iat At willy Sige, Me hae e Ny Pca Se Tete Be AF It’s Good For The Island a The Guardian Is For It he Guardian Gecord C. - woo Pith Jawlessness continues unabated VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 200 p.lstberiead ap Second, ¢ < CARRYING = armioads of from looted stores in the Watts . elothes, “Negro youths race arew of Los Angeles Friday as in the riot-torn district. (AP Wirephota): ¥ oxiavae ee apocesavanen Exchange Of Daughters Turned Down By Father FREDERICTON ‘CP) . An exchange of Evelyn Marie Con- nors, 5, for her 14-year-old sis- ter: Shirley.-was reported to have been refused Friday by the girls’ soldier father, who said hiselder. daughter would probably join her sister in New Brunswick if she got the chance to leave Wales Manager Robert A. Lockhart of radio station CFBC in Saint dohn;—--N-B-,-said-—Cpl-—-Atonzo Connors told him in an_ inter- view he wanted his whereabouts kept secret to avoid reporters. Cpl. Connors, a member of the Canadian Bisley team in England, brought Evelyn back with him, leaving the girl's di- vorced mother in Barry, Wales, with Shirley. He flew frem~tre- land to Montreal before a Lon don court order against the girl's departure could he served.. CHILD SAID HAPPY =r Lockhart “said Evelyn told him she was “very happy to he with her father” and never mentioned her mother. He quoted she woman looking after the girl as saying Evelyn never shed a_tear. ie. hanny as can be and plays steadily.” Fredericton Airport_Thursday.... ~Rarher Friday, Mrs Thomas =P atice “said” there “wat ter-in-law of the corporal, she was denied any information on the child from the army or RCMP, although she-> could ~ prove Evelyn was ‘‘terrified’’ of her father. Mrs. Tobin. said Eve- lyn's grandparents __w-e-r-e——in shock after her departure and she just wanted to confirm the child was ‘‘all right.” Divorced in 1963, Cpl Con- nors was given legal custody of Newfoundland works depart- land, France said .erder but it was not served he- Air- fore the two left Shannon ‘Will Rival Centre Here ST. JOHN'S, Nfid -yrviie f apenas 1 dd an adverse effect on a people's intellectual development. Speaking at the second con- gress of the National Society of nity, of Atholville school, ualism ‘‘poses a serious prob- | lem, that of the normal lectual growth of an entire peo- pin... | Quoting the findings of “ex- | perienced psychologists’’". who jhave- carried out studies in countries where some degree_ of bilingualism exists—whether ~* _aerough conviction. or neces- | Sity”--Brother Mederic said a | sienilar pattern emerged. This pattern was marked by ‘'a gen- ~ erally inferior and weaker intel- ligence quotient.” “Is this the result of biling- ualism itself or simply because one or other language is disre- |garded?"*; Brother Mederic asked. q CITES COUNTRIES Among the countries where such inferior growth had been (CP)—The found were South Africa, Ire- and Hawaii. It Acadians meeting in this north-) eastern New Brunswick:*commu- | Brother Mederic;” principal | said Biling-| intel-| | FOR GRADE 12, Maritime The following ftesults of the Grade XH Procincial Examinat- ons fhave been released by the Desdrianant of Education. All examination papers were set and read under the direct- of the Atlantic Provinces Examining Board. 2 PRIZE WINNERS The following Grade XI! stu- dents are awarded prizes pro- vided by the Provincial Govern- ment for those standing high- “ for the province’ 1. Rosslyn Shaw, Summerside- oll RR 2, Athena Regional High School ($100.00). 2. Douglas Sobey. Summer- Summerside High School the children bya New” Bruns- ment~has~-calied~tenders: for a--4!80__was_-found__among__Euro-7¢-<"q9) $5,000,000 arts and cultural cen- Pean immigrants not yet assim- wick court. He obtained visiting rights to see them in Wales this tre to be built here. as this prov- ince's biggest national centen- summer, and did not return from a drive with Evelyn. Mrs. Connors then obtained a court Three Men Killed On N.S. Highwa nial project. The building, lottetown's Confederation Centre Brother in size and scope, will contain concert hall, ary” because of the tendency O'Leary. O'Leary Regional High facilities ® for toward assimilaiton. In Canada, School ($25.69) federal bilingualism is contribute institutionalized.’* a public library, art gallery and music teaching. The government will HALIFAX (CP) — Three men $2,500,000 toward the cost. were killed Friday in a two-car —-—-——— coltision, near a highway _inter- | section 17°iniles north of here The unidentified victims were all riding in one of the two cars Two other persons were injured One of the cars left the road but did not overturn. The ac- cident occurred on the limited. hopes to be able to release | Bicentenhial Highway Statement “today about the word: Big N. e ACCESS 6 ng of a an! The father_and.‘child_arrived. ot tera eeu rear Be Baiitax dication of when the victims’ a ODUM... of, Woodstock... N.RB.,...S8i8- oe would. bereleased_~ “Bo Canadian Wh eat Sale Stirs World Trade Outlook * Ry CARL MOLLINS LONDON ‘CP)—The deal that will send millions of. bushels of Canadian” wheat to Riissia is stirring businessmen from Lon- don to Hong Kong, Zurich to Buenos Aires The_international zold. market Inst some of its glitter and ship- ping shares surged ahead Fri- day under the impact of the sale of 187,000,000 bushels of wheat to Russia. making a total of 222.000.0900 bushels to be shipped within a vear _Some economic experts _be- heved- the deal’s longer-term effect will he to boost world trade generally at a time when “Dawn Messer Is Annoyed Over Charge HALIFAX (CP)--Dawn Pene- lope Messer, daughter of tele- vision personality Don Messer, was fined $25 in police court Friday for <peeding Miss Messer, who had been driving a 1965 lilac-colored con- vertible at the time, pleaded not guilty. She said she thought the ear in which the police were driving contained a group’ of boys followinaz her It was 2:45 am. when the. incident took place. She said she had been followed on that street before. Constable Vincent Bourque saidwhe. did not use the. siren of the police car because. the car: were ona residential street. He signalled with his flashlight, he said, and finally overtook Miss Messer’s car out- side the city limits and stopped her by cutting off her car Miss Messer said $ heen frighteneff’- Guring the chase and became angry when she found it had been a policeman following her and flashing the light in her face. the indicators point to interna- tramp steamers tional commerce tapering off. London gold dealers pared the price Friday with the prospect of Russian gold landing on the market. Some dealers said the Russians have already started selling gold to pay for theawheat purchase In addition to the $450,000.000 Russia requires to pay for Ca- nadian wheat shipments before July 31, 1966, the Russians. will need an estimated $150,000,000 more [or-ether— supplies. MADE OTHER ORDERS Russia earlier this week or- dered 40,400,000 bushels of Ar- gentine wheat for an undies closed sum to make the total ordered. from_that--country —this season 73.500.000 bushels. An- Statement Due: ‘On LBJ Letter other 36,740,000 bushels is being | delivered France Shares of shipping compantes on the London Stock Exchange made a general advance Friday | as the wheat deal assured spec- ulators that the scramble for | shipping space will intensify. by Australia and | Gains ranged up to the four-| shilling (60-cent) advance from | A shillings ($8.40) recorded. by | Liner Holdings Pacific rose $1.75. A spokesman for International | Shipping Information Services | Fs Ltd. Canadian : cer- | © in London said the Canadian. | Soviet wheat deal ‘‘will tainly firm up the market” for | she had. INSIDE TODAY . Classified ...... 14 15, 16 WON Ses sesisseees ec is 15 Deathe< \ccccccccccccees.. 3 COMES wr sitisinsecccis 39 Sport bbe Vince Faseievics 9s Finaace. markets Setess Oa WOES oe ecebbiivecs 7 eee erreye rrr 4-| Summerside. cs | Kings, Queens, City . oo 5 Prince County ....... 2 OTTAWA ister Pearson (CP) —Prime said Friday Johnson on Viet Nam. hee aE “But he “sainthe—premient ts in a position to make the not entTenlettors peer: 27 tet tea _A_market ready idle at the moment. Economic eperts in London speculated that Russia's pros- pective-release of an-estimated SHOT Worth of gold to” Western markets will have a buoyant effect on world trade by increasing the amount of international currency in circu- lation at a time when the stpply was dwindling. ae letter from President al tight with only one per cent of the world fleet_reported lated by the “‘melting pot” in- the United States. The +protiem in Canada is to rival -Char- More pressing than in the U.S., Mederic said situation is In the U.S. -the ““tempo- “permanent and- Calling-for a scientific study ————— of the effects of bilingualism on |Canadian language and culture,’ ‘Brother Mederic said __ tradi- tional Acadian isolationism has not only cut Acadians off from Quebec but had erected 3 Carolyn Marie . MacLeod, “Wood Islands West, Montague Regional High School ($50.00). 4. Dianne Mae MacLeod, Ver- High School | $25.00). 5. Shirley Mae MacAusiland- 6. Jeannie Wright. -Bedeque., ‘Athena Regional High School ($25.00). The. fotlowinz prizes are | awarded by the Provincial Gov- | ernment to pupils standing a est in each public high school: First $25.00: second -- $15.90; third £10.00 The foliowing “Almost Be ten MILL VILLAGE, N.S “CP) Extensive use of a_ water bomber Friday encouraged 200 men fighting a 2,500-acre forest fire near this south shore vil- lage to say they have just about beaten it. Edge Dauphinee, chief pilot of the lands and—forests—-depart- ment, was up and down all day -with—his—Beaver-—bomber->—By mid-afternoon he had made 70 drops on the north flank of the fire where the most dangerous spots were breaking—out: i A navy helicopter also was In- strumental in helping to move firefighters swiftly to remote areas. It also made a tricky 100- foot winch lift of an injured man ; John Monks, 19, of Montreat Hotel, keep their eves peeled Fire_ SRO and a sailor at-the navy'’s Corn- wallis training hase near Digby, suffered a leg wound while cut- ting trees..on the fire_line..He was taken out by the ‘copter, given first aid by the crew, and later released after hospital treatment. A. lands and forests spokes- man_said the fire will he inder. control in another two days if there are, no ‘extraordinary flareups. Friday, winds were light and favored the men. Earlier in= the -week the flames, burning through valua- ble spruce and pine, threatened the nearby village of Charlest6n, home of 250 people, - and Can- ada‘s $4,000,000 satellite tracking station near here. The British —performers—ar- rived from Landon Friday '* and | Helen Murray, 2. non River. Montague Regional ' =EVF Prince Edward Island Like The Dew™ RLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1965. w WEATHER Scattered showers evening. 54 and 75. Sunday: Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS ® Acadian Sava Bilingualism | Has Intellectual Problem | By GUY RONDEAU “opaque walls” between prov- The National Society of Aca- CARAQUET, N.B. (CP)—An inces with the result that even dians represents “Acadians in Acadian ‘educationjst said Fri- Acadians did not act as a unl- New Brunswick, Nova Seotla day that bilingualism can have fied body. and Prince Edward @siand. Bd. Exam Results Announced | pupils. merited _ the a prizes Alberton High: 1, John Me- Neill: 2. Jean Vincent, 3. Fliza- beth Rarhbour. Athena High: 2. Jeannie Wright, 3. Shirley Buffs. Central Queens High: Har- land Wyand, 2. Wayne’ cuca 3. Lynda Snowie Fnglewood High: 1. John Vis- ser_2. Barbara Grace Webster, 3__Sherwood. David Clark. . Evangeline High: 1. Melina Arsenault, 2. Edmond Gailant, 3. Carmella Poirier. Kensington High: 1. Douglas Meek, 2. Gordon Murray, 3. Marjorie PaPynter. Kinkora High: 1. Nora Noon- an, 2. John Stewart, 3. Shirley Barry. Miscouche High: 1. Rosskyn Shaw, 1. Mary -Ann Marie Arsenault; 3. Gerald Richard MacDougall. Montague High: 1. Carolyn | ‘Marie MacLeod, 2. Dianne Mac- Leod, 3. Thomag Thane LeLa- cheur F Morell High: 1. Anne Maoel Smith. 2, Gemma Marie Dunn, 3. Pearle Georgia: MacBeth. —¥beary-Bigh:—1Shirley-Mae MacAusland, 2. Robert Kenneth Matheson, 4. son Stella Maris. High: 1. Anne | Marie Gaudin, 2. Audrey Marie | Gallant, 3. Gerard Edward Gau- | | thier. Summerside High: L ae 2 _Faward Lee, Ponies | Sati High: k Lc 2 esbate- Aan eae Tignish High: 1. Mary Fran- ces Gavin, 2. Patricia Mary Broderick. 3. Jean Marie My- ers, and Marion Theresa Shea equal. ‘Continued on page 5 col. 5) | Saint idkin Man” | Killed In Crash SAINT..JOHN, N_B.(CP) Walter Rov Currie. 18, of Saint John, formerly of Toronto, was killed early Friday when a car in which he was a, passenger coilided with a taxt about eight: miles east of here. The youth was a passenger in a car driven by navy sub-Lt. David Patton of Halifax. Driv- er_of-the-other car-was-Joseph Williams of Moncton. There were no other serious injuries. SOMEONE UP THERE MAY BE A BEATLE Teenag® airs, part of a crowd of 10,000 standing watch’. for a glimpse of the Beatles outside New York's Warwick lodged on the top two floors. begin a two-week US Canadian tour. (AP Wirephote) Jane Carol Morri- Mildred Ena at ‘anadian__ ~ devastation, “age. | “This e 4 ; od 2a pe een Soret MAJOR CORNRAD Local Officer Taking Unit To Cyprus OTTAWA ‘CP)—A, %-man re- connaissance squadron from Camp Gagetown, N.B., will take -.over patrol duties of ‘Cyprus in early. October from another, squadron of Royal Canadian Dragoons, the department of na- tional “defence announced Fri- day. The _ squadron, commanded_by. Maj. W. L. Conrad, 35, of Char- lottetown, P.E.I., will fly to Cy- prus in late September to join the 1,100-man Canadian United Nations Contingent there. * The 2nd Battalion, Canadian |Guards, commanded by Lieut.- Col. C. V. Carlson, 39, of Wey- burn, Sask., also leaves for Cy- _Prus in September. , nor, Glenn M. Anderson, winds southwest 15 in aftcrnoon an@ | ow-high sunny andwarm. ‘16 PAGES lif. National Guard 5 cent Into Los Angeles 5 000 Persons | Out Of LOS ANGELES (AP)-—Cali- fornia’s National Guard was or- ‘idered into the riot-torn south side of Los Angel s Friday as * thousands -of Negroes ran wild, (burning and looting over a 150- block area. California's lieutenant - gover- issued \the order by telephone from the ‘Los Angeles Airport as he ar- rived from Sacramento to con- |fer with city officials on ways to quell two days of violence in the city’s “‘black ghetto.” Maj.-Gen. Charles Ott of the state national guard said he ex- ipects he will be asked to supply 500 to 1,000 men to reinforce*the 900 local officers who'have been fighting rioters since Wednesday night. | The action came as a police spokesman said: ‘‘We simply do not have the men or equipment to control this situation. Looters are entirely out ef hand.”’ BUILDINGS AFIRE Fires blazed in more than half a dozen buildings on the south- east side, sending up columns of smoke visible over the entire tLos Angeles basin. : Brick - hurling rioters turned back many fire-fighting units, but squads of police got some of them through to fight the spreading flames. The police spokesman aid: “There have be n many cases of our men and helicopters be- ing stot at. Power is out. be-| - cause of the fires and we are trying to muster enough units to escort a water and power department truck into the area so there will not he a blackout after. dark.”’ _criminately Control In the third and worst day 9s? riots radiating outward from the south-end community of Watts, throngs estimated at several thousand roamed at will through a 150-block area. - A helicopter televising the scene swooped low over build- ing after building going up in flames, with no fire equipment in sight. Little knots of people stood around and watched. The helicopter, saying it was under rifle and~ pistol fire from the ground, suddenly soared and darted among the towering col- umns of black smoke visible throughout the Los Angeleg Dasin. In Thursday night's wild riot- ing, yoyths tossed rocks indis at Negroes and whites alike. Friday, there were no reports of Negroes being attacked. Anderson came to Los Angeles te confer with Police Chief Wil- liam H. Parker. “Law and order must be re stored and the state will assist Los Angeles officials.’ said Anderson, acting governor dur- ing the absence of Governor Edmund G. Brown tn Europe. “We have not been able te give sufficient protection to the people in the community from damage to their property _ and. injury to their persons,” Parker said. “To send enough police inta this area to handle it effectively we would have to strip the rest of the city.’ He said police are changing tactics and plan mass arrests under an unlawfu) assembly law. . CONTROVERSY RECALLED 2nd World War Ended -20YearsAgoThisEvening — By WILLIAM NEVILLE Twenty years ago,. at seven “o'clock on the evening of Aug. 14, 1945, President Harry S. Truman stepped onto the White House porch and proclaimed to the world: “This is the great day. This is the day-we-have~ been-jooking ,for.” The war with Japan was over and with it the Second World | War. ~“=—Over after almost six years cul- of _conflict__and~ misery. minating in the mushroom clouds over Hiroshima and Nagasaki which ushered in the atomic age and left an ‘indelible imprint on world af- fairs. =—Over after more than 15,- 000.000 war dead, countless. other casualties and devas- —tation—_which—took--a-—decade and more to repair. ‘Although spared the physical Canada_ made_ its human contribution to the cafn- Almost 42,0 Canadians were killed in hattle against iNazi Germany, Italy and | Japan. | PAID GREAT PRICE Said Prime Minister zie King that night ago: Macken- 20 years peace we have pur- chased at a great price, a very great price. Now our people must do their -utmost to be |worthy of it.” Canadians heard the news of Japan's unconditional = surren- der not from Truman. but from British Prime Minister Clement Attlee “The last of our enemies Is laid low,’ he said in a broad- cast « carried throughout — this country. “Let all who can-relax— enjoy themselves.” And~ Canadians. did all through that night and. the next day, formally “proclaimed V-J Day for victory .over Japan. Mr. King made Aug 15 a na- tionals holiday; in fact, ‘‘a holi- day with pay,” said the frugal prime minister PLAYED SMALL ROLE For Canada, the end of the war in the Pacific lacked the same direct impact it carried for some of the Allied ‘nations. This country's armed forces, lat a V-I_ Day. strength of. 739,. 972, had concentrated oan. the | European campaign and had. ‘ticularly Burma, RTE IRAN TSN attention to. the -Pacific. Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, then Canada’s defence minister said in a V~J Day statement this country Just then was ready to commit large military resources to the assault on Japan. Sen “That our Pacific force will not now be. required to go into battle is a reason for deep re- joicing and solemn _thanksgiv- ing,” he said. Canadian ‘forces had, how- ever, already played some role in the Pacific theatre. : Several RCAF squadrons, chiefly transport units, had operated.in.Southeast—Asia,—par- under British command. The Canadian- manned cniiser Uganda served with the British fleet in opera- tions... against. Truk....and__the Japanese home islands. And a Canadian brigade group was part of an Allied force which landed at Kisk in: the Aleutiagsh Aug. 5, 1943, only” to find the Japanese had evac- uated the island a fortnigtt earlier. AT -HONG- KONG The best known and cer- tainly the most controversial— Canadian military effort in the Pacific came within ‘a month of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It was the Hong Kong expedition, a military disaster that still is dehated. At the request of the British government, Mr. King agreed In September, 1941, to send two Canadian battalions to help bol- ster the defence of “the 410- square-mile crown colony: off the China coast. The British request made no mention of an earlier memo from Prime Minister Churchill warning that, in event of Japa- nese attack, ‘there’ is no the slightest chance of holding Hong Kong or relieving it."’. With the cabinet agreed that Britain deserved Canada’s as “sistance, the government or- dered a force—Roval Rifles of Canada and Winnipeg Grena- diers—to the Far East They arrived. 1,975 strong. in Hong Kong on Nov. 16. On Dec, 7, Japan struck at Pearl Har- bor. The assault on Hong Kong began on Dec. 18 The battle, -Savage and shori, was _over_by 3:15 pm. Christmas Day Killed -or fatally wounded on official historian rece pees ge oe eee ere pens arnt had time since -V-E—Day the scene were 290 Canadians, * ress . Staff Writer. May_8,..1945,_to..turn._their.. full... The rempainder..wete Laken. Drie... —.--~.. |oner and another: 267 died is prison camps to raise the final toll :to 557—more than one in four of the original force. AfTION DERATED The incident set off a national furore at. home and_resulted: im the appointment of a royal com- mission headed by Chief Justice Sir Lyman Duff of the Supreme Court of Canada. Its main con- . clusion: -The expedition was nel- ther ill - conceived nor _badly "managed. This was directly contrary te charges by George Drew, then premier of Ontario, that the twa _hbattalions_were sent _ta Hong Kong .‘‘without even a fighting chance” and amid ‘‘shocking in- efficiency’’ in their manage- ment. The_final word...to_this date, least — came from Col. P. Stacey. the army’s Sard he in his the’ Second at Charles 1955 volumes — on Worth” War: “We can today: that the decision to reinforce Hong Kong was-a-—mistake. The idea that the arrival of two Canadian battalions in the Far East could exercise an‘important deterrent efféct upon Japan was -shown up, in the event, as an egreg- ous absurdity and one which cost the Allied cause the lose of 2,000 soldiers.” The attack on Pearl Harbar set off. an equally embittered episode within s.Canadian bor: ders Thousands of Japanese-Cana- dians were uprooted from their homes on the British Columbia Coast. many with no more than 24 hours’ notice, and resettle. ment ‘for .security’s sake” itn the B.C. interior or in Alberta. see FORCED TO MOVE With littl more than the shirts on their backs. they were” forced to give up their estab lished life, in numerous cases with only fractional compensa. tion, and take up hand labor jobs until the war ended The official army history was equaliv rough on the govern- ment for its judgment in this instance > There was, said the history, no Japanese plan for an attack on the North American main- land,_a_fear’ which_supposedly influenced the decision te shiff the Japanese-Canadians.