43 Tf lt’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For it ere ee Sr __ Ottawa and tor \ ul oo | “Covers Prince Edibard Island Like The Dew” _ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1966. ¢ wor McRB THAY De Gaulle Will See | Bomb Test NOUMEA (AP) Presiden | Gaulle of France wound up| his official visit to New Caledo- | nia Monday and. prepared to fly to Polynesia, where he will wit- mess the explosion of a French uclear device. a one-day stop in the New Heb- ‘lrides Islands, ‘jointly - adminis- tered. by Britain and. France, and then takes -off on-a 2,900- mile hop east over the Pacific to Tahiti. The: nuclear--test is scheduled for Saturday. over Mururoa Atoll, 850 miles east of Tahiti in the French, Polynesian Islands. French otficials had reported thedevice! ‘de Gaulle \would be ‘doped’? ‘with thermonuclear material, lan. experiment -that would put \France on the — threshold of ibuildtng a thermonuclear |weapon. : But Frene-h scientists an- nounced Monday at Mururoa jthat the test of the ‘“‘doped’’ de- ‘vice had been postponed> until after de -Gaulle’s visit. Thev igave ho reason for the posi- ponement but said de Gualle would see the explosion of a powerful device instead. . France did not sign the 1963 treaty banning maclar tests..in fhe atmosphere MET OFFICIALS In. Noumea Monday, _ |French president met ~with> mayors, city councillors and mative _ chiefs — and later with | the jsembly. ital -with-a je es: =Car mo jeorted by motorcycles. | In Mururoa, Pierre Andre, di- lrector of radiological safety at | ithe testing ground, pondents de Gaulle would. ‘see the explosion of an atomic de- | vice hung from a bright yellow “PILOTS ESCAPE WITHOUT SERIOUS INJURIES rn oo. - Rain Floods N.S. School BARRINGTON PAS SAGE,. N.S.. (CP) — While thousands of Nova Scotians complained that wind and rain had cut their La- bor Day holiday short, students at Barrington Municipal High School were given an_ extra week of leisure by the same un- seasonal weather. Fight upper classrooms and Quarton, 42, | Sonora, Calif, — and Howell C. (Nick) Jones, 39 of Augustus Ga. Jones flew the plane with the checkerboard design on the tail.. His plane flipped over after he landed in a.cornfield. Quarton’s plane _ erashed* about 1,500 feet - from the front of the grandstand. A race official said Jones came out of a turn and dived to ~ gain speed and position when his’ plane struck Quarton’s craft just forward of_the_tail- (AP Wirephete) A Canadian Jailb reakers Are Arrested In Indiana ~ Two pilots were “injured, nei- ther seriously, when their mid- get planes collided Monday while competing in the Wash- ington national. air races at Frederick, Maryland, airport. The pilots were Arnold G.- He travels 400 miles today. for |; (to be detonated. for |. told corres- | _ by , GARY, Id. (CP-AP)—One of police risked their lives need-|of them in rooft S six lower ones were flooded Sun- four Canadians who fled a Win- lessly in the capture Saturday| Awaiting Bears chases. the (28¥ ight, and Monday morning nipeg jail last Thursday say*s ‘night. charges are Leishman; Barry when heavy. rains between two police who captured them were fortunate to come out pf the in- cident— unscathed. Kenneth Leishman, © 34, -_al- leged . ringleader of the group, said in an interview Monday ~ The Canadians are charged with violatin’g the National -Thief—Act and stealing an—air- plane. eh ie The ‘fugitives were captured by 60 police, who wounded two US. Bombing Policy Fans Canadian Alarm By DAVE McINTOSH ‘partly attributed here to a de- Kay Duke, 21; Joseph Laforte, 25, known. in Canada: as Joseph William Dale: and George Le- jclerc, 26, of Montreal.. Both Le- iclerc and Laforte- were. slightly wounded in the capture. “This one chap (policeman) kicked in the door and found himself. in a bad. situation,” said Leishman. ‘‘He .was look- ing into the darkened room and there weré two guns trined on him. He was very fortunate. “Once there’s one policeman ishot, there's no harm in going on. But nobody had any inten- tion of shooting. Wé weren't looking for trouble.” OTTAWA (CP) — Concern Is'sire by the Johnson administra- ALL ARMED growing steadily here about the; American bombing of Commu- nist. North.-Viet -Nam,—authorities said Monday. They said the - government feels the bombing: fs driving the Communists farther and ‘farther from the negotiating table. And continued bombing tn- ereased.the chances of an acel- | dental attack on Red China! which might bring the Chinese! directly into the war. Radio Peking claimed Mon- day that US. planes: sank a Chinese cargo vessel a weer earlier in the Gulf of Tonkin. Canada ‘has publicly regretted U.S. bombing of North Viet Nam since it began in Febru- ary, 1965.. Prime Minister Pear- | ton has. said he got into a pri- vate argument. with President. Johnson after he had called pub- licly Jast year for a bombing | pause. The US. govéFnment's dect- sion to step up the air asSault bombing petroleum .dumps | Wear Hanoi and Haiphong is ition to win over the hard-liners |who have. been pressing for | ‘more vigorous “prosecution of the war. ‘VIEWED AS POLITICAL | .The US. air attacks ‘looked on here as almost purely political..and not military. Officials say the U.S. feels it imust exact. some penalty from | ‘North Viet Nam for its large- scale infiltration of South Viet Nam. Military authorities adde dq) that if 1.000-plane raids during | the Second World War by the Canadians, British. and Ameri- jeans could not destroy Ger- imany’s industrialized society, smaller raids cannot greatly \damage North Viet Nam's rural |Society. They argue that the US bombings may serve only to rally the North Vietnamese greater effort, both. Britain and Germany dur- | jing the Secead World War. are | to | as happened in| All the fugitivés were armed with automatic . pistols, police -said. . Police were guarding the |four-passenger Mooney Mark 21 laircraft on a farm 12 miles southeast of here. They said the plane, stolen from a_ hangar jmear Winnipeg Saturday, con- \tained a small hee ha of guns and knives. Leishman was ielaz held in Headingley Jail in Winnipeg to, face trial for theft and conspi- iracy in the theft March. 1 co Continued on page 3 col. INSIDE wOEY. Island news Summerside Deaths Fditorials Kings, Queeis, City Women’s and three inches, and high winds lashed the school. The. roof. had been-undergoing-repairs in pre- paration for the school’s opening Wednesday: Principal John MacPherson Said there will be no classes held until next Monday “at the earl- iest.”’ An emergency meeting of the school board was called Monday night to deal with the problem of thousands of dollars damage | caused. An eight-man crew is at | work cleaning the building. but accurate damage estimates have | not yet been made. By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Union leaders talked about lean -dispute injunctions: living, and’ clergymen about the failure of the poor. to share in {Monday marked Labor Day. | Holiday traffic, jamming jroads in every province. had jkited 88 persons hours before | the weekend was over. In Quebec City and Toronto, Archbishop Maurice Roy and, Britain’s. Lord Soper said the | \same “thing in different words: The, poor have t shared in| _|the wealth of caneds as they | should. have. Cardinal Roy, atchbishop of |Quebec and primate of the Ro- man Catholic Church in jada, said"in’ a ‘statement that | | per cent of Canadian famt- lies have a revenue of less than Canada’s’ riches as the country/POOR LEFT OUT “jern ‘| l | aa bre | Postal workers in “Toronto, | some whistling, take part in Toronto's traditional t hr ee. tile” Labor — Mon- THEY WHISTLE WHILE THEY WALK day from Spandina ” Avenue and College Street to the Duf- ferin Gates of the Canadian National Exhibition, A bowt 8,000 Slacard-Bearing mars h- ers protested the use of n- junctions in Labor - mana.e-, ment disputes: (CP Wirepho‘o) Rail Traffic In Canada 3 traffic on the CPR and CNR began to irate, |there was no rail movement by | the-two-main-companies~and: no limmediate indication when men |would return to work. | Most of the other rail work- jers across Canada voted during out and comply with last Thurs- day’s act of Parliament which ~rordered an end to the peaeenee strike. At Moncton, N.B., about 1,100 shop_ crafts workers. voted Mon- day to return and CNR and CPR reported ‘all’ services in‘ the Atlantie provinces back to normal. In Montreal, many of 2,000 shop crafts workers, who voted to defy the government order, still were out and there was no indication when they would Te- turn. ALL BACK IN ONTARIO A CNR spokesman in Toronto said Monday operations were 100 per cent normal’’ after workers in Niagara Falls and Windsor voted to return to their jobs.~ Dissident. strikers -in- other parts of, the province previously had voted for the return to work. Employees of Northland Railway, the Algoma Central and Hudson Bay. Rail- way, also were returning to work Monday. At Fort. William, Ont., a mass ;Meeting of rail workers who \held up a passenger train for '10 hours Saturday, was sched- juled for Monday night. The men blocked the path of ithe CPR's the Ontario |$3.000 a year, more than 1,900,- 000 are under-educated and politi- 1,300,000 suffer from permanent cians about a falling rate of | physical productivity and a rising cost of |the initiative being taken on the disability. .He called Ne on-poverty ‘‘timid.’’. |. In Toronto Lord Soper, a (Methodist minisier and the only 'non- Anglican clergyman to sit in the House of Lords, told an audience of labor leaders and \businessmen that the world's wealth has gone to the rich and {few and not to the poor and |many. Skies were cloudy and the the weekend to end -their walk-/ passenger train, The | Speeches On Labor Themes Mark Weekend In Canada ‘RCMP Rail | traffic moved west of Edmon- In British Columbia, however, jee and Calgary. PICKETS REMAIN ~Pickets were in evidence at key CNR points in Manitoba, traffie on the Prairies jmove again at a near’ normal ‘returned to normal, although no- but were not disturbing rail | Is Resuming Normal Level members of the territorial as By THE CANADIAN PRESS \Canadian, until- dispersed ~by a |movements: -Work was bé ‘k to . | Holdouts by rebel rail union |riot squad inchsding elements of | Later he went on a 30-mile+members appeared to be drop- jlocal police, the OPP and the: —\drive around this tropical—capi-— Monday—as=traffie—on : normal at CPR shops. normal, but CNR ope’ations were hampered by men s'ill out in Edmonton and Calgar: . A CNR spokesman in Mont- real said Monday night how- ever, that_railway.emplo. ces. in. Edmontor who belong o the Canadian Brotherhood c — Rail- Continued on page 5 cl. 2 3| advised ‘|wealth but _CPR: operations in Sask :tehe- WEA Sunny, some clouds THER in afternoon with oe casional light showers; light winds. Low- high 52 and 68, Wednesday; cloudy. .TEN CENTS ‘Smith Sees Goon Humanity Testing Time Crisis In Rhodesia — Watched By World S| By JOSEPH MacSWEEN_ ‘ LONDON (CP) — The isth | prime ministers’ confer-| ence opening today marks a “testing- time of humanity,” said Canadian Arnold § Smith, head of the Commonwealth sec- retariat. a addressing reporters hion the eve of the 10-day confer- ence, put the problem of Rho- desia—in—a— world context and listeners not to “alarmist or despondent’’ — the prospects of the Common- wealth. He admitted that the 22-coun- try ‘ conference is _ critical—of fundamental. importance~ to the Commonwealth. and: the world— because of the defiance of the white-supremacist._ regime _ rul- ing Rhodesia. Some . writers and political leaders had described it as.a testing time that could threaten the existence of the -Common- “it strikes me as more profound to regard this not as-a testing time of the Conimonwéalth but of human- ity.” “The real question is whether mankind can co-operate across the divisions of race and ¢con- tinents."’ FAITH IS SHAKEN The conference opens inthe shadow of a crisis of confidence among some.‘African leaders in Britain's Prime Minister. Wil- son, who had ‘said at the last 18 PAGES & lean-he-achieved-by-this Ae that isolution.”” ry “The object {is to -solve lems. Ripping up the cha of communication is no good . you can't opt out of the planet.” —~ The 50-year-old Toronto-born diplomat, formerly a senior man in Canada's external af-= fairs department, said the igreatest danger in the world to- be {day is--neo-isdlationism. There was evidence around the world ‘of impatience, despair, frustra- to draw in." It-was seen in such varied events as United States split. RULED BY MINORITY ; Rhodesia should be seen ‘tn terms of the world crisis. This would enhance rather _ than lessen the. importance of settl- ing the problems of the central African, country where 4,000,000 Negroes are ruled by 220,000 whites. Smith announced that Rhode- sia would be the first item of business today and not a world political review. as had been at first proposed, This change was seen in some quarters as a tac tical victory for” the “Africans, — But Smith. said there was ne feontroversy. when «the decision was taken at a meeting of of- ficials Monday. Wilson. who as host ts chatr-. man of the conference, had sug- |Commonwealth premiers’ meet- |gested that“he step down during jing last January in Lagos, Ni- |\the Rhodesian debate and this | geria, tions in “weeks rather months.”” “ _Zambia, Sierra Leone_ rebel regime -of Rhodesia's Jan Smithmight be ousted by sanc- | Sources: indicated that Canada's than Prime Minister Pearson might. and, that the white-minority |suggestion was accepted. While smith did not say so, some take the chair if he-received a unanimous ‘request to do so. | —Pearson- tion—‘‘a tendency of everybody. race—riots--and..the. Sino-Soviet = aiesleashdeas a ot —told—a—news-confere——_— taken against the regime which seized to chit Referring indirectly threatened withdrawals, ‘DEPRESSION DANGER SEEN LONDON (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Wilson warned the British worker Monday he must work harder for less immediate re- ward or face the danger of _a 1930-style depression. pet Further, Wilson indicated ‘the government is ready to enforce a form of .,wage restraint for years, if necessary, against the ANCIENT RUINS ARE LOCATED LIMA (Reuters)—An Amer- ican explorer has found a lost city in the jungles of north- west Peru which experts say could date from before the INCA civilization, it was ‘learned Monday. Explorer Gene Savoy, who has been scouring Peru for the legendary golden city of. El Dorado, .told reporters in Chachapoyas town 500 miles Rnorth-of here .the-.city con- | tained hundreds of white | Stone houses two and _ three storeys high. He said the ruins were lo- cated 30. miles west of Ch chapoyas and_ skirted the 9,500-foot_ Cerro Peruiva peak. There were —numerous_ tem-— ples and palaces with highly decorative cornices and win- dows and what appeared te be public squares. His expedition last week found. the ruins of four other | cities and 10 fortresses tn the weather coal over most of East- | Canada>. on while’ the West enjoyed. a mostly sunny and warm holi- It rained-in Halifax and |Truro, ruining sports events and Continued on page 6 eol. 4 Labor. Day, | ‘same area during the quest for El Dorado. Savoy declined to speculate on the origins of the latest city but archaeological experts in Lima said it ‘could be the pap ofthe Chaca Indians, a race which lived in Peru be- fore the Incas. : entrenched principle of free col- lective bargaining. The Labor government leader, under attack from powerful un- ions for ‘taking legislative power to freeze wages temporarily, hit back with a harsh lecture on--the economic facts=of life in -a—na- tionally-televised speech ‘to the annual meeting of the Trades Union. Congress at Blackpool. ‘Appearing before the TUC’s opening session at his own , re- quest, Wilson repeated a dire assessment of the economy of Britain and the world that he had outlined.in a message to union . chiefs last week. ; MUST BE ON GUARD In the face of a shortage of funds to finance world trade and other economic pressures, ; Wilson _said,. “‘one.-false, care- jless, regardless step could push sented at the conference—have threatened to quit the Common- wealth unless decisive action is Rhodesian independ- | ence from_Britain last. Nov... a said the test would lie in “what | ence Monday he would like te see the Rhodesian ques tion dealt with hy the confer- ~~ Continued on page 5 -col-1t ‘Greta Fails ~ To Become oh] e fi ° the world into conditions not un- like the early 1930s." The alternative .to austerity— including a standstill on = in- Continued on page 3 col: 3 Former MP. Dies In N.S. . NORTH SYDNEY, N.S. (CP) —Dr. William Buchanan, 68, for- mer Liberal member of parlia- ment for Cape Breton North- Victoria, died suddenly at his ‘|home here Monday. Dr. Buchanan was a member of the house from 1953 to 1957. A life-long. resident of North Sydney, Dr. Buchanan practicied dentistry. here for. the past 43 years. _| Hurricane Work Harder. fx ies Money 3 at Some Wilson Tells Britis’: People MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—Tropical 4storm Greta weakened Monday, frustrating scientists standing ‘+by for an effort. to tame her: with a silver iodide bombard- ment. ° : Forecast to grow to hurricane force, Greta instead sagged into poorly-organized, 40-mile-an- hour windstorm. This happened after the storm ‘had whirled deep into an At lantie Ocean target area far from any land area where she could safely be seeded by planes of the U.S. government's Pro- ject Stormfury. + eee Scientists believed water im the wall of a hurricane's eye will collect around silver iodide release. the heat storm. But when: they launch the big experiment.” they want a_ full- ‘blown hurricane with a solid eye iwall and Greta doesn't qualify® in either respect. Forecasters, however, held forth a possibility that the storm would intensify and should re- main in the seeding area two days. i Greta was 300 miles northeast of San ‘Fran, Puerto Rico, and 1,200 miles east - southeast of Miami Monday, moving | north. west at eight miles an hour. Exceeds THE CANADIAN PRESS Vy me accidents in Canada had claimed 88 lives with six hours still to go-before ‘the 78- hour Labor Day holiday week- end ended at 12 midnight Mon- day, far exceeding the Cana- dian Highway. Safety Council's prediction of 77. ‘A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. local times Friday to 6 p.m. EDT Monday showed eight drownings, three deaths by fire. and five from. other kinds of accidents, raising the accidental death toll. for the period to 104. Despite highways crowded with vehicles through a com- bination of the summer's last Toll ln Accidental Deaths | Council's Guess holiday weekend and the linger- ing effects of a countrywide rait strike, the death toll was. below those for Labor Day in ‘each of the last. three years. There were 195 deaths over Labor Day, 1965, 71 of them in traffic; 104 with 82 in traffic in 1964; and 125 with 77 inadpaffie in 1963. ; 66 IN TWO PROVINCES b pagaeehind, Ontario and Quebec at counted for’ more than two- thirds of the. fatalities _ this weekend with a combined total of 66 deaths. Quebec had 3 road deaths, one drowning and one man who died after falling down stairs. Revised figures for Ontario jshowed 22 traffic deaths, five jdrownings, two deaths by fire land a baby who choked on a’ piece of meat. f British Columbia reported 12 deaths, 10 of them in traffic; Alberta had six on the high- ways,” two drownings and one electrocution: Saskatche- wan four road deaths and Mani-: toba. two. ‘New Brunswick had four highway deaths and one by fire; Nova Scotia four traffic deaths and Newfoundland two. Prince ;..Edward Island re mained fatality-free. The survey does not tnclude industrial or natural deatha known suicides or slayings. particles, fall ‘into the ocean and fuelling . the ‘