Re JONN. Geb ANC: 2——H1van=€ Rand said the justice Jing the Teport soon after the OTTAWA <CP) The govern had. “breached the standard. of opening of Parliament's emer- ment Monday announced it will conduet--obligatory upon him* gency. sitting, announced éurtly ask Parlament. for the unprece- and pecnanently impaired his. that\Parliament will be asked to dented removal of Mr. . Justice jusefulness. as’ a judge remove Mr..lustice Landreville Len Landteville after tabling a As a result, Mr. Justice Lan- A jomt resolution. of both Com- scorching ingui report declar— dreville--appointed to.the bench mons and\ Senate :is—the only inc the Ontar in e eaneeme Court’ 10 years ago next month by the. way te do ‘this. ~ judge unfit for the bench St Laurent: Liberal administra- . Mr.- Justice ‘Landreville, after The Rand commission. report ition--had “‘proven himself unfit receiving a eopy of the Rand found the Sé-vear-old judge der- for the proper exercise of his report last week, Said he would elict in his duty, both oan-the judicial funetions."* not-resign and wanted another hench—and earlier ‘as mavor of | Justice . Minister- Cardin, tabl- hearing--and Mr. Cardin -said Sndhtrres-—Ont—thrauch his in- “he -will get’ that. valuement_in_a_Stt7.non- windfall — profit. in-stock from.-a. gas com- ~ Judge Calls FIRST_0F_KISD———— = pans-—that—sot—a—Shdhurv-fran- The ‘report of the &? “year-old bhite NTE : - — z commissioner, -a —retired justice in S0.DOI avneda siccling wth Rand Report of the Supreme Court of Can- perhaps the harshest. language | ae aan, i ibe first of its kind fm ever used publicly about a high | Malicious ana en history Canad an judge. commissiqner : The inquiry was ordered by — ’ E the government when it was. TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice faced with a> request from the -+-Strike- Impact: .Leo.-Landreville said _on_a (BC. Law Society of Upper. Canada television “interview Monday (Ontario) ‘for the “femoval “or “Hits ‘Montreal. night that-the Rand report,ta-the-_judge_because —of his —ae- : bled earlier in the dav—is “ini-—ceptance of-7,500-free—shares- in MONTREAL (CP) The Mont- qWitious, malicious. unjust, and Northern Ontario: Natural Gas real area groaned Monday un- prejudiced. .Co.. in - 1957. soon, -after “he : weat dex the tmpact of the: Canada- The report deolared the On- to the bench wide railway. strike oe oe uae wmGiE Mtr. Justice. Landreville had Cause... of. _.the.-consternation.. Cardin: siiebioataiies scale best evar ct Su Wee was the traffic: problenys” gener=~onment will ask Parliament to us city council gave NONG the ated by the stoppage. of trains pamove him. municipal. franchise. which ~ normally . carry 42,000: “T have done nothing ‘legally Mr. Rand in his support de : tommuters tn and from work ‘ethieally or morally wrong, scribed the conduct of the judge places in the city When anyone proves that I have in the stock transaction as “This is a very trying day,” [ will resign,’ Mr. Justice Lan ‘trailing odors of scandal aris- said an official of the Montreal drevitle said on the news broad- ing from its initiation while he Transportation Commission a8 east. Was mayor and consummated ST. JOHN'S. Nild CP) —Al unknownmsparty leanings. least. tivn.tiheral. members _ of the Newfoundland Jegislature, CHANG 7ED POSTS e > including ‘one. of. Premier Small- Mr. Curtis, for 17 years at- “woods cabinet) ministers, were torney - general, resigned that re-elected -by acclamation Mon- portfolio last month to take the dev when nominations closed post of president of the-execu~+ far the Sept. & provincial elec- Contiiued on page 3, col. 4) tien * However, .& eompicte picture Mf all candidates in the running for the remaining 40 seats may net he khewn: for severad. days PORE EST LEO AT ete kee ota tave hit tel-“raph and lone distance tele- Phone? services: across the prove in Pry ly preg ord hosts, taxi and RCMP. radios inte service immodiately vafter Wesinations clased at 2. p.m, NDT — in ‘tempts to get. the Now of ecneddate into elee- toral, headar irters. here - i hicf. elect 0 icer ® R. ¢ Trickett closed sO Ce, 2% an nad. renericd. an a to f 6} candidates wore O'fi- C13) Vu operted..to have filed. pa- Pp . 2 > e Keown to bé-clected wire cab- in ter Leslie R. Curtis in Tu vate and Liberal A.C. Wornell in Hermitage. dnelnding these two omen, the names Anni Henschel. (LEFT) and reachine electoral headquarters fer son. Joachim, 17, are held showed 28 Liberals, 26 Progres- by West Berlin police in con- sive Conservatives; —two~-New. Democratic Party members; neefion with the kidnaping of two Independent Liberals, one) Audrey Klewer, 4, of Montre. f Three fitures at vesterday’s. ed. ferry: service bei ween Bor- union local 197 meeting in den and Cape Tormentine. Borden are seen here. follow-. From left to right, strike lead- ing decision to resume er Everett FOLLOWING BORDEN TALKS den: tative Barry union. represen Hould of Mone- ton:, and. Willard Pickering, Borden, union local president. national —~— = — mone limit- MacLeod of Bor- Supreme CourtJu dgeSaid ~ UnfitTo Remain On Bench the commission-operated city The dayeof mv resignation I bus service strove to -agcommo- wil] fix. I will not he pressured date the majority of the traim- hy anyone to” resign less commuters “T have no doubt that I would Ali over town, people turned he setting a bad example by up late for work, ttaffie crawled resigning—there would be a law along streets alrehdy = strewn for the rich, a law for the poor, with detours caused by big but na law ‘for a judge construation projects and ,mot- “If } had done anything wrong orists looked desperately for I would resign... indeed would he. av poor judge: ave 40 dosthat." ~ Two Nfld. Liberals ~ Given Acclamations By DON MeLFON —RAFking space. ent and _fwo Independents with Independent and two Independ- | al, Canada, who. was oo J - —=thad.- HELD IN KIDNAPPING while he was a judge of the Su- preme Court of Ontario i There had been grave suspicion of impropriety obliging the judge to remove the “suspicion and establish his innocence, but he had failed to fin thiss justifiably Besides blistering the judge— one of the last appointed bythe ~St—Latirent-government—for_his “ldirect part ‘in the stock deal. |Commissioner Rand found he committeds..*g- rors: s jtempt™: of his own Supreme ‘Court and of the Ontario’ securi- ities commission __ INS'DE TODAY Island news” Stuummerside Deaths Editorials Kings, Queens, Women's Sport Comics Classified Finance, Markets_ City =. 4 a week Anoth- 22, sus- (AP Ber tinharmed last Friday after she disappeared er son, Juergen Henschel, is’ considered the prime pect and is still missing Wirephoto hy cable from lin) con--- Be The four-day oh ' HAMPTON, TU ESDAY, \ NK : + Xx \ os \BORDEN ing), president. of local 127, Willard Picker- tative Barry Hould ‘hz direc said ed -the. members who Sirk on XA \ \ aN \8\ \\ that a limited ferry service would the regulat shift to rep ork for go into. operation a8" o'clock work at 8 a.m. daylight aN inchyde paxsenzers, \this’ morning. National union representative | Barry Hould\ met with the union | .at the curling\rink here and the’ ~ decision was announced to the press at 5.10 in a statement read by. Mr. Pickering. The text of thé statement as follows: ‘Membership of local 27. af- ter considering a directive\from their. national president and ‘tak- ing into e@ffSideration the exist ing traffic situation on” Prince Edward Island, fully realize the will” relieve any resulting effects—involvel if a prolenzed_ tie-up ‘of ferry servie- es was allowed to exist - “Therefore, the loc al 127 a emnnc rs mage Wage, Price — Control Due - For Meeting OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Pearson-said Monday in the Commons that federal and pro yincial finance ministers will discuss next week possible legis- lation—te__control_ wages and prices. = = He_was- replying te Opposition Leader Diéfetbaker. who asked whether the government will call the provinces together to tr) to reach agreement for ‘‘co- operative legislative’ on control of wages ‘and\prices, a matter of provincial jurisdiction. -Mr-—Pearsom-said.-the federal__and_his crews who.cooperated to. and: provincial finance: ministers will -meet_next week and" on the, agenda.” Manitobe. Team Wins - Canoe Race NEW YORK (CP)--A- canoe team from Manitoba won the 470-mile race along t ancient fur route from Montreal to New York City The Manitoba team, after the first two days. finished about 100 ‘yards ahead of the Alberta) team. The British Co- lumbia canoe trailed, about a auarter-milechack In the total time elapsed, how- Lever, British Columbia vsecond and-Alberta third: The race, between 10 eanoes -manned by six paddlers each, Wwas-a-re-enactment—of- ploits of ‘pioneer canoe paddlers, and was staged to publicize the 1967 Canadian centennial cele- ‘hration and Expo 67 in Mont- real The Canadian Northwest canoes provinces and Yukon ies. The | finish line Manhattan's 79th. Street on the Hudson River Ninety-nine canoeists pated in the eighty-day Fire Chiefs Hold Meeting SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP)— annual meeting of the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs . opened Monday with more: than. #4) delegates from across Canada attending. | City Manager Stan'ev R. Price lof Saint John told delegates ‘that [600 wooden biildings had heen demolished here in the last four represented the andthe territor was at marina “partiet race. . siyears as part of the city’s urhan erenew al program Lunar Orbiter Completes Task Va. (AP: ‘Orbiter—completed. today round of. taking Closing out with in which Survevor I soft landing early in Lunar its pictures ‘of the nyoon, the area made its duly National Space spokesmen reported. the Agency space- craft at 9:23 aim. EDT. made 16 photographs of the Tast of nin Weritial ta sites for United States Apollo astronauts. Tuesday, Aug. 30. “ment ‘ Premier Sees Problems. Relieved By Decision Premier \lex Campbell ' said last night ‘the restoration of limited ferry. service . between possible con- gestion at ‘Nood Islands within the\ immediate future. “Even although the Bordefi executive. of ferry service- has been partially and ind national represen. restored we are still faced with ———_ the -serious’ tonsequerites to-our.. “potatemdnstry “unless” a” settie-—~ is reached. nationally by which-rail services restored. “Our | emergency \. measures committee will be on call during “pf. rpmainder of the strike and dy to act in any “emergency. Reservations on the Wood {s- lands ferry will be~honored until. bY the Leader of the Opposition denc Friday evening and all=persons who® had prevjdusly- reserved ace at- Wood Islands‘and who! now intend to travel via Borden are. request-d> to: cancel their reservation. All commercial traf- ; fic will now be given priori at Wood Islands. COMMENDS EFFORTS “L wish to commend the ex- cellent work of Major Orin Simons and the public servants who worked. with him around the clock to ensure orderly and con- venient. passage to motorists at Wood Islands. Also Capt: Hunter, the full’-in— providing increased this-is--services during the ‘emergency | and to the general public: whose cooperation at all times enabled our emergency measures coni- mittee to establish priorities | without involving delays at the Monday | leader delicate was the. -ex-,: long... shots of. ferry terminals. —“The... tourist” department presently. preparing advertise- ments for mainland radio and press in an effort to attract Vis- itars ‘to the province for the Labor Day weekend. “As to the Leader. of the Op- position’s. suggestion that a special session of the legislature be now called. “the Premier re- plied ‘during the last two weeks negotiations were being CELEBRATED STATISTIC Steven Dulk of Toronto were born within six minutes of the hour predicted She's only a week old, But Ouelette of the Searborough suburb of Toron- might he a cele- brit) She and the daughter of & Antoinette to already Kn | Island Like The Dew” N \ \ \ \ LY \ = \ ‘Tiiied Bo 5 on fi e Scheduled For zs AUGUST 30, 1966. = % Nv \ > Rai : oy \ ~ \ \ : \ \ “TN ‘Mcastive DS) dd, tt quite lear that they calc yw Han- 2 limited, traffic whith Swoult a eS S\vehae lag and” tourist. trailers) conducted w nein pro d Vvintial governm gis an nions and\the ultimate resiits of these all. It issmy considered that any hasty and arbitraryact- ions by any party t6 these gotiations, such as calling t legislature, might\have made the present resuits of \the negotia- tions impossible, because any sot to the strike could not be ‘dictated by =provincial- legis- lation. = CHARGES ANSWERED “The experience. of the Wond Islands ferry system. in handling all offering traffic: denies” quite adequately the statement made » ‘with the boats off the col. ft Monday (Cont nued on page 3, I Neial separ TRA \ XQ \ No Bi | Creditiste \ Quits: Party formerly his -party's top ’sae-" Nticiay in Commons debates, was asked\to leave because of nis ‘open: adyocacy of Québec inde- pendence. ‘He was. elected eight. * daysago. as president of Lé.Ral- liement\. National, a new provine- attst group in Quebe \Nhangigis (Megan- .Mr> Gregoire’s leader. MN is group. pa Raymon Mic was nan sbecesgor AS OPPQSES. SEPA Mr. Caovette— sai ig absolutely \opposed . which he ntially “th Quebec. x Caow They \ came from\nowhere n the 196: 2 elee- _tion_to of. Quebec’ 8S ‘seats..in am rliament, while~ theirs ‘\western Social Credit\allies won | <four seats. WS The, 3% Soci Credi fielped to defeat ker government on n e vote in Februar declined steadily in internal split RY but elections and Partial Service At Borden said last ‘night he considered the | partial restoration of ferry ser- vice at Borden ‘‘not much good.” He said the most important traffic in this Province was that moving farm produce and it by Wood Islands. He_regretted he had—not been able to personally discuss the > crisis with railway men im the past week or so. If he had he thought it possible some com- promise could have been worked out. - That was w why he “had. suggest- ed yesterday a special. session of the P.E.I. Legislature be call- ed at once to deal with trans- portation. problems could get around a common table.”” In a statement earlier in the day he said: “The Conservative party in this province has been keeping _ment Mr. and Mrs by the Dominion Bureau’ of Statistics for the birth of Can ada’s 20,000,000th citizen | Ai. would. -still_be limited. to_move~- “when” we i * Not Much Good, Shaw Says Opposition tans WR = Shaw: “in aia Touch with the strike jyityt=— situation and has given every ‘possible support to ,every effort aimed at an alleviation of the strike crises. NO CLEAR PLAN Mr. Shaw said that at a meet- | ing ot the elected representatives | of the province in — Chariotte- town Saturday, -it was decided that in view ‘of the absence up to the moment. of a clear-cut plan of action and the lack of definiteness in plans\at the fed- _.eral and provincial levels that the- premier--of. the. provitice. be | asked to call a meeting of a special legislative session with: ,out delay. “There seems to be a lack of co-ordination and planning among. our own provin- cial. groups and‘there is little | action regarding appropriate action from Ottawa. ‘Continued on page — 3, col. . tionetie’s father, holds a Anthony silver cup’ presented * by nurses at Toronto East Ge- neral Hospital. while - mother holds the cause of it all, (CP Wirephoto) NOT MORB said wou wer\found \ standa Net | vative spokes -goire’s » \departure a agmentation of Mr. Yo constructive | 4? WEATHER southwest 20. TEN CENTS N Cloudv, showers or thunders how ers; 4 ind then northwest 1 high 50 and 70. Wednesday sunny. 5. Low 1? FAG! q Bill Orders ay Strike ‘Interim Wage Boost passeitger \ The outspoken Lapoinid, MP, table under the..threat-of coms pulsory arbitration. Railway. union leaders- imme- diately denoun the govern- ment proposals and predicted that most of the 118,000. striking railway. workers would refuse to. comply. mh bilf or ring’ an end tq the ike that an Friday was\in- troduced. by Minister. Pearson, who sa walkout, would tional dis The . Ne\ itself rime betome a na- iecused by Con- n of playing ics in a natio ul emergen ent sought an overnight ad= nm to’ study the. back- to-~ woe on ~ pol three-member ORTAWA i Se And then ithere \were eight C ditistes in ds se er en the Co ons : : { The n'ttsh Creditiste “MP, Sena rr Be eeciiguorntt ouse Leater Gilles Gregoire Ne Pointe), stormed out of\.a OTTAWA (CP) Ns Parliament to resume bargaining,’ with e party caucus Monday and Cred. was .asked Monday \to outlaw deadline of Nov. iS to make itiste Neader Real Caouette an- ‘the railway strike by Nmposing ‘progress. If they don't, rompul nounced\that his erstwhile lieu- an\ interim. eight-per-cent\ wage. sory arbitration. procedures tenant would OE sit 88 increase and ordering ‘both could be applied’ by the govern an_ independent. sides back to the bargaining ment. A board = ap- pol n ted by the government > would handle the arhitration Howeyer, it wouldn't be inau gurated if a federal -mediator decided “favorable. progress 19 bargaining was being made hy the deadline. At the same fime, introduced * proposing a power a prolonged ‘eral commission to ¢ ment the govern second iN new “ox bill ted- the. entire field of transportation Among other agenc® would administer legislation to give unprecedented” ting freight rates.,. the freedom li things, ine mae railwaya\, in” set- getting rid. of nes and ning unprofitable passen- ee branch ndo in rvices. Ho any ‘a_ three-hour Yecess - Debate on second Peading be- was arr ae | Debate 0 ‘to Shegin la tives saying they were willing to work: call night Breet’ ier ending legislation Suen NS ORDERS. END See \The legislat n- orders union leaders. to the ike - of 118,000 wor ry ernment. House le aiggested Nibe minute ‘the Dill Niefenbaker mi he given DR Parlia ent. . Adtitional, time to fitigh -the bill vides See in- sf New Mr. Diefen- terim wage increase made, up bake lined. He will restime of fourNper cent of pay ret today. Y \ active to<Jan. 1, Sand. another Marlior Sopsecvative four per ret active ta. Mrs said t ea be willing Neen It orders railways an Pearson “OTTAWA. iCP}— Prime ‘ister. Pearson told the Commons” ‘Monday night: his bill to end the \Tailway . strike is almost identi- ‘eal to legislation passed by the former Diefenbaker government jin 1958. Opening debate “on “the meas- | he said- quick Parliamen- tary intervention in. the wage \dispute, has become necessary and inevitable. Parliament had_ iniervened ithree times since 1950 to_halt ure, strikes affecting transportation © |services, In 1958, the Conservative gov- én for this purpose alter gan at iscussion:-———-——-\— son Sreent reading was Yenbaker with, Conserva- Hdyse* Tianna seu Pm. tion to -Rit<through> the night ta get id gos a “wtrtke- ending Bit Sthrortgh. | vee journment orks Minister pt and... pm. Only before” e rail bill @uess Mi, Pear: positing Leader. Die _ it. res ties the at 2:30 Di fenbaker ‘ ‘was speaking the tr rmal came. Although - on His Bill. ~ 10 aad Tiraith; 5m Mint lions sate Saikig seamen tn foe to_return te work, granting an’ ‘oterim wage increase ofeight pet.rent and proving for ¢ tion if later ne The Pearson. bill nie same. provisions,— pulsory ntiations rbitra- iled a ht interim> wage hoost a ei cent for rail .workers. eR “prim ibill?* jenba then. ort made so many nd e . what ker don't Mr minister say Opposition interjected did the remember Diefenbaker Doubtful Unions Will Obey Laws iy ‘-OPFAWA—CCP) | Leader Diefenbaker . questioned |Monday whether . striking rail- way workers would obey a law | providing for an eight-per-cent | wage increase and compulsory | arbitration: | Speaking in the Commons on | the government's strike ending bill, he asked: an asstirance from the cabinet ‘that the 118,- 000 strikers will return to work if the legislation is passed. | _ Wyewoul he i. dang Rerous, de- OTTAWA ‘CP) — Fotir, lead- ers of striking railway tinions met Prime Minister Pearson Monday night to voice their op- position to the government's proposals to Parliament for out- lawing the pation wige rail strike, The meeting began, shortly after the Commons adjourned idebate on the bill). whith would lorder the strikers hack to work immediately ‘approval. Its terms include an interim wage’ settlement of eight per jcent and instructions to. both iparties to resume bargaining junder the threat 6f- ¢ompulsory | arbitration. R. C. Smith, negotiator for thé international non-opérating |brofherhoods, said the meeting was requested by the unions ‘‘to inform the. prime minister of our feelings about this bill.’ He said the negotiators had already been receiving calls ‘from union locals in other parts — Opposition ‘upon. Parliament's | about Leader Dief- reas I've speeches ‘since | Pearson replisd n ernment had introduced legisla- amid laughter structive - situation: if-Partament was placed in the position of being defied openly by the rail workers f Mr. Diefenbaker said the in.” ,terim wage increase set in the bill-amounts to only six.per cent during 1968. ‘ess than had heen recommended. hy the, conciia- tion boards in the wage disputes ; The legislation provides for a four-per-cent boost retroactive to last Jan. | and a further four 1, of the. country ‘ per cent retroactive to last eine ¢ July Union Leaders” Are Oppose: ham na to accept the ferms of the leg islation. give Also Ww. in.” at “They the inmen meeting P, Kelly of the Brotherhood of Railroad. Tra fion't- want ws te were Ww ! Smith of the Canadian. Brother hood of Railway. Transport and General Worke: and Tom Readehead of the .shoperaft un ions’ negotiating team President ‘Clade Indoin > the Canadian Labor Congress was called in to join the disen® sions. pp iets Phone Plekating Is Forbidden ST: JOHN'S, Nfld, 1 r Ay. alon- Telephone Co. was awarded an that premises until11:00 a m day, interim forbids ¥ injunction picketing “ Mondas at. ts Thore ~ tia SS a X \ x