if It's-"Good: For The-Island ~ The Guardian Is For It a a - es Covers Prince: Edward. Island ‘Like The Dew” Authorized as Second Class Mall by the Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of postage im cash. “SCHOOL UNDERWAY The surf lifeguard school at the sudente will the YMCA began’ yesterday employment at the National and continues to..fune..15, with Park in one of eight Supervis-- 14 studenf€’ receiving instruc- ed areas along “the ‘Park's tions, At the end’ of the school : shores. Above, senior’ life- qualify for guard. David’ Large (CEN- TER), the school instructor, shows Douglas Moore-(LEFT) and. David. Johnston’ how to throw. a life line. ‘ ‘Education And Pollution Topics ntion Of Mayors Mount | ke\Up VANCOUVER (CP)—Eduea- ‘resolution “submitted by tion and pollution were the Royal, Que, which wanted the nain teples Tuesday” at open: toderatian ta: “ask provincial gov- ing” session of the Canadian ernmenis ‘to legislate provision Federation of Mayors and Mu- ‘1 other. sources of revenues nicipait‘ties conference. for school purposes and ease The. resolutions committee the tax, burden on property recommended a change in a owners. At Negroes Resume Anti-Fear March HERNANDO, Miss. (AP) — several Negroes stepped for- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and ‘ward, the officers shoved. them several aides resumed James H. off the highway: One Negro fell. Meredith's ‘march against “‘If you march in single file frontation with magn Jato march to China,’ a patrolman men. told Dr. .King, head of the South- The Negro civil rights leader ern Christian Leadership Con- and about eight other Negroes ference. “tee linked arms and walked down = «No, we ‘reg, just a highway, ‘starting at the spot Jackson,’ replied Dr. King. _ near here where redith, was felled by a sho ‘blast late MARCHED ON SHOULDER Monday on his’ mare to Jack The Negroes then headed son, Miss. . . , own the . highway, . single Half-a-dozen highway men stopped hem, them off the pavement. in patrol- ordered the road. When Earlier, in Memphis, where Meredith, is ‘in hospital, Dr. , King’ pledged a march through iMississippi “bigger !Selma.’ ' Meredith. 33, who -cracked the racial barrier at the University of Mississippi in 1962, was shot down in the 27th mile of his 225-" = Island Man Admitted To Bar Of N B mile walk from Memphis to —" Jackson. He, was reported re- covering. FREDERICTON (CP) — Six MOVE . FAILED. , Young men-were admitted to thea out Bar sotes News: Brunswick» -Fues- See tie highy bed 4 ' b t SESH in “Hernands, a white" Sie aie. Mahe Wo Hotere ay Un oe ee “ul § f r ‘ sy 7 : ; : + dith tried unsuccessfully, to Bathurst, N.B.; Ch&rles Emery Ne have his $25.000 bond reduced. Aubrey James Norvell, 40, an unemployed: hardware store clerk, was charged with as- sault and battery with intent to kill and iinet : ‘Thousands Of Cubans . Brison and Allisen Mills, both of Mencton,.. Charles. David Hughes, Fredericton; Gordon Simmons, Summerside, P.E.1., and Ross Webster, Westmount, Que. "Flee Hurricane Aima RY “feat! Tuesday aftera_brief-con—and~ stay off--the- ~road you—-can- id “Salad: than® _ ovement: ernments by ‘North. Bay, going to | file, walking on the shoulder ‘of . *The committee proposed sub. “treasurer, ment. but Mayor R. P.. Daw- shh of Mount Raval: pereen the chaa g e. Mayor Dawson asked what’ progress could be reported-from~ similar~ resol. ‘tions t6é Otlawa. Ald. Don Swailes of Winnipeg said tne -increased cost of edu- cation *"necds more than a dt | rect apyroach to the federal it needs; a direct “approach te the provincial gov- this organization.”” Chairman M. Ont., said the BNA “Act makes "eauication a ‘prov in- cial ma‘te-: 2 WANTS: ST inp Ald. Horace Brown of-Foronto “TT -tionk: that this body takes a stand on amending ihe BNA Act so. the |i federal government can: legally enter the educational field.” Mayor R. C. Maddocks of Castlegar, P-C., complained of Cecreasi ing DEOpGES ‘tax reven- ues,” ““We have a sitttation in Brit- ish Columbia where the govern- ment*is moving more and more |that into the fields where private en- terprise us-d-to be."'-Provincial ‘srants mounted to less than ‘taxes. on, privately-held-. prop- erty. Coe The amendment was - proved 2 MIAMI AP).—Killer Hurri- houses and some power lines on cane Aime. already responsible ‘hc istand- of Cayman Brae f& 72. deaths moved on Cuba-about 190 — south of the’ Tuesday. with_ ~¢""- mile-an- hour Cuban coas winds and iashing rains that TEP aT Poa HOA CR TO OE ATHOLSAN DS PGB Benn or HAW HAW DIES. ban Premier Castro's stagger. Thousands fled low ~ lying “ing -eccnomy. ; coastal arcas—ofCuba -and- its Alnia’s | tale -. foece® wints, Tle of Pines ‘as the huge,: wet pester all thenseaycfrom-Hon. orm thr a shed. relentlessty — duras in ‘Gentral ‘America .ty. 1° ithward out of the Caribbean the Florida straits, churned pp Sea at a s's-mile-an-hour pace. 90.000 square miles of: angry Wines’ were expected to rise aes, ‘ : fo hurricane force late Tuesday And squelly weather reached might on the Isle of . Pines, Af evce” farther: driving smatt ca jail cells are jammed craft into sheltered waters as ith Castro's: political prison: . i neth Cape Kennedy in vis, and over aH of western central Florida. Cuba. shortly -afterward. Two ships caught in, the hur- Squalis hit Key West, Florida’s rieane, the Gulfs Trader and Southernmost city, Tuesday Morine Services rad®ed the morning and rose” steadily US. Weather Bureau that. they toward gale velocity. Due to the were {.aht'ng seas 20 to 30 feet storm's: urcertain movement, Hall just nosth. of the storm's irrecacters declinéd .ta speen- eve 4 late uct later on the; fate of A te:nade snaking out. of the the” heaily-populated southeast torm - system eee several Florida mainland Other. resolutions: ' =Peiition the federal govern ment to allow’ ratepayers deduct . realty taxes paid i “Thunic patie ies from taxable Choose Sides | ! Seek aa amendment to the MONTREAL (CP), — Frank National Housing Act to Hanley, returned as an_ inde- ‘broaricn its scope and enable pendent member for the Mont-, greater 2sristance jn “upgrad- real riding of Ste. Anne in Sun- ing ter areas.! 1% Capt. Norman Raillie Ste- wart, who. as the, original Lord Haw Haw. of World War 'T broadcast from Bremen for the Gormens, “collapsed on a Dublin, Ireland, , street Tues- day and ‘diec in a hospital. He was: 57. Baillie-Stewart was jailed ‘er treason and. releas- ed in 1949 frem Britainis Park- jurst Prise Since .then he. had lived ayietly in a Dublin y fuburb ‘ 3 (AP ' Wirenhata) (, 3? ° 6 Sy, ~ 3 = # =. EF. Dickerson of “Telected president of the ‘ident. TA, Walthen Gaudet. QC; Charlot- . |tetown: ad \County,_ _m.ssion to the: aAeeeral, Rover: ot QC. Robert Smith, Stewart’ : ‘dent presented his report for. the it is about time” ap- |whether services and provide bet- day's ntegration of urban tion, s*id Tuesday he will sup- E dependent members elected. fhe. const ospid=he=willvote=hy-issue” and. t _ CHARLOTTETOWN, Access ts anette ttt CO ALON DOMESTIC MARKETS BEING LOST? Geneva, outgoing president By KEN SMITH trade iCanadian Press Business: Editor rey B talks at. Style, ada had: offered specific tariff MONTREAL (CP) Canada of the Canadian Manufacturers’ reductiois at the talks two |may be negotiating away its es- Association, sald Tuesday sears ago in expectation that jsential | domestic markets eA in’ He toid the 9th annual meel- the | Urited . States, European Common Market and. other. =<eonnttics—would= reduee— their tariffs by 50 per cent in the | Chief Justice Fleced | Head Of Canadian Club The Chief Justice for thé Pro- vince, Hon.. Thane A. Campbell of Summerside, last- night-.was Cana- dian Club of Prince Edward Is- land.He. succeeds Alex Wilson_ ef Charlottetown. Retiring vice- -president w.J. ‘Hancox presided in the absence “rot=the president Lieutenant - Govern MacDonaid Other ' eet tees vice-president, wt W.. is honorary presi- officers include: Gordon Bennett; Queens County, . GD. MeKnight, vice-president Prince. Allison. McLean, _Sum- honorary _ secretary- Jack A» MacAndrew. A.*.Walthen . Gau- County # Montague: mersi¢e: Directers are: Wright, Mrs. . Evelyn Cudmore, | Gordon Avard. Mrs, Frank Cut- | cliffe Fredericton. »Mr Hancex as acting sic CHIEF - SUSTICE CAMPBELL ‘bership, Robert Smith, speak- lers, and Ross C. Merriam, cour mg- secretary-treasurer. The meeting was held at the Charlottstown Hotel. year. Other veports were given | by Miss Mabel Matheson, mem- Lesage Is Silent On Resignation QUEBEC (CP). — Premier work slopnage by some 1,600 Jean Lesage, — still_ silent on professional ~men~ and—-women whether he plans to resign after employec by _ the _ Provincial the nzrrow election defeat of government. ~ nis Quebec Liberal party, said. paniel--Johnson,—whose- Union. Tuesday “a tueeting of his: cabl- Nationale won °55__ seats net scheduled for__today--—-willeseainer=5T-for=the® ‘Liberats has: deal wiih ‘ ‘routine, though press- called on the premier to “‘fol- pl aebiokas ‘low established recedent’~-and-- Mr. Lesage _ sald constitu: | step dager - ‘ tional custom makes it. neces- °': el dame te Meeimutaneas | ee sure we will be -called lereated by the Sunday election, eee. to ree Oe eocernitent the “government ‘should (7°O) SIG. -"t) dontieon. |make no appointments and that; The Union Nationale leader ° it shou'd deal_only with press-'says his party now should’ take ing routine matters. ever the government, with him- The premier made the state- self as premier. iment when he was_ asked the cabinet meeting \woulti cea’. -with a month-long Independents provincial, general _ elec- ‘port the Un: on Nationale party. ‘Dani«l ‘Johnson’s Union Na- ; tionale party won $5 seats m3 the’| lezislature Sunday while # Premier Jeon Lesage’s Liberal party took 51. Mr. Hanley. is one of two In- “My pesple have’ instructed me: to curport the. Union Na- tionale as long as they present legislation to the advantage of the—people of Ste. Anne’s,”’ he. said_ in a. telephone interview: “They felt that according to itution the party® with ) the moat seats should govern.” ‘Arthur Sovuin, the other in- dependest momber elected, has not, follow . any “party. line. However he said he would provide "some support for ‘the Liberals as.‘'] agree, withs85. per... cent of their fpr: legis- lation * wi * INSIDE TODAY CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1966. - "Manufacturers ‘Alarmed | Over Geneva Trade Talks Humph- | manufactured goods our border in increasing volume =trom:-altcover- the -world,.- it be- ' another hard look at the offer “Storms Hit ~ +~-Felegraph..... s g of the association that Can- trade-nezotiations, a PROS ECTS ‘BLEAK “There now is: little prospect: that this will be achieved. and, =~ aS a. consequence the....«doors | : which have oe i crively prevented Canadian exports of from ‘ex- pundin? on a broad plateau are, likelV¥ ‘o remain closed; “with imports -of—fully -manu-— factured goods pouring across “W.J. BROWN Local Man Is Lions Goverrior W- J-—"Bilr' Brown of. Charlottetown Lions Club elected District Governor of Dis- - otrict-41-N-1—at;-the—Lions~annital-~ hooves Gur government to take multiple district convention held at Portland. Maine yesterday. The news was received by tele- phone from Allison Gill of fhe, list which’ we. made in Geneva iwo years ago to make certain that we are not negotiating Continued on page 3 col. 4° Mr, Brown's . campaign chair- jman in. the governorship race. ; e Electrical. the Charlottetown Lion a provinces of P.E.I, _In-Maritimes- HALIFAX (OP) — Severe elec- trical storms struck many areas including 89 members ‘Lions Clubs in-this Province. Sunny. with a few warm. e ' @ ‘ > Planned a = By HAROLD: MORRISON BRUSSELS = (CP)- “North Ate antic foreign ministers failed Tuesday “tc break a’ deadlock over the future of 70,000 French troopin West Germany and ex- ternal Affairs Minister Paul Martin was. forced to call a Wiltsin discussions and shift. at- tention elsewhere. The Canedian minister, siding over the NATO council, if vd a press conference that the. rence oe issue will be reopened today in European” security.” ~~ Ja special session. ; the from. #NATO's was tary command July 1 \Charlotietown Club, , who was nf the Maritime Provinces Tues-—; vay night, knocking out power _and communications and damag- | ing several buildings. There were no. immediate re- ports of injuries, but five mem- bers of. a family were forcet to flee their burning ‘ome after more experiments . than any it was struck by lightning at the previous U.S. spacecraft, flew | northern tip of Cape Breton Is- jn ornit- arcund the earth “in| Jand. yerfect condition’. on its first New Satelite — | Goes Into Orbir~| P OGO ill, a satellite bearing | CAPE KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) | ' At A Glance - NATO members ‘had proposed a committee of five countries: to negotiate the future role of the troops after France withdraws integrated . mill- SAYS NOT POLITICAL. _ Officials —said—Freneh—Foreign— ~“Manv Minister Couve de Murville said he believes the troops prob- ‘lem is a military and not a po- litical one and there ‘is Ro need for French negotiations with the ~- committee of ° five-the United States, . Britain, The © Nether- Martin ssid he has informally role negotiated by | Man- ltive ‘of « one NATO © country iwhich ‘would meet with NATO's | jsupreme commander and the | Parliament By THE CANADIAN PRESS TUESDAY, June 7,.. 1966 Labor Minister Nicholson 4 Lightning strikes caused a day in space Tuesday, ready to | and Transport Minister Pick- section of Saint John, N.B. | relations to this planet. \brief power failure in a farge junrave! mysteries of the sun’s| J 011 met to discuss a strike | vote approved ‘by 1,200_work-- A brief blackout was report: | Sensors aboard the 1,138-| ers along the St. “Lawrence -ed_in. the Woodstock, N.B. area. where a church steeple wes \physical Observatory—found the . damaged by lightning. bun- | South Stores ~Treomost: Ama s,~ Ahn. ont ~experiments an storms were brief and rainfall turned on )Friday. ae Was Tigh tenner i an enya meer et area | Hardest hit area sebeaced to | he: satelite “may” eke | irarne northern Mb: oF officials, when solar flares from | be the ex the sun make it too hazardous | Cape Breton Island. Several aa homes were hit by lightning and to launch moon, two-storey house. was es- ttoyed by a resulting fire but) OGO blasted off at 10:48 p.m. Mrs,-Mary~Dixoh and her four ‘Monday. asthe payload of—an Atlas- Agena ome ‘children escaped unhurt. astronauts .to the! G0—for—Orhiting Geo- | Seaway. The workers” approved = sun and earth's horizon Tues: | walkout for June 17 x back - communications. |day-.and..locked—.the._bug-like |.demar aSswere disrupted on Nova Scotia's craft in position so that its nds for higher Speaker Lucien oe be | anndunced tighter security re- ooacwegtretions. for the ommons in the wake of aD blast last “month that killed” the , bomber. The steps include an in- creased protective staff, clo-er _ control over visitors, including checking of pack- ages, and issuing of identity cards to employees, members |-of the Press Gallery and min-— isterial staff. Prime Minister Pearson an- nounced cancellation’ of a fed-: eral - provincial conference scheduled for Victoria June 16-18 to ‘discuss eduoation. % Uncertainty” about _ would represent two provinces An \tion cam \ aprogress in “p.m. Hite’? outlines in the wake of close-provincial elections forced a switch for the. conference. this.fall..in, OPK ca, -he said. The buréau of statistics Te: ported that the -consumer price index in May rose to a record 143.4, » one-fifth of a point. The Commons “studied and ments to the approved amend Customs Tariff “Act outlined earlier in .Finance « Minister Sharp’s budget. sods Then it approved a resolu: 4 tion carrying amendments to the Excise Act and _ started __study on one amending in: come taxes. WEDNESDAY, June & The Commons meets at 2:30 _to continue study of a resolution on-income tax amendments. The Senate meets at 3 pm: Economic Progress ‘Apps: winds westerly. and 70. Thursday. sunny, WEATHER. cloud’ periods and," 20, Low-high 35 i. warm, © ayvivey! : ot P AGES fg? chairman of the French chiefs of staff. Martin. and other foreign min: isters -maintain political issues are involve’ in the decision and can be settled only by govern- ments and not generals. SHIFTS TALKS Martin shifted afternoon ° ‘die. _ cussion to East-West relations. pre- — The ministers branded as too hasty any NATO initiative now for an East-West conference on They emphasized, “however, that cautious and continuing. ef- forts. shoud be- made te im prove Fast-West: relations. This. torpedoed; a Danish pra posal calling for. a. conference “between. the NATO.and Warsaw Pact nations. The latter now ‘are meeting in Moscow. NATO represeniatives— maintain the troops issue is the most critical the organization faces. her forces. This could demoralize West \Germary which believes that se long-as Allied forces remain on- ~ | The high honor bestowed gar lands. Italy and West Germany. |hor territory her partners would. ~ will | _|make fim responsible for ~ up- jexplored _ the possibility of of- attack from the Fast. France wards af 40 Lions Clubs in the fering a solution of his Own tO‘;maintains the Soviet threat has and New end the impasse. It would have ‘virtually disappeared. \Brunswick. Some 800 delegates the trceops attended the Portland. conven- NATO Secretary: -Geneéral tion during the past three days, Jig Brosio and the representa. | goto her aidt-in-the event of an ‘Martin said a compromise _ 06 ithe issue is essential. Price Index | Up For May OTTAWA (EP) === The ‘con- ' |sumer price index rose one-fifth jof a point to 143.4 for May, a record high but the smallest in- ‘crease™in four months, the Do- minion Bureau of Statisties re- ported Tuesday. The index, based on 1949 con- ‘sumer prices equalling 100,:was 143:2 in April and 138.0 in May lasf year. : food prices, —svhich Rising iclimbed rapidly last fall and -winter;-edged -upwards—-by only one-tenth of an index point to 143.8 in May from 143.7 in April. Clothing prices fet! fractionally, ~ but. the costs of recreation and reading materials were higher. Vacancy Question Deferred CAPITAL BUREAU : OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA -— An attempt to question. Prime Minister Pear- son about, the. Prince_Edward* Is- — ‘WhO ttand senate vacancy failed in the Commons Tuesday. Melvin . McQuaid, MP for Kings, asked Mr. Pearson # he probably £0 /oould give any idea when the P.E.1...representation_in_ the sen- - ate would be. brought up to full strength. Although he prefaced his ques- tion with the comment that the matter was one of extreme ur- gency and of considerable na- tional importance: Commons Speaker Lucien Lamoureux rub ed that the question should be placed on the order paper. Mr.. Pearson has not yet filled the vacancy caused by the re signation last summer of Dr. T. Vv. Grant. P.E.I. is .entitled te four senators but sinee Dr. Grant's resignation has been re- presented by only three, Senge tor Elsie Inman, ‘Liberal and by Seiiators ‘MacDonald and. Dr. Orville Phillips, Conserva- tives. Chief Issue For Manitoba ~ WINNIPEG (CP)- ptogress uring the “eight-year ferm of Premier Duff Roblin’s Progressive Conservative gov- ha¢ become the axis gn. 4. It was the keystone of the pre- Jelection Jegisiature session and thas developed into a recurring theme of the two-week-old elec- ition _Iyfttle. “We've got a future in this province and we're moving into sie Premier. Roblin’ as he advances made during his tenure, He dismisses oppon- ents who criticize the lack of Mani{oha as ‘{poor- nifpickers,” mouths anc ' “Ke onomic! e 93 Manitoba elec- Liberal . Leader Gil- Molgat says Manitcha has developed a Mopiriecniomy and a ~ dew pressed industrial atmosphere a Conserv ative | govern- ent Wr are falling behind in te dustript development. We are iasing our topulation and we have the lowest wages west of the Maritimes.” The standings in the last leg islature were 36 Conservatives, 13° Liberals, five New Deémer crats, one Sociale Credit with iwo Vacancies Running a close second for verbizze are education and- fag- ation.- neth carryover — con lier campatgna. Classified Deaths » Comics Sport Women's TEACHER RETIRES AFTER 41 YEARS Finance, Markets’ seeauis a | ‘ ‘ Serre Pea ees ; |’. Mrs, Roland Bryant, a grade school. Last night the Park- a Sherwood, and presented Summerside 0. uc. ea 5s ‘ ; : ‘al ‘oh stat: wave: a part er with a_gift we are Kings, Queens, Ciiy” 5 seven teacher at _ Parkdale ee a ae oe Bryant and We Carmody, Prince County . Bg es 2 Junior High School, is retiring in her honor atthe ne ot principale Parkala Juaior . ‘ | after vf years of teaching Mr. and Mrs- Everett John yigh. eae 3 mm E SRA nALENNTTST TTI WH TEnEI IO. NtenTnT ener Te . +t te ww * — ~ Vv - 7 : © » a France might withdraw. a7 <e y an armatnd ipseta agetanenr