Alberton Un- ited Church hall last night ‘of the Canadian Chamber of ‘ Seen here LEFT TO RIGHT, are Bennet Wisner, vice-pres- ident Marit i m-€- Provinces Board of Trade and a director | WEST PRINCE TRADE BOARD HOLDS DINNER ges | The Alberton and West Prince : : Board of Trade and vice pres- ident for P.E.I. on the. Mari- _time board: ; Harold-Phillips, president of the’ West Prince board and A. T. Parks, man- dissipation of the:cold war cli- mate which has weighed in santly on Europe for 20 years.” | France hopes. the economic social and political evolution of Eastern. Europe would daily lterrand . and Socialist party lleaders Guy Mollet and Gaston | Defferre. + READY TO DEBATE MOVE — The premier said France was der ca i ision 4 ich ‘be 9 | QUEBEC ‘CP) — A with @n attendance of about Commerce, who was guest: -aging secretary of the Mari- | bring it closer fo France ‘“‘in/teady to debate with its Atlan- ie ee Sete ae pets | Von Luckner commanded ajalarm fire that heavily dam- | 75, visiting officials hoard of speaker: C. R. Leard, secret- time Provinces Board of Trade. | eliminating divergencies and tic Allies, particularly the tional League violated Wiscon- \¢lared that the National League speedy German commerce jaged the Louis XIV Hotel here trade members and guests. ary Alberton + West Prince __(See. story on page 3.) | multiplying points of ener "United States and West Ger- sin’s anti-trust laws ping Milwaukee of league team. by its rip- | major | jand-the Braves ‘shall be, and | they are hereby restrained and | raider which, disguised as an lold sailing vessel, took a heavy itoll of ‘Allied shipping but not | Wednesday was brought under- control by” about 100 on early in’ the evening. 4 } | | Pompidou denied France | 5 many, on the — of as ae troops west meg. canal NATO’ ies. from Frafite or evac-— ten of U's. and Canadian bases. ~\enjoined from playing the home | Roller said; “The cnehiaal of | Lcogiepionship schedule _ of the je sinate life. The a Doe a the National Leaguecand the Braves in any city or place Gat cen their pela-cmere tale have escaped. from the i failure of the American League |other than in the County of Mil- storey, 50-room — ae to issue a franchise to Milwau- | waukee before :e pouttlee their ships. |puilding. The fire was said to Se ree eee te Dass Crestine Flo od fer refusal to deal in_restraint of the order shall be stayed i, Th in Sweden since he mar-| Narrow streets Bipdered the | trade and commerce within the plan for expansion by noon May |F ried Ingeborg Vonengstroem, a |firemen who came from all sec- | ; State _of Wisconsin.” 16 that would ii Milwaukee Petar iene < a ae “~~ - the eke Pe, WINNIPEG (CP) Hastily is lo 0 jmajor league baseball in 1967. ing the second World War when Place a ne Notre | constructed dikes passed the en- , he was in Germany. Dame des Victories Church in? durance test of cresting - flood ‘Von Luckner, descendant of a ‘the old quarter of the city. water. in southern Manitoba inoble German family, ran away @ause of the blaze was not |Wednesday and forecasters pre- ito sea when he was 13. _lnueniaiel known. dicted the swollen Red River All. .guésts ‘were govitated= fo | President de Gaulle’s visit an Russia in June: ‘‘does not repre- .jsent some kind of change of al-| p __|liances .or_ some kind of threat: Ad. Se wid the “guections against our European or Ameri-|rrench troops in West Ger- can Allies.” ~ imany—France has decided to |PART OF POLICY jwithdraw them from NATO “It is part of our general pol- control by July—‘‘can and will jiey of developing relations with be resolved if Germany 90. ‘all countries, whatever their re- wanes vas 16 Divorces Granted will lose more of its wallop be- ,and Morrie where dikes’ are fore it reaches Winnipeg Satur- wel] above the maximum river day. level expected, but it is an The. downward revision of the piq) tight at St. Jean. mI anticipated Winnipeg crest—now expected Saturday at--26:5- feet’ IMPRESSED BY EFFORTS labove average winter ice level’ Mr.. Hutton said he is tm- ;—was the second in three days. pressed by the efforts at the Roller’s decision was a com- ae : | ase S. Viet Nam \plete’ victory for Wisconsin, a . \which had sought the Braves’ Elections ireturn in the absence of any | |agreement to expand in time to give Milwaykee—a franchise i a bourer’s International Union of honest day’s work. ing anything and patting the la- | “TORONTO Gp) ; : Ae “North America was on hand. He ‘‘We are important to contrae- |borers;on the back, ‘‘but."’ he - eave. “eu ea i, he poate a in ae A told the men that they must do tors and. they are important. to said, “they are just looking for tional history. -peojéek site (iebibad sity is our : this thing sober: He: said they |Us."" Mat White told the meet- a soft place to stick) the knife.” Canadian educationists. teach : een . would make posters. for their ing. A number of men said that-if| ere and students all agree | ; He said many. Courses’ listed cars and. drive around construe» He said thal the* greatest |they. stayed away from _ their history is at present the ‘d t. ithe. curriculum. Bs Cane tion sites where other men were workmen. ever known in North jobs too long their, employers | act stupldest eitlan ik the dian historv” have nothing to 500 . where Planned 1967. land chopped another foot from |tiny community the-forecast maximum. Dikes dikes hold back up to 15 feet of 3 In New. York, baseball Cont: | have: been raised to 30 feet | | water. ee SAIGON (AP) — The South missioner William D. Eckert | around Greater..Winnipeg-_and | }'q have to —say-— the _job | } : : cae Vietnamese chief of state, ‘said, ‘I have been apt only the flood-prone Elm Park they've done was 20 per cent Nguyen Van Thieu, today the Braves andthe National leave in suburban St. Vital has material and 80 per cent pure ‘ a signed a decree providing for, |League and: the other oor of! : leanse | for-concern. +guts—that'sthe—only—term—that . : : general elections for a civilian ee ae ee sees te it Agriculture Minister George ,can describe the effort that has! OTTAWA (CP) — A record |1961, 44.8 in 1964, and 45.7 last government in “three to five) Hees the Wikconsia Supreme | fank Bomb Hutton told ‘a flood briefing: |gone on there.” 8,941 divorces were granted year, the highest since 1948 months. fo. Court: es ae are sure the eee during 1965 by the provificial when it was 54.4. The decree followed asures. we have taken = : and territorial divorce courts) Divorces by province: (1964 point communique issued at a ‘I'd have to read the whole | | Windiper) are adequate. The TODAY and the Parliament of Canada, figures in parantheses) final session of a political con-|decision and talk to the at-| SAIGON (AP) — Aval- | while in traffic on the Ho Chi, Grenades hurled by two MO- chief problem will be maintain: INSIDE Pal ithe Deminion—Bureau__of Sta-|__Newfoundland 3. (7): Prince ~gress called by: the —-hard- | itorneys before-—making any anches blasted into Mu Gia |Minh trail. ‘torbike riders injured three po- ing the Elm Park dike. The wa- | “* tistics reported Wednesday. \Edward Island 16 (5); Nova - pressed ‘central government to statement,” Warren C. Giles, |Pass by the first U.S. B-52| Results of the raid were an- licemen and three children at & ter-will not top it but we have| Classified ... ..- 18, 19 Scotia 323 (315); New. Bruns- resolve - the current _politiéal | president of the National League | ‘bomber raid on North Viet Nam | nounced Wednesday a few police checkpoint in ve Saigon |t, watch for seepage and the | Deaths ...,+.seereereeess 3 The figure for. 194 was 8,623, | Vicx 997 (210): Quebec 228 crisis. ; said in Cincinnati. ‘have closed that bottleneck om [hours after a Viet Cong guer- dock area. ‘like.”’ | Births 19 |There were increases in the |(834);. Ontario 4,054 - (3,508); \ The powerful Buddhist hier-| Giles denied that baseball had the main Communist supply Tilla mortar. attack at Saigon's Briefing officers . sieoiiused | Seepage is also the main con-, Comics ... 17 gece eee opm: Manitoba 443 (418): Saskatche- archy boycotted the congress made any last moment offers line fo South Viet Nam, the Tan Son Nhut air base killed |the Joss of a U.S. Navy Sky- |cern at Emerson, 60 miles south Sport .......... seserteeee 8 Se cut umpla-' wand 312 (315); Alberta 1,348 throughout. — to avert the ruling in Wiscon-|U.S. Air Force reports. This |seven U.S. military men and ajraider jet to a North Vietna-|of Winnipeg where the river, Women’s ........... ecovs 6 Divorces granted in Ontario, |},389); British Columbia 1,961 MORE sin's anti-trust suit. ‘eould-mean a-sharp-drop. fora ;South Vietnamese civilian. Imese anti - aircraft missile. |crested Tuesday, and at St.| Rural churches .......... 9 |British Columbia and Alberta (1,596): Yukon 12 (24); North- : Sa ee ee , The. planes dumped nearly 700 The Skyraider, from the car-|Jean Baptiste and Morris, be | Finance, markets.......-. 11: _jaccounted_for_four__out _of-“five|west-Territories 6.2): tons of bombs on the pass, 80 rier Ticonderoga, was shot | tween Winnipeg and Emerson,| Editorials ...:...........- 4 {of the total in 1965. The high 1964 totals reflect FIRST SESSION YESTERDAY | miles north of the border divid- down 33 miles south of Vinh. ‘where .a peak is expected by | Summerside ......... - 3 The bureau also reported the the breaking of a 1962 parlia-— ing the two Viet Nams. U.S. flyers and navy men |today.. | Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 [divorce rate -has been climbing mentary bottleneck, when the Meanwhile, Buddhists planned |combined in an attack on sev-| Local problems have been! Prince County seeeee B {steadily since 1960. The’ rate— Commons- passed no bills of to stage a big March in this eral platoons of Viet Cong quickly pinpointed and defensive i |the number of divorces for each divorce for Newfoundland and Wage Protest Meetings Scheduled To Continue “The Basilica Recreation Cen- tre was the-scene-.of Prince Ed- ward Island's first wage-protest meeting held yesterday after- noon at one o'clock. Approximately 250. or 300 con- ing was expressed that it is very important to keep up with. other ‘places in regards to taxes but not in regards to wages. Mr. Maclnnis said that ‘protestors had to admit the that | sign, “We Construction Workers Are Burying Our Old Wages.’’ to lead the parade. Another 20 signs had been made and were | jpasted on cars which followed 'behind the hearse to all sites *) capital of South Viet Nam today And there was. a report Buddhists would drop their coy- cott of the preparatory. congress e government convened Tues- day to recommend ‘steps for the ‘orderly transfer of power to a civilian regime. Radio Saigon | seats caught in the open in a man- action taken at both Emerson fire killed 25 Operations—at- the Tan Son \Nhuf ‘air base were carried on junder the guidance of an emer- \said? Buddhists would take their knocked out in the Congress today. |'mortar_attack - early Tuesday. *. gency control tower. The man tower of that huge |military and. civil terminal was in. the Viet Cong. struction workers in a rather |there were some good men on construction in Charlottetown. boisterous and ‘‘we want action Ithe other side of the table and |. He told’ the men that now is | ‘HISTORY IS DESCRIBED mood attended the meeting without employers there would the time ta ask for more wages which was chaired by Bill Kells. be no employees. In order to re- when their companies have lots | y , _Reiean Charlebois, Interna- ¢eive an honest wage, he said, (of_johs, He said before elections AS STUPIDEST COURSE s- | “tidnal Representativeof the ta- it-was—very—necessary. to do an America have come from the Is- Politicans will go around promi | do with Canada's past. 100,000 population—was 36 in) Quebec. ee oe Tee to emphasize their opposition to |grove swamp in. South, Viet Pye ge ert Prag Nguyen Cao Ky's mill- Nam's Mekong Delta. A spotter | [ta “government. pilot said rockets and cannon working. but they were not to | would pick men off the street! ‘ % tal a aie mak or threaten land and that Islanders are | |and fill. up the vacancies.- One rg a at the. On Dr. D. R. Cook of the Uni- thet. in any way.He said he felt known éverywhere for their man said that he had been ask- | 4255, waducational | ‘Agsobint versity of Toronto agreed with sure they would fall -in- behind work and fairness. He said the ed to be just whatever .was need- conference Tuesday that a ir Mr. Hodgett and said: ‘The the others workers must stick together and :ed in the- shop where p)is em- toned suieey of Hole Gitad good guys are Canatans and | work for their fair wage in this ployed. It was nothing néw to be natare ie taterhe mag au the had .guys ‘are everybody | NOTES HIGHER TAXES province poe called a plumber one minute and), 055 °ic nationalism ene 1 else as far as Ontario's his- While Mr. Charlebois was out— A representative from a Sum- jan electrician the next. cose atriotisn in teste : d tory courses are concerned.” | 6 preparing for the making of merside company said that he; Mr. Charlebois said that the | I Pees bl ek : } ; j | signs, Dougal MacInnis spoke to felt it was the duty of the work- | meetings will continue at the La- © Oran oe a r “Canadian . history — is _too| the. group about the raise “in ers to stick together and fight ed Coifncil Hall, 162 Richmond am deeply disturbeed find- | ‘often the Slory of some | : SS ae taxes announced at the City for a higher wage, ‘we owe it to _ at 8 am. every morning un- | ” yeungsiets in ms country | wreiched fishery treaty. a ee Sy Council meeting on Tuesday our families,’ he, said. be ‘the employers. are ready to shat witha oer oii fact valiant Ottawa against a Pp fn Na ws ge ‘ night, Bill. Kells said that one of SIGNS PREPARED make agreements. He told the (07) Wil joel. ee ; Gresatul provinces, of the evi PENNY. i ICKERS ARE HONEST . the-councittors-hac~said~in re Finally Mr: Chartehois returi- men that if they'll stick tozether-~ neu ated State absorbed—by | a empire— ee Oe ea . gard to the increase, ‘'we are /ed with the word that the signs |the employers are bound to see | OF hewn tl kth 1 5. -stote ue e skan__Pan- It was like pennies from -forcycling messenger hit a* he was delivering to a coin harvesters. Said the messen- not out of line with other Mari- | were made and that he had ob- things their way and offer them on an ere will ever © handle from us = heaven at this downtown Tor- hump and spilled $60 worth of colléctor. Most the -cnina ger, Jeff Snider: “People are. ¢ time municipalities,” y . yy The: feel- | tained a 1928 hearse carrying A'‘a just wage; onto intersection when a mo- pennies — §,000 in'all — which 4 were returned by the helpful more honest than [ thought.”