WEATHER Scattered showflurries or freezing drizzle; winds becoming north 15. Low- high 20 and 32. Friday: sunny, mild. r If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian ‘ts. For lt : ev ; “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” — CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1966. ommitte ~ ass ‘ VOL: LXXIX. NO. 28 pied ga 16 PAGES ~ : Glttlawa, and for Paymest 4 JORDAN VOTE GIVES MARGIN U.S: Wins UN Proposal - For Debate On Viet Nam UNITED NATIONS ‘CP)—A} .ctucial vote by Jordan enough Wednesday to place the Post Offi ' . we + \ Postage ts Cash. wet See SEVEN CENTS yn ‘ Aging ive Reform | | 65,000-Word Report By STEWART MacLEOD OTTARFA ey @ Joining the United States imjof Japan, this month's ‘council a eh oa) roval of the |president, for informal consulta- e ;agenda, which called- for a de--itions openi Vietnamese ‘ssue on the United bate on Viet Nam, were Brit- Iielbecio détehe. nc menieee Security Council in the ain, New Zealand, The Nether-| Sadi’s statement that Jordan - heavy opposition from | lands, Argentina, Uruguay, |wants a full examination of the he Soviet Union and France. |China Japan’ and Jordan. Vietnamese issue by the Coun- The United States proposal to! Casting opposition votes were \cil touched off a heated. ex- have the I5-nation Council at- the Soviet Union and Bulgaria. |change between U.S, Ambass»> tempt to bring peace to Viet while France, Nigeria, Mali and dor Arthur Goldberg and Soviet Nam’- was ‘approved by © the Uganda abstained. In thy! se, |Ambassador Nikolai Fedorenko mecessary nine votes after Jor- an abstension amounted to an for the second time in two days. | danian delegate Waleed M. Sadi OPPoSsing -vote. Co ee cast the deciding’ vote in favor ivETO LOOMS Ie ° t ¢il in suspense Tuesday night |agenda, but the Soviet Union is | Po [ ef after requesting a ‘ postpone- jalmost .certain to use the big- Urs n ° ment on the vote until Wednes- |power veto privilege before the : meeded the backing of one more ‘debate. @ Ynation to gain a place on the| After the vote, the Council agenda. ‘was adjourned by Akita Matsui inforcements of men and heavy equipment continued to pour jinto. blizzard - raked northern of a debate on Viet Nam. The veto did not apply re- day when the U.S. proposal leouncil ‘winds up its Vietnamese Storm Area : DeGaulle Accuses U.S. |New York state Wednesday as for a guaranteed annual It was Sadi who left the Coun: garding the approval of the| SYRACUSE, N.Y., (AP)—Re- at age 65. The committee : ee : snow-shocked residents slowly hs : overcam mendations, |\mends that single persons get Comoromising Peace Cause 30": cers, ove | _|stecting all levels ‘of govern: minimum ‘Jacome of $1.20 ee MANOED Kine a A new, general snowfall was ment, and. individ- and married couples $2,220, The : UN Security Council opposed a forecast for next weekend. uals. include a suggestion that federal government would fill- oP ARIS (Renters) — President |U.S. proposal to have the Viet While things almost were back all Canadians at 65 receive a |the gap between. existing a Gaulle has accused the Nam situation discussed—a pro- |to. winter normal late Wed guaranteed minimum income comes and the proposed mint- United States of compromising posal adopted by the Council day in much of the stricken as a matter of right.” — : the cause of peace in Viet Nam | Wednesday. area, progress was slower in the There should also be a “dy-| The committee does tot esti-- by resuming air attacks on \CONCERN INCREASES Syracuse Oswego areas namic ’’ among gov- |mate the cost of such a pro - North Viet Nam. | De Gaulle was reported to be which bore the brunt of the ernments to give the senior cit- gram ‘in detail. But it says that. The French leader also ques- |increasingly concerned that the t ce-day storm. 9) izen an to maintain |if a minimum income. of $1,500 tioned Wednesday the wisdom fighting in Viet Nam may lead Main arteries in both cities | jhimeelf as a productive mem- |@ year were established for ‘all # U.S. attempts to obtain |to an all-out war involving the were opened Wednesday but of- | ber of society, said the commit- persons over 65, about 40 per. nited Nations help in ending ‘world’s nuclear powers. ficials said it would be at Jeast tee headed by Liberal Senator cent of them—or 560,000—would the Viet Nam war. — | His latest stand received rare Friday before all secondary David Croll of Toronto. jneed average supplements of. - Ap official communique pre-junanimous backing from the streets and highways could be | The job is a big one “‘but the |$400.-The report says that with pared by de Gaulle shortly after French press, imade passable. committee’s outlook is not pessi- the money saved by other as @ cabinet meeting said the | = : mistic,” the committee said. It |sistance programs, the met cost > French government “can only | a 1 em added: -|of titts would be about $100,000,- regret and disapprove. of the p S || < an bala , - “We believe that without 000 a year. ‘ 0 m en 2 r ae a . mes ~ : economic ’ j . ‘Nera Vit Nem ‘FrOVINCe OelIS ——“# THREE RE-ELECTED BY ACCLAMATION orm come core. | Tis contin fe ai The communique revealed a) ee ; Former Frigate ' 5 ; ; ‘>. eam create in Canada a s@ | years’ residence in Canada and hardening in French opposition : % : : ry Councillor Mrs. Dorothy lottetown Civic Elections clos- Ward Six is being contested elety where youth and age (that net cash income from all: pape Page in Nese ser . e enture. ssue Is Still Adrift Corrigan is being congratulat- ed Wednesday. afternodn at 4 eee alike will find satisfaction | sources ee SS when the French delegate in the; ae HALIFAX _ (CP)—The Polish ¢d by Mayor Walter Cox whee o'clock. Also re-clected by se- Siccdie te--| he cna report, tabled |merely fill out @ “simplified tax |_ Provincial Treasurer M. A. | ority of The Prince Edward Is- \tug Jantar still was| she was re-elected by accla- ‘clamation was Frank. Zakem, MacDonald and El- | Wednesday in the Senate, says |return’® and there would be Bi | ts Farmer announced Wednesday |land Loan Act, 1965 (14 Eliza- trying to secure a towline mation in Ward Two yester- LEFT, of Ward Three and J. mer MacRae have offered for that .among other things there |“‘sample checks” from time fe g e the sale of $3,000,000 Province of | beth H, Chapter 2) which auth-|aboard the former Canadian | day. Nomination day for Char- Arthur Gormley, Ward One. re-clectioa : |should be: 3 time to- curb abuses ? Prince Edward Isiand 5% per | orizes the Government ‘to raise“inavy frigate La Hulloise Wed- : $ - —A national council on social | 14 ld tans ce H cent twenty-three year non-/|from time to time by way of |nesday night, more than 2 (ae e : e Need s research to gather all the nec- ee i arass «| Callatile debentures, dated Jan.|ioan such sum or sums of |hours after the vessels were |~ F 335 essary information. we. Of this, the Semenittes . 15, 1966. Money; Mot exceeding” $6,500,-| separated. 19-miles- from here. | rn s niversi eac : er —A& national. commission on |". Ge ek _ |000.00 as may be deemed “ex-| The. Jantar, also is towing the BB e = We GwE! ~ 4 the aging to co-ordinate. ali | “It avoids the Viet Con This ‘sale resulted from an of- | 04 ; 5; -o-ordin: ne Swe g fer made by # syndicate com- | Pedient for any or afl of the /former frigate Cap de la Made |) 4 Pee s2 programs. seeds test: to- which: we i posed of J.L. Levesque and L.G, | Punposes mentioned im -the act. |line to a scrapyard in te. 2 f > : a ; ae ita |. More effort to find Mploy- HOt like to several | our oe nay oat | Beaubien Ltee.; The Toronto- fy page [ x OSs ; =a m FYCT a maT ceding ecapelgn wr. and ; ve bombers joined — grou ‘orces | Domifiiony Bank; and Green- Pi a S %, ; 0 f= cam by. thi : ioe ern ane, socce shlekie Ineorporete:, at a price Insurance. Company es. a9 : —. ’ \ |. | Nationat’ “Zenplorment’ “Secv. in aearaen oe ’ .66 — a cost to the Pro : : a : e ‘4 i ; | ‘ ; ‘ from “operation. masher,”. 8] vice of 6 cent... | me ! : FORT WHLAIAM, Ont, (CP)— jcentre and was on the board of jand Macdonald aré not the time | —Changes in federal-provin- i. present inequity im coastal drive in South Viet Nam | his ie Dies At Pearson’s Dinner He taught psychology at’ Lake- |education. ; person. Melvin Belli, a United.| cial Gaining programs to the |‘eatment of the already-retired Cong illa a wa_Viet | caunent write had _bose con |— . _ |head~University. He was presi-| He was an impostor. States lawyer who has repre-| benefit of older workers. thos The veighten Leng from etaina bef accepting this TORONTO (CPY—- ‘ -ident of the Thunder Bay Re-| The man called himself David sented Demera, says The Great —Greater financial assistance Ghats charced wp. Guareil offer ES |Bryden, 59, president of North tarded Children’s Association. (George Macdonald but he cannot | |er—older_home-owners. frenshanaah os Siete The proceeds from the sale |American Life Assurance Co., He worked with the Lakehead |be located to answer questions |Angeles and he has seen him| —Wider coverage for the over- | ang those now range overlooking the Bong Son | of these debenture. will be used |Colapsed Wednesday might at a Alcohol Addiction Clinic in St. |about his career. in San Francisco within the last | @5¢ in any medical care inSu- lirom the lower qualifying battle sone, 300 thlies nerebenet | or -indebte banquet for Prime Minister Joseph's Hospital rehabilitation | His story came to light after |six months. | famee program. if security payee ; ,, paying floating indebtedness Op s Mr. T calitithe anes. : lor old-age t of here, while lighter’ planes | of the Province Peareoe_and was dead on arei- his suspension as 2 a. Tomiie se er. | —Improved institutional care. | ‘Te report adds: “Any age ere, ¢ . : val at Toronto General Hospital. ° ° teacher at the university. sity received a letter Jan.' 21} including the licensing and Se ae carried.on.the revived U.S. air| The issue of debentures is ; Antigonis WwW. G. Ta from @upervision of all nursing a war against North Viet Nam. |made under the législative suti|~Mr.- Bryden. was. sitting. im the é aout aa he eae eee ee ae | ee m6 |when the $75 pension is not euf- audience as comedian Rich Lit- ae \Macdonald Monday after two University of Missouri at Colum- |. |ficient. should be expected te. é tle was entertaining about 1,500 Job Held rs ef telephene checks an [bid, 00,, from which the Lake |GUARANTEE URGED | i fer supplementation .|guests after the $25-a-plate din- : Fcivarious colleges and universities [head Macdonald claimed to have | But the most far-reaching rec- pu acivance afer 2 needy or —imer and before Mr. Pearson be- “As Z : letter ommendation is the one calling |test is utterly ae 1 ies: taneuet ANTIGONISH, N.S. ‘CP)—In- in the United States. Macdonald , The _ asked e a : Ror gan addressing a sources said Wednesday had listed the variods schools ag |Lakehead to investigate about a | : ee = the impostor of Lakehead [references while applying for his (possible fraud. oo OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — Prince Edward Island batted an even 500 in the House of Commons question period Wednesday. ‘ On the plus side was an an- _gwer from Public Works Minis- ter George Mellraith to earlier questions asked about~a possible slowdown in the construction work" on the Prince Edward Is- land causeway. Mr. Mcliraith said there was no intention to delay or stretch out the project. David MacDonald,, MP for Prince, asked what the expected his question on the order paper. On the negative side, Mr. Mac- Donald was provided with an answer..to another question he- had placed on the order paper regarding the employment —of P.E.I. workmen on the New Brunswick. approaches. % *‘T am given to understand by the Diamond Construction Company that, to the best of their knowledge, none of the employees working for them on the highway approaches in New Brunswick is a resident of Prince Edward Island,’’ Mr. Mc The program was not inter- tSlowed Down 2s ee FI VE Ne Ne Bet Nd VV EB Pearson gianced toward _ the | amourenat advised Rint plaes Lamoureu im area. ot irme_| mediately known. Mr.. Bryden joined North American Life in 1929. He_was_appointed_ vice-presi- dent and general manager if 1955 and a director in 1958. ‘Mr.—Pearson-—-spoke—to—about 1,500-—persons at the annual prime minister’s dinner of the Toronto and District Liberal As- JOHN T. BRYDEN O'Hagan said later the whole |i sociation. Text of his speech was | issued ‘to the press but Mr.) Pearson skipped delivering parts | to catch a waiting train for Ot- | of it as he cut the address short |avoided by co-operative arrange- ments which would erode neither fired by the clinic at time. ired was ed in lity comes was imper- “University; which tired. Dema-a-sarear was exposed is possibility . @ man posing as a psychology |1951 while he was posing as a |eonating . \professor early in 1963, said “‘he Royal Canadian Navy surgeon sounds like the same fellow.” |aboard the destroyer Cayuga in .it, the prime minister said |St. FX for about 2% months each level of government must |fore he was dismissed. He “also stay within its own field of juris.|worked as a psychologist at a diction.- Where there: was over-|mental “clinic here and, was lapping, conflict should be the same im Fort Wiltiam, Ont.teaching post at Lakehead. Macdonald i ild’s story raised spec- be sz At A Glance . : == Trap, licence Limit Parliament Ig MONTAGUE BUREAU. OF THE GUARDIAN tee sea ‘s Association The Southern Kings and lat their annual meeting here last night strongly urged that the trap. limit and licence re- soon as possible. Some members ‘were of the opinion that.steps strictions be put into- force as (ANSWERS QUESTIONS ying grounds,.Members_from. |Eastern Kings Association would not--be—suitable- of-their_fishermen.so_the thing was left the past. Deputy Minister of F Iiraith stated ‘jshould be{taken to assure action jcould be taken on this matter * for the coming season. The meeting was in the regional high | date of completion of the cause- tawa. Press secretary Richard |federal nor provincial authority. Islander Was Member Committee On Aging haven't gat tiie on — their side.” The report The meeting unamiously sup- ported the resolution for trap li- mit and licensing of fishermen lag presented by the P.E.I. Fish- lars for leries Federation at their annual |23 per in Charlottetown on October 13th, 1965. Copies of this resolution were distributed to the federal minister’ of fisher-- fies, the provincial minister of | fisheries and the Fisheries Coun- | cil of Canada. A discussion took place on the present charge for licence. it was passed by the Eastern Kings Association that a fee ‘of }$10 should be charged. This meeting felt the $10’ amount was a bit heavy. In the end it was decided the fee would not help | in any way so the fee of 3 cents was felt to be sufficient. Tanaten Tee + hy < os iMAY 7TH OPENING joan ae ‘| ‘The. meeting als vant ithe opening date of Mg July 7th as present ition préviously to The running of tions was also discussed and it was suggested that-a resolution ; be drawn up to change the present situation. The pre- _jsent regulations require a fish- ‘lermen not to leave his announc- || OTTAWA (CP)—The Senate jcommittee on aging, which ta- bled a 65,000-word report Wed- of nesday with révolutionary sug- people ions for helping the elderly, to maintain. themselves “as @ - during three sessions of matter of and continue lament to gather informa- \to be productive members .of > . 6; © 2 members, starting in , held 31 meetings to hear denied an . MP’s claim that an ARDA project last fall was used as @ Lite along with“Senator Croll, were: Sydney J. Smith (L—British Co- lumbia), now er of the Senate, F M. is (PC—Nova Scotia), J. Brooks (PC— New ick: Jean - Marie Dessuréaukt (.—Quebec), Mu- tiel Fi (L—New Bruns- iwick), F. W. Gershaw (L—Al berta), Allister Grosart (PC— | \Ontario), James C. Haig: (C— Manitoba), Malcolm Hollett . (PC =~ Neewfoundiland), Fisie 4 groups, and interested \Inman (L—Prince Edward Is- ae. land), Mariana Jodoin (L—Que- “It was about time somebody pec). Eugene Leefrancois ‘1— |, took ‘another Jook at this field,” |(L—New Brunswick), Arthur Senator Croll told reporters Quebec), W. Ross Macdonald nesday—‘'And__we_feel. i and ave come up with something.” |([--New Brunswick), 2, Arthur AS the committee plowed |M. Pearson (PC—Saskatchew- Ree wort, Be onid, 1 wae jwan), JJosie Quart (PC—Que- : that the old can’t |bec), Arthur Roebuck (L—On- pooh any longer. “What, they tario), Donald" Smith (L—Nova | vile we're concerned with Ontario). A ‘Ontario government ‘committee heard repre- eentations from the federal and Provincial governments, univer- Sities, hospitals, welfare and gious -organizations, various | INSIDE TODAY. voansseeets 14, 18° pai] TORCH PARADE OPENS CARNIVAL tion Centre last night. Other key games events in the carnival include ball featurin a —tournament,—curling the carnival matches, basketball end hoc- the Confederation a Gated up a river’ for some dis- fance is at a disadvantage and rule of thumb used in this @rea has been a Rg ye @greement of starting from: pearest point of land to the fish. eee eee eeeeten & high, the the eve of their annual four- of Wales day Se airaien bese # seen parading the opening ‘featured ‘Charlottetown on lagers at the Basilica Recrea- ze they need now. The peo- Scotia) and J. A. Sullivan (PC- | ents