* Wilson closed a one-day debatp possible * ‘chamber before being forcibly than -ever-a day ago." Pays Tribute | -Gen. H. D. G. If t's Good For'The Ist’ The Guardian Is For HY WEATHER . Clear; not much change in temperature; , vest winds 15.. Low-high 18 ‘and 32. Sat- *urday: sunny, windy, cold. Ee gata “Covers Pan Edward Island Like Tipe” x Seca 'casee Mat Oe Se Sap Bice CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1965. “Tuan . SEVEN CENTS ~ 14 PAGES VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 78 Authorized as Department, Ottawa, and for Payment of Postage in Cash . Britain's Support Of U.S>> Erupts Into Fisticuffs __ By JOSEPH MaeSWEEN ,countries involved —in the. Viet ;ment of the Viet Nam fighting | ‘LONDON (CP) A young Nam war their views on~ what | now is an- “academic question,” demonstrator yelled protests | constitutes a basis for settle- \There- th and . fisticuffs broke out in the |menf. ” as no mgs: the ‘Commu- public gallery as Prime Minis-|° Addressing the House of Com: nist North Vietnamese were fer Wilson reiterated his Labor mons, Stewart also spoke” in willing to quit their attacks on government's support: of Amer- sympathetic terms of a new South Viet Nam). ‘ ica’s Viet Nam policies .in_ the jappeal by 17 non- aligned coun- : Hotise of Commons Thursday | | tries for peace ° negotiatiuns to Stewart's first major Com night ad the Southeast Ahia conflict. ("100s speech as foreign minis= “You. are as bad as the lousy} He spoke of the Communist ‘ter amounted to powerful sup- | Tories,’ the man shouted as attitude being- difficult and im-. port for the U.S. position: in Viet ‘at present” but added Nam and he pledged that Brit- on foreign -affairs. . follawing an interruption by one ain )“‘shall attempt a break- The man furiously scattered jor: the Labor government's. left- through by*a variety of means.’ papers over the gallery railing |wing critics, that. “there now | Stewart opened a foreign af- into the well of the Commons ‘signs of more. ground for hope fairs debate ‘after the Commons .had been shaken to. hear an removed by ‘Hoyse. stewards. In- Paris, however, George. announcement by. Célonial Sec- One or two BloWs were. ex-. Ball, United ‘States undersecre- retary Anthony Greenwood that chanzed between two other men jtary. of state, was reported as the British: have. made frequent one__of whom. apparently. . got |telling. the NATO. council Thurs. use of non-lethal ga¢-in British over-excited’ in attempting to day that a negotiated _settle- | Gui: Guiana. assist the stewards, while mem- : s bers ‘of Parliament stared up- ward in amazement at the’ rare acene Wilson had spoken” on Viet Nam for only seven or: eight minutes at the end of a half- Cracked-Gas Main hour address in which he ranged over many of: the world’ S problems. He reiterated with emphasis the U.S. position in Viet Nam while admitting an anxiety at some aspects of the bitter fight-- MONTREAL (CP)~A metal- |way around the pipe circumfer- |. ing in the Southeast Asian area. jurgical engineer testified lence. Earlier. Foreign Secretary Thursday before a fire-commis-? William Malcolm ‘Williams, Michael Stewart said Britain sioner's inquiry’ that a gas associate professor. of metallur- was trying ‘o ascertain from all The Commons main at LaSalle Héights where |gical engineering at McGill 28 persons died in. an apartment | University, said he concluded explosion: one month ago was from a -visual examination of cracked three-quarters of the |the pipe ‘that it was certainly broken before the explosion and iwas not a result of the ex- plosion.”" ithe 24-unit- apartment building ‘reduced to, rubble in the “éx- |plosion was not immediately es- | tablished: i Mr. Williams. said the. crack. | originated from a piece of metal ichipped, probably. during owe! OTTAWA (CP) The Com- mons paid tribute Thursday to Crerar,. wartime | commander of the 1st. Canadian | Army. who died’ at the age “| Prime’ Minister Pearson said | Gen. —Crerar served. Canada (portation. or installation, off with “quiet efficiency’ and) surface of the cast iron, pipe. “great devotion’ in war - and fe ‘He said it*wWasdifficutl to de- peace for. more than half a cen- tury. He said Gen. Crerar com- manded the only army Canada has ever put in the field and } noted that he was a member = the Privy Council Gordon. Churchill (PC—Winnl- 7 jtermine the age of the: break, | |“but it was’ not more than a few | years old and not less thas al \few months old.” >» The inquity resumed hearings \rhureday" into the-March 1-ex« | peg South Centre) said Gen. | : : act ga after a three-day er Crerar had been an example of | : Seth Roberson, 41, of Hous courage and devotion to his CRERAR DIES _ Tex., testified ‘that the odor- men. He had served Canada | producing substance added to | with distinction. | Gen. H. D. G. Crerar, 76,- | the gas by the Quebe> Natural T. C. Douglas, Demo- Gas Corporation could be _par- | New commander of the First Cana- Seen Explosion = The. location of the main ‘te! (oasiae! HEARINGS — 7 Sea Cow Pond: his Will Get N ew : Boat Harbor CAPITAL ba cad . OF THE GUARDIAS “OTTAWA ~- Two breakwaters will be built at Sea Cow — as part of the development of new boat harbor there, Solicitor. | General J. Watson MacNaught | said here Thursday. Mr. MacNaught said it would: a the fourth such boat harbor | .that-he ha’ been’ able to secure | cratic party leader, said Gen. dian Army during the Second | tially filtered by soil. |for. the fishermen of Prince | Crerar was a great soldier and World War, died in Ottawa*) Mr. Roberson; vice-president | County. “Others are at Howard's fine Canadian. Thursday. Prime Minister of the firm that manufactures [ Cove, Fishing Cove and Skin- Robert Thompson, Social | Pearson and leaders” of the the odorant used in the La-'| ners Pond. z Credit leader, described the gen- eral as one of Canada’s great citizens. and Real Caouette, Creéditiste leader, called him a great Canadian. Salle gas mains, said his com- ipany’s. odorant is .designed mostly for use inside buildings | fs a warning device. Natural igas has no odor of a own. Viet Cong Down ‘Copter; American Gunner Killed SAIGON (‘AP)-— Viet Cong |Cong. caves, gunners shot down’a U.S. Army ‘cations. heliéopter and killed the Amer- The thunderstorm had put out ican door-gunner of another hel- fires from tons of napalm, .phos- icopter in a brisk fight 20 miles phorous bombs ‘and fuel oil that west of Saigon Thursday. _ | 70 U.S. planes dumped on tinder Four other Americans were dry trees and jungle. growth wounded in the action, which Wednesday. : flared near the town of Duc The elements thus intervened parties in the House of Com- mons paid tribute to the leader. See story page 10. (CP Wirephoto from National _Defence), ee fortifi- U.S. Air Force ‘commander in| try again. The 1965-66 estimates of the | department of public works pro- vide a sum of $123,000 for the | | project. The’ breakwaters will | | be filled with Island sand’ stone | with a. three-foot. armor. of recast..| concrete blocks on the sea-side and a one-foot rip-rap on the | harbor side. The two breakwat- ers will enclose’ a triangular. | sheltered .area with -a 100-foot opening. A 240-foot landing ~ on pile bents, with creosoted wales, will | >be located ‘inside and along the | “shorter.” breakwater.: There will tect the boats. Mr. MacNaught said the work Viet Nam, ‘had hoped would | will-be done by contract and the | leave’ the woods burning” for| plans and specifications some time. Spokesmen: declined | drawn by the department of pub- | were exceptionally good, though ~ to. say whether the air force will | lic works with the assistance of |Judge J. C. | the department of fisheries. were Hoa. Helicopter - borne South) Vietnamese troops engaged a Viet Cong force estimated to total from 100 to 200 men. { A thunderstorm washed out! the U.S. Air Force’s massive | scorched-earth operation against! the Viet Cong in the 19,000-acre Boi Loi forest, 55 miles north-| west of Saigon. The oil-fed fires | am being quenched by unseasonal | rains, the guerrillas maintained | their hold on the forest. Reports were: scanty from the fight west of Saigon, but the Viet Cong were believed to be! & hammering hard at the govern-| ment forces at dusk U.S. sources said heavier, engagement of the same type Wednesday at Viet | An, at least 3 Viet ——_ were | killed. This* was the ‘battle in the central-highlands south of the Da Nang air base in which - Viet | Cong gunners shot down four U.S. Relicopters and killed three American airmen. South Vietna- mese army casualties were nine dead, 3) wounded and *| missing REPORTERS FIRED ON Failure of the fire bombing of the Boi Loi forest was under- lined by heavy.shooting at re- porters who flew over that area, which is honeycombed with. Viet t : onl a! that in a INSIDE TODAY bea iy Births, deaths ....... 2, 13. |e ™ Little Charlie Brown, chihua- hua owned by James Serdon of Chicago, takes a sidelotig Northbrook, Ill. The. dogs’ are -| ~iaw a hic-iowled- Champion vosing at International Amphi “ Sen Editorials ’ DON’T GET HUNGRY, CHAMP _s.- _Dandow's ; ientabier, bulldog ‘isomer in Chichi, where the owned by Mrs. A.R. Glass of 23th International Dog Show will be held this week-end (AP Wirephoto) Given & JUDGE BILL Bennett places hand on the rump of the ‘that Shorthorn = steer went nada Pen Senate _ Grand Champion at the Easter Beef show -for James Cud- more, Winsloe. (at the halter) -*# Irving “MacDonald, York is”in the background. The Cudmore steér had previoysly won the Shorthorn championship, Easter Beef Show Proves Importance Of Good Sires By NEIL’ MATHESON Results in shew here’ yesterday added up .the best possible advertise- | ola for using good sires, as both ther grand champion and reserve grand’ champion steers) were sired by bulls that were senior and grand champions at Charlottetown and Halifax last | fall. The grand champion was a | Shorthorn, “shown by James Cud-: ;more, Winsloe, and the reserve | grand champion an Angus steer shown by Ina MacDonald, York. The grand champion was sired | by Rankindale Sportsman,~ the bull that was senior and champion Scotch Shorthorn last year for Gerald Dollar, Winsloe, at the provincial exhibition here | and the Atlantic Winter Fair in Halifax. -The Angus steer was sired by York Ernest that was senior and grand champion for Irving MacDonald,.. York—he's in a hitees month campaign that) be .a deck of untfeated plank |Ina’s father—also at Charlotte- Maj.-Gen. Joseph H.,Moore, the 4nd there will be fenders to pro- town and at the. Atlantic Winter “Fair at Halifax last November. The. championship class pro- vided the stiffest kind of com- petition as the tops in all breeds (Bilt) Bennett, for- mer livestock superintendent for New Brunswick at Fredericton [was ‘not ‘so happy about those "that placed farther down the line. It. was the first time a Short- ‘horn ‘steer. had-won the grand | championship at the Easter Beef +Show- hege~since- Athol-Roberts /won with one of his Fairgrange po ogg Shorthorns some years ra CHAMPION ~ aN | The 4-H Clut 4-H Club- _champion was the Easter-. Beef | grand ° shown by Edward Hickey, Mal- peque. by Buddy Loane, Kilmuir who also had the best pair of Angus steers at the show. The champion Angus steer was the reserve grand champion: the |reserve Angus was shown by George Kelly, Morell. The champion Shorthorn. steer | was Mr. Cudmore's grand cham- | pion, the reserve Shorthorn was shown ‘by Lorraine MacDonald, York. The champion Hereford steer was shown by Dave Ford,-North River, a man-who has had one grand champion and either two or three reserve grands in for- mer years. His grand came in 961. The reserve Hereford champion was/shown by Her- man Smallman, O'Leary, who was president last year of the P.E.I. Hereford Breeders Asso- ciation. The reserve was -shown) The Shorthorn grand champion steer is 17 months of a Be “and | weighs 790 pounds, owfier” Mr. | Cudmore told The Guardian, His | dam is one of Mr. Cudmore's | heifers. The Angus champion and re- | serve grand weighs 1,055 pounds. He is 21 months old and he is out of one of the poorer cows in the herd of Irving MacDonald, father of Ina. sion pproval lat Does It Mean For Each Canadian? By STEWART .MacLEOD _OTTAWA (CP)—With only the formality - of royal assent- re-" maining, the Canada Pension |Plan is about to’ become a fact |—and it's doubtful whether any other piece of legislation has re- | quired so'much effort to bring it ; into effect. |" Three revisions, nearly two \years of exhaustive — actuarial and economic studies, countless conferences, wearying federal- provincial “negotiations, 26 days | ‘of Commons debate, 51 sittings of a Senate-Commons commit- ‘\tee, and three days in a Senate icommittee and before the Sen- ate itself—this is the partial story of how the massive legis- lation -is reaching.. the statute books. No one can reckon the thousands of man - hours that went into the measure. And now that it has cleared its final parliamentary hurdle, what _have. Canadians got for themselves? The ‘short nswer is: that-most Canadians will have a wage-re- | lated..pension—scheme,..compul~. ‘sory in nature, that will provide a maximum benefit of $104.17— the $75 nthly old - age pension—a month when a con- tributor reaches A longer answer is that the plan is 30 complicated, a mathe- | matician could probably earn a doctorate by figuring out a sim- ple method of explaining how much each contributor will give and take. HOW_IT, WORKS . |“ In tie fiaples sense, it works ilike this: For contributions of 3.6 per |cent of income—half paid by lemployees and half by employ- ers—persons will qualify at-age for a pension of about one- |quarter of their previous earn- | lings. Contributions are made on | | earnings between $600 and $5,000 la year, and self-employed per- | sons, who must pay the entire 3.6 per-cent contribution the selves, enter the scheme when j they earn $800 or more a year. The minimum and maximum limits of $600 and $5,000 mean Plan. » [the minimum will not make any contributions .or receive any benefits; -and persons earning” more than the’ maximum. will not make any contributions on 'Hncome above $5,000. Based on average earnings of ;$600, minimum benefits. under ithe scheme. will be $150 a year, and the’ maximum for a $5,000 {income.will be $1,250. eee eet Contributions will -start next i Jan. 1, and the first benefits will ‘be paid out a year later, But ‘these benefits will be 6n a graduated * scale tntil the plan reaches maturity. in 1978 Dtring this 10-vear maturity period a person now 55 can con- tribute until he is 65 and then .draw the same pension as if he |contributed for 40 years. This: for a 10-year period he would ibe contributing $79.20 a year— |1.8 per cent of earnings between $600 and $5,000—for a total of ‘$792 and he would-then draw a pension of $104.17 a month. {Within —eizht--months’ofretire=- ment; he would he ahead of the lgame. diene This transitional, period, dur- ing which certain contributors get Sgspect of the plan not .wage- related. It means, -in effect, that future contributors will be sub-- jsidizing those receiving wind- falls. These windfalls would be drastically reduced if the ma- turity period was extended... to |20 years—as suggested by both Ontario and’ Quebec. But. the - ‘shorter period was one of ‘the - ‘concessions. gained by the fed- eral government in its negotia-, tions with Quebec, which fre- |sulted in both plans being dove- tailed to achieve fortability. The pension plan as finally’ japproved by Parliament is basi- ically the same as the one. intro- iduced to the. House last Oct, 30 —the third version of the scheme. While the government did accept some amendments-— most of them technical ~— the fact that it had previously been meshed with Quebec's scheme prevented any funda mental The best pair of Angus steers | that persons earning less than charges. were shown by Buddy Loane, the second prize pair by Mack and Hilda Dixon, Clyde’ River. Incidentally Mack Dixon won the prize for the best 4H Club | showman. The prize for the best }4-H Club showman in _-his _first year went to Edward Hickey who showed the champion 4-H steer. Allie MacNeill, Summerside, was ?third and Frank Mutch, ' (Continued on page 5, col. 6) Session's End Expected: Today "OTTAWA (CP) * The Com-~ mons passed an appropriations Personal: Letter From LBJ Handed To Indonesian Pres. By JOHN LEGGOE JAKARTA (Reuters) — White House envoy Ellsworth Bunker Thursday gave President Su- karno a personal letter from President’ Johnson at the first of several meetings over deteri- orating U.S. - Indonesian rela- tions. ‘No details of the letter or of the 80-minute meeting were re- ‘vealed, but Bunkér said the talk was. ‘‘very constructive." The president's envoy arrived | for | in Indonesia Wednesday talks aimed at ending the de- terioration in relations. They have reached their low- est point after the burning of American books, the closing of U.S. information service librar- ‘ies, the-seizure of American rub- ber plantations and supervision over American - owned indus- tries by Indonesian control teams. ‘Major Plank In PC Platform aid Education Aid Question By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)—Federal “aid to education and a. Supurban lareas. development ofrogram jwill be major plattks ip the lelection platform of © the ne c- gressive .Conservative party, ; liable sources said Thursday. Opposition Lea = er iviefen- fbaker — dropped , hint about jthem in a ielevision _addréss iWednesday night. promising that they will be enundialed in “detail ‘very shortly.’ Informants say the opting gut legislation passed by the Gam: mons Tuesday night is a key factor in-the federal-aid-to-@d- ucation plank The ‘Conservatives are "ex- peciéd to propose large: scale federal education assist- ance, along lines suggested by | schonl-truétee and teaching as- sociations, -under feders vincial agreements. Provinces which wilted to opt out of the programs could do .so without losing the Anan-° _cial benefits provided by fhe federal government The suburban areas program is said to include a provision to permit home owners to deduct their municipal taxes in deter- mining their federal income tax liability: EASE TAX BURDEN The aim is to ease the tax sburden on the property owner from local improvement. and school taxes’ which haves grown greatly with the post-war shift of population to suburbia. Informants said the two elec-- tion planks were worked out. by groups in the caucus of. MPs’ and inthe party. Mr.,._Diefenbaker in his televi- sion.gpeech said ‘the time has icome, if Canada is to take its |that the suburban areas pro- . nationally and tionally and achieve the destiny’ that should be this country’s, | when considerably larger meas- iwill, have | to be provided by agreement between the federal government «and the provinces assuring at thé same time that there shall be no_ interference with the exclusive- jurisdiction of the provinces . over eduta- tion.” The aid-to-education plank is undérstood to have been devel- oped as a broadening of the pro- gram of federal assistance for construction and maintenance of/technical schools initiated by ithe former ‘Progressive Con- servative government. Under that program the fed= jeral government agreed with the provinces.to pay 75 per cent ‘of construction costs of techni- similar to. the Agriculture Re- habilitation | nomic basis’ ¥ eae } : ew and Development Aét aiméd ‘at putting: marginal ures of federal aid to education farming areas on a more eco- bill for $762,542,000 Thursday jnight, making it ‘virtually cer- j tain that the longest session in Canadian parliamentary history will end today. The Governor-General is ex- pected to ‘open a new session Monday with a longer-than-usual throne speech outlining the government's legislative pro- gram for 1965. The interim supply bill au- thorizes the government to meet day-to-day bills in April and May pending approval of the 1965-66 spending estimates, The measure was passed with- in 10 minutes after the end of the dinner adjournment on the second day of debate. It was expected to get speedy approval in the Senate today. The Commons then turned to the final item before the cur- rent session—additional spend- ling estimates of $245,.581,000 for the fiscal year ended Wednes- | day. Thursday was the 247th ‘sitting | of the session. In earlier debate on the sup- ply bill, Conservative MP. Terry Nugent; said’ a government- owned . shipping monopoly in Canada's north could hamper, northern development _ policies for many years. Pearson Says Budget Due Verv Shortly OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minis- ter Pedrson said in the Com- mons Thursday that the budget will be presented to Parliament cal ‘and vocational tra ining “very shortly” schools. recess : Mr. Diebaker indicated He was replying to George Nowlan (PC — Dighy-Annapolis- interna-, grams. is planned as something. Kings). Detes after the Faster Institute for. the begirining | ard eee until we_do, we cannot end of Parliament's. Easter re- devi the complete “and sim _ + Me: Nugent,.member ‘for Ed- monton - Strathcona, was com- plaining about what he termed unfair- practices by the Crown- owned Northern Transportation Company which: he said led to a recent agreement. to purchase Yellowknife Tra ns- portation Company He said the company: sold out only because‘ of unfair tactics of Northern Transportation that were used ‘‘with the «fulk ap- proval of the government.” Mr. ‘Nugent cited as an ex- ample the. authorization -for Northern Transportation to pur- chase a $2,000,000 ship to im- prove service. ° The companies operate on the Mackenzie and -Athbasca rivers. Mr. Nugent said the creation of a government’ monopoly. is going to make private investors look twice before investing in northern development Projects McGill Forms Institute Of Cancer Resea rch MONTREAT.. (CP) McGil University Thursday be _ecame the fiffh Canadian univer sity to establish a cancer re- search institute The announcement was made jointly by McGill and the -Na- i\tional Cancer Institute of Can- jada. Dr. Peter G_ Scholefield, 29, of Montreal; a cancer re- isearch specialist. was chosen di- tector of the new institute Other institutes are located in British Columbia, Alberta, Sas- katchevan and Western Om tario. ee ‘Dr. Scholefield said McGill's will concentrate on finding out what takes place in a tumor cell, . ‘Until we know that, we cas not figure out what causes can- cess have not: yet been am ple cures for, cancer which the nounced: “Good Friday fs April whole world is looking for,” -he 16. | said. # 2 » a a " “winds,” is the one major