; WEATHER. a Clon with scattered showers; winds ay south 20, becoming light. Low-high 45 : and 60, Saturday:cloudy, * *- a “Covers Prince Edward Island. Like The. Dew” 5 a ee ene CANADA, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1966. SEVEN CENTS” |Probe Indica If It's Good For The Island ~ "The Guardian Is For It wor MOK | THA es fom: 18 PAGES Aothorized as Second Class Mai! hy the re ost Oltwe Department Mtawa, end for payment of-pestage m cash +. ye VOL. scien NQ. 118 WOULD AID UNEMPLOYED _Pay- To- Learn Formula. ~ Considered By . ommons “~ there were mropresent-tevels-attract ta few workers \t the same time the hope is 2 : lo sever the odious. connection | inte - the—classraen.—— tirely- out-of the - pieture.. —Workers—would be assured a minimum $35 a week with ex- tra allowances of up te $55, a FOR EVAPORATED SUPPLIERS. ~ 1 Cent Mik Premium ~ Revealed By MacRae - Hen Andvew: MacRae, min- ister of agriculture yesterday | Provincial government premium ‘the same time it is trying ri } will enable farmers to receive a announced a 1))-cent per J hundred- » weight premium to farmers on Grade “A milk ‘delivered for the manyfacture ‘of evaporated | milk. The premium will he ret- Toac tive. to May Ist. Mr. MacRae said that the pro- vincial government is implemen- ting this support cause the new guaranteed—pricej program of the federal govern- ment does hot apply to milk used for the manufacture of evapor- | ated milk. This action will bring “all “producers“of- manufacturing milk to a_uniform price level, | ° Mr. MacRae said. if only evaporated milk plant} in "Edward Island the Maritimes. CALLS VOTE Premier Duff Roblin of Man- {toba Thursday called a prov- fncial general election, to be held Thursday, June 33. Last election was. Rec. 14, - 1962, which returned Mr. Roblin’s Progressive Conservative par- ty for its third term, His, gov- ernment has seats in the 57- seat -house, Liberals have 138, the New Democrats five and Social Credit one. Two seats are vacant, Gasoline Prices Increase In_N.B. MONCTON (CP) -— A two-cent ‘per gallon increase In the retail. price of gasoline ir. New Bruns- wick was announced here Thurs- day night -by Frank W. Landry ° of Moncton, managing director of the Maritime Retafl Gasoline Association. i The increase, effective imme- diately, will raise the retail price “of regular grade ‘gasoline to’ 47.5 cents a gallon at Fredericton The price of premium gasoline in each case remains five cents higher. ; “Mr; -bandry said the ficrease was necessary to help. service station opérators to stay in bus- oe Security Measures On Hill Are Defended By Speaker ‘OTTAWA (cP) » Commons Speaker Lucien Lamoureux ‘Thursday defended security measures on Parliament Hill hut announced an_ immediate review to determine ~ whether improvements are. possible. Mr...Lamoureux, speaking al- most 24 hours after a dynamite blast in a third.- floor washroam killed Paul Soséph Chartier of Toronto, invited MPs to send him suggestions, MPs applauded whe nN he praised the work Wednesday _ of tne Commons protective staff folowing the explosion, Their ‘‘cool --headedness and efficiency does them honor and justifies the trust Rive them, _he said The Commons opened for, the afternoan. sifting Wednesday, e quietly Just- as hun- program be-|ium -will affect \.ment_ to include evaporated | milk, | Something must be done fer our | (ce _Wirephoto) The Minister said that the | price equal to $3.25 per_hundred- , weight delivered to the plant. The existing federal subsidy of 75 cents for milk used in the manufacture of evaporated milk | will bring. the price fo. farmers to $4.00. Mr. MacRae said the prem- 1,400 farmers whe-supply30 million_pounds-of— milk... annually” to the Charlotte- town -plant2” 2 Failure of the federal govern- in-its -new program for a a anteed $4.00 price was termed tby Mr. iecee as “‘a serious to dairy farmers of Prince | He said hé-would continue to “press Ottawa to extend the pro- include: . evaporated in the meantime, gram to “but | producers in Prince Edward Is- | land, and the~most effective | ourse is the action now to’ he Padiaivent— At A Glance By_THE CANADIAN PRESS. "THURSDAY, May” 19; 1966 Commission Counsel J. L. | O’Brien criticized ‘the actions of former prime minister Diefenbaker at the Gerda Munsinger judicial inquiry. . Mr. O’Brien in his final ar- gument said Mr: Diefenbaker thould have acted in ‘‘another manner’ in handling the in- - volvement of Associate De- “fence Minister Pierre Sevigny | with the German blonde. Transport Minister Pickers- gill tabled in the’ Commons the. report of a federal inquiry | backing Ait Canada in its de- cision to eliminate its over- haul base at Winnipeg as tur- ho-prop planes are phased ‘out., : The government reported April - unemployment dipped * to :298,00 from 341,000 in March: | reading to a bill that “would The Commons gave. third extend an annual $8,000,000 grant to .Newfoundland _ until both....the..federal..and..provin- cial governments -agree to change it. rs Creditistes forced a vote on the issue on second réading but were swamped 173 to 7, | The Commons... gave first reading to a- resolution that would establish a pay-to-learn program for workers seeking to improve their skills: FRIDAY, May~ 20 The Commons meets al 11 a.m. EDT. to continue study of ||. postal department estimates. The Senate stands ‘eee - until May 24. | Fill said the 173 - to - 7 vote) ‘Joo South) suggested’ that, implemented on a eee ‘Intend of the. rest. f In dehate ‘Thovaday on a reso- lution preceding the legislation, | manufacturing executive _Steve=' | -Otie—,—¥-ork—East)said.cCan-... ada‘s—vecational_training pro- grams are not working. km- ployees shrink from retraining because they fear failure in the course and loss of savings, he said A promise of. full support “came from all opposition part- ies, although Conservative and | New Democrat ‘spokesmen; asked for a weekly minimum of 14 9$1.25.an hour. - - Roger Regimbal (PC— ‘Arete | | Be Deux-Montagnes) ‘said it is strange the government: should | # propose to pay $1 an hour at the labor code to establish $1.25 fas a minimum wage: The Commons earlier passed bill extending Term 29 of the by which Newfound: | . ‘in : a agreement land entered Confederation: 1949 It provides’ an annual $8,000,- 000 grant to the province unless | % a_change is agreed to by both the federal and provincial gov- ernments: SEES ENCOURAGEMENT ‘Transport--—Minister~..-Pickers-. ‘against a Creditiste objection to | the bill would be - encouraging if Yew ele oO ‘000,000 was-~ rexarded as a con- stitutional right.. The Creditistes said Quebec- ers shouldn't be taxed to aid, \Newfoundland,- which had stclen Labrador from Quebee. Max Saltsman (NDP-—Water- ‘out on the boat, owned by Frederick Coda, Chicago bus- inessman was thought to have originated in the wiring sys- tem: ‘Phe craft, off Borden at « the time, was brought hack to Charlottetown, from_where she had sailed earlier in t gov - and is docked” at the FIRE aboard the &-foot Pied Piper, bound from Florida to Chicago yesterday morning un-| left extensive. damage amid- der the- program, some prov- . chips after a crew of four inces would be paying a share worked -feverishly to quell (of training —costs _for__persons--_the—blaze—which—at sri foto who would leave the province | Was 6 ee ae mas soon as“they were qualified trot.” , whieh” foe for a new job. These PS ant ishould be compénsated for Leosts. . 1 Howard Johnton (SC--Oka- | | mnagan-Revelstoke) warned that — ~~ ,once amounts are. set for the | ‘training atlowances, there sore o'teenee ee Suffers Extensive lwise, a person. ‘would be“ |tempted to take a course he/| | was not. suited for just- because | By-LORNE-YEO ithere was more money avail-| ~ : lable for that training. | Bound from Miami to Chicago, David, Orlikow (NDP—Winnl- |the 83-foot yacht, Pied — Piper, |peg North). said the system of was out of Charlottetown Har- |moving loans is ‘‘not good bor only three hours when fire ‘enough.” It should be replaced |proke out amid ships, burning \by outright grants. It was diffi- loff a large water hose, leaving jeukt to interest.a Cape Breton /her crew of four with reduced iminer in a training program | !equipment with which to. fight |when he knew he would have |the blaze. »-Harbor Wednesday: - afternoon about 3 o'clock to refuel before proceeding to Chicago. Her crew. included: Captain ‘Petersen of Chicago, Walter Tompkins, Virginia; Paul, Georg- sen, Denmark; and a deck hand from Nova Scotia. “We were off Borden about three hours out of Charlottetown Harbor. The crew was eating ® Yacht ‘Bound. For: Chicago | TORONTO ‘CP) — A-pafttern of —the—deranged _ mind. ‘that _Planned to bomb the House of Commons.emerged for police + -Thursday~ in the tiny, ‘ untid?> room here where Paul- Joseph Chartier’ conceived the ~ homb that would “kill as many MPs as possible". ‘ In a_ historic. instanee of the plotter wiped, out with his own weapon. Chartier was killed Wednesday when a_ crudely- _made_ dynarilite bomb blew._up in a House of Commons wash- 'Toom at Ottawa. As police sifted through the mess of papers and. belongings § of the — 45-vear-old- Bonnyville; \Alta,, native in his-.room— in j west «central. Toronto; they mane ~ = Writings that indicated Chartier intended. to. kil! as many members. of Perlia- ment as possible “for the rot- ten way vou. are Tunning this ;—eountry* | —A handwritten copy | f of a the House 5 —Seraps of paper Indicating he had tigtred” it “wild” take * | the bomb 2'5 minutes to ex- | ~plode from the tone, ho Jit the fuse... —Three ot: 0 of fuse amed name jn nearny New- market last week. ‘<A collection of home-made ment of transport wharf. Mr. : : | bombs a police bomb- expert Coda is expected to arrive in | termed poorly made fire- Charlottetown by plane today. Officials Silent } erackers. without detonators. The oe is estimated at a hh —4% sticks -value of $200,000. Seen aboard On Oil Purchase | pwhich inlicated “52 were! the craft are crew members ~ Paul Geéorgsen of, Denmark, LEFT,’ and Walter Tompkins," Virginia. | OTTAWA (OP)—Federat_ offi- -cials had no comment Thursday’ onthe progress of an investi- gation into the purchase of 3,000,000 gallons of Venezuelan | oi by Premier Oil Company: | The purchase of the low-| LONDON (Reuters! - eine (priced oj! sparked ~a protest Minister Wilson called his cabi- from Ontario service station op- net together Thursday for talks erators who claimed it violated on Britain’s seamen’s strike but the-national.-oil: policy. ‘decided against_any new move ~Mines~ Minister Pepin told the ‘to-end the walkout, now in its Commons Tuesday his. depart- fourth, day. ment was aware of ship-|. The dispute has hit Britain's Damage the_captain who checked the en- gine- room shouted that there ment. Bwth he and his -officials Jagging- export. drive, but ‘the was. smoke helow,’” ‘said the? had been. in touch with the com: government does fiot believe it pany to ensure conformity. with yet warrants declaring a state the national policy. of emergency. “I expect to have further dis-| The 62,500 seamen showed no cook, Mr. Georgsen. The remainder: of, the crew was in the mess hall, he said, | and they didn't even get | eusitone a he rr lis «hint of a change of heart. They mmedia ure determine have warned the government it chance to start eating. “Dek, fewdack atk opened. whether any-special action 18 risks a general strike if it uses a cupboard located to the rear required,”’ he added. Royal Navy ships to clear the of the engine room, flames shot Mr. Pepin disclosed the gov- country’s jarnmed ports. out and the ‘crew went into ac-- ernment's interest in the case In| The National. Union of. Sea: d To Kill -MPs_ , tragedy ‘a The 16—- Commons clerk Leon Raymond “New: Move: he Rejected By Prime Minister 'to pay about $2,000 to move to a |place where he could take ad- ‘vantage of his training. dreds of school children packed the southend gallery: where Chartier apparently sat before walking to the washroom. ‘The security guard was heav- jer, with a member of the pro- tective + bers of the public were stopped at the door to the Centre Block , end, asked to state~why_ they | wanted to enter the building. Mr. lieves general security proced- ures have been adequate over the years. It was not easy to reconcile the enforcement of strict regulations .with the de- gree of freedom to the Parlia- ment Buildings which the public expects. He*—sated- Parliament must, strive. to achieve a feasonable balance between the two object- ives. 4 staff vstationed » inside | cach door to the chamber. Mem- | Lamoureux said he be- | | Major J.E. Ready,. of. the Prince Edward Island , Regi- ment, receives the Canadian Forces Decoration from Col.” M. Turner, area _commander- for N.S.-P-E.L, dutig ~Tast night's annual inspection of Is- Jand -mititia units. The €PD-was also presented by Co!’ Turner to Sah E.M.« Stewart of. the ' P.E.LR. Following the inspee- ‘The boat, owned hy Predarick \Coda, a Chicago. businessman, ‘had-_dockedin - Charlottetown _.._ RECEIVES DECORATION tion, which took place at Me- * morial Field, Col. Turner con- gratulated the units on main taining the high standard. ‘of militia training —that—hias_ bern — set over -the years by P:E_L. upits. He noted thai - last night's—parade marke <A “nyive- stone in Island militia history in that it closed out a long as- and sociation between P.E1. a - \ breakfast, I was at the whee! tion with fire extinguishers and a reply to Andrew Brewin, NMP men. has demanded an immedi-- moving. at about 10-knots_when- hoses," the cook said. | member for “Toronto Green- ate reduction in the work week i wood, who asked what actioa to 40 from 56- hours with no re- We thought at one point when | the government planned on a duction in pay, and other. bene- the blaze became practically. un- protest from Ontario service fits-that add up to a 17er-cent controllable, that, we would have “station operators that the gaso- increase. The basic wage for to abandon ship. Our big hose | jine would be sh * was burnt but we kept fighting for sai wi ia ul : sai vel a alatoaal sada | with a garden hose and fire ex- } tinguishers until the fire was fi- » nally under control, " said Mr Tompkins _* Aboard the Pied Piper ee two life, boats,—a Boston Wha equipped with a 75. HP Ones anda launch with an outhnard engine: The boat,.three Hoare includ- ing the deck received damage to ; radar equipment,. sonar = sys- tem. the smoke stack which was burnt right off, the pantry and the early. part of the salon. There was water damage to- carpeting as well as-smoke damage to oth- er sections of the -craft. The—blaze. started —about.on 48 | and-raged-—on-for-about an honr and a half until the fire was cir: pictely out, the crew members | said: For 1960 Security By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP )—Chief .com- mission. ¢ompse!, J.L.. O'Brien, said Thursday the prime minis- ter of the time, John Diefenba- ker should have dealt with his associate - “defence minister Pierre Sevigny, in “another manner’’ in. 1960 -He didn’t specify jin his sum- mation to the Munsinger. secur- CREW ASTONISHED ity inquiry what “another man- While fighting the blaze, crew ra ee tare been. But he ss ainbere: aaldi (heW WEEE “abtoti: ci cabinet~ security directives ished-to see a ferry boat about prac gall’ for the sacking or * four, miles away inthe Strait not ranefer.. to: less sensitive _posts CEaitc bial MA RAe Mi of persons with doubiful secux- quiry. As a result, no Conser- vative argument will bé heard. Mr: O'Brien’ said Mr. Diefen- baker should. have sought’ ad- vice from RCMP. security ex- perts, brought the Munsinge af? fair before the full cabinet and informed Mr. Hees ‘about - the case, . “And Mr: Harkness,” pur in Mr. Justice Spence; referring to the _ former Conservative de- fence minister. Mr. Campbell. said he advised Mr. Cardin not to appear be- fore the inquiry because “e had no useful information for it. c come Ate , ecrcan said that smoke iszu- ae een . He said he couldn't under- ing from the burning boat was Justies per ebell: ee [oF stand why _Mr, | Diefenbaker visible front that distance.” Mes Saou Ws i araim, 3a'¢ hadn't instructed Mr. Ful:on” to The ctaft, reportédty valued Hed ke ee jould Sst a get all the Munsinger dotails at approximately $200,000 was Mr. ‘0 Bri PaaS I iat from the RCMP or why Mr Fui- constructed mainly of wood. The hakencin nae ie oe ter fenton, hadn't suggested: such. action boat itself was about 12. years 4.) lecember, 1 ace himself. u old- : ike a headmaster #dmonishing {nclided on hoard-—were—three 8. Schoolboy: when he told: Mrz, WASN'T ‘TRUTHEUL’ | state rooms. in_ aft for cvesrs Sevigny: to énd “his. relationsip Mrs. Munsinger’s ~ continued private quarters for the ecaviain, With Gerda Munsinger, a Ger presence in Canada had been living room, baths adjoining wach Man divorcee -who_lived_in-Caa-Jeft—unattended--by the govern- stato room as well. as’ the cap. 248 from 1955 to 1961. ment. If Mr. Sevigny had been tain’s quarters, main salon and | The inquiry headed by “Mr closely questioned, it would galley ~ Biren "Court ap Bs a -~ Supreme Cour anada ad- ‘ ~ journed ‘uftil Tuesday af 19.39 INSIDE TODAY>* Battered - Ship a.m. ,after hearing final argu- r. ment by Mr.. O'Brien, Mr Classified Visi re 46;-17,-18 Se under area command Is Left Adrift Campbell and=%, A. Goodman, Births .....0.......55- 18 with New Brunswick under the : counsel for former Conservative -Deaths ..... ee eesceeveces 3 new organizational setup, and HALIFAX (CP) The sea- trade minister George i Comics 15 the, ceremonial, iransfer of patferéd Greek. freighter* Aurora Faice Dupre, counsel for” M Finatice, tharkets 14 command change took piace lav adrift somé 160 miles east. of vigny. will present his ary Sport 10, 11 lvst_eVening. Units bn parate St. John's, .Nfld., early » today _ment., uesdhy, + Totnan'e Niteens included-the P.E.T. Regt... .5 (Friday) while her 27-man crew ar = ten peeeneses i Signal Reg't., Student Militia ~headed: for safety ashoce... BOYCOTT INQUIRY— —a —— Falter dale sy seeessss: i ; Platoon, 5° Medical Cov., and The: 7,195-ton vessel was™aban- Mr. Diefenbaker . and forte cum 6 . ie ‘ the, Band of the P E.R. Par. doned:date. Wednesday night af- Conservative justice minisicr “ Pelte, Queens, City |;..-. ; ade. commander’ was Lt«Co! ter she began \faking in water Fulton Wednesday inst.ucitd rince County a E.G. MacLeod; MC, | their lawyers to boycott the in- | t ae Y . through her ~ “4 ¥ x “ Va QTTAWA (CP) The Com. still lingering between training maak debenidian on local) wage and welfare. rates and ne ere | mons considered a_pay-to-learn —tinemployed—workers— sp Rg recat formula -Thursday cestened for eee ee rn ee er Oe | : : nical and vocational training : workers -who-eant-afford_to—im—programs—new—receive &unem— PROVINCES WOULD PAY : prove their skills. ployment insurance and small, The. previnces would handle “The--government” plan would training” allowances. Legislation. the_payments,with.Ottawa—re- Increase {oas_much_as_$90_a io be advanced soon would take ‘™bursing them for 100 per cent, era nge \in veek training. allowances -that unemployment insurance. en- pf the first $35 and 90 per cent | Picture essarses: missing from the 10 bought at Newmarket. DETONATORS*~ MISSING Police ~said— detmators- -alse were missing. They said Char- tier, a former mental patieut, -miscaleulated im judging the fhurning time of the length of | fuse, causing his homb to ex- plode before: he could enter’ the Commons charobe* The* miscaleulation, of, ‘eid than. 24% minutes, may have been all that prevented a mass in tne Commons. page speech, which refused to allow “Chartier ta. read because only. members can speak in the House, gave ample evidence of Chartier's determl- nation to go through with. the crime. } It was implicit In such sen- fences as: © “For one whole year IT have thought of nothing but how to ‘exterminate as many of you as speech he. wanted to give —in {possibie.’ “What T came to Ottawa: for was to drop a bomb and kill as many~as* possible~ for the-rotten’ way you are running this coun- try.”’ : “Generally, the spend {a a dige 3 joint.ed, rambling : complaint ment on sex and scandals, in- justices to Indians 2141 workers. Chartier, who: had five sister and three brothers, his fathet died about five ‘vears ago, worked mostly as a truc« driver of dynamite, for construction firm’ in Can- Te lada and the United States. Roy Arnold, Scottish strike or ganizer, Thursday condemned a@ navy —food .run to the isolated Western Isles off northerg: Scot- Jand as “‘an peers blow “against the strike.” EMPLOYERS, FIRM iS The employer are eqiiatly adamant. Shippefs’ Federation chairman Ford Geddes said he saw no end to the dispute. “We have gone a. far as’ we can go in a low-profit indust-y. To give way would be aisastreus for the country.” The emplovers: offered to 1- troduce a 4)-hour week in three annual stages. The “samen turned this down. The strike continued: to affect food prices and supplies.- ~ The Dutch liner— Statendzm sailed from Scuthamptan for New York Thursday with nearly 400 passengers who transferred from the Cunard liner . Franco- nia. Counsel Hits Diefenbaker y Steps had . not Diefen- 13, have been found he been=truthful with Mr. baker in their interview. Dec 1960. 2 Mr. Campbell sald Mr. Sev- igny, could have heen. ‘'nres- s.urized' or blackmailed by. Montreal]: racketeers with whom Mrs. Munsinger associated Mr.—.Justice—Spence. intervetied to. sav there should have “heen an_ investigation into the politi- cal pressure exérted get Mrs. Munsinger out of jail Feo. 4, 1961, and by” whom. Mr. Campbell said the gov- ernment must be severely criti- cized “for basically doing noth- “ingevabout the Munsinger af- fair e Mr. Sevighy’s “indiscretion” rendered him unfit to -hoid of- fice. : : mee a Mr. Justice Spence said (sas- ton Levesque, executive assist. ant.fo Mr. Sevigny, testified Mr. Sevigny -had--seen- Mrs. Murr- singer. four times after he had declared he had broken © off with ‘her WANTS CHARGES MADE Mr. Campbell said if the indge accepts his argument he (Mr. Justice Spence) should make charges. The judge said notwithstand- ~ ing , the dc, eeceen he would inform ‘befotehand any persons against whom mh: * i ° ngitendted 4o take CRORE AD LDCS men. “would have —-the--epportnnity—of “reply before he submitted-tis te-— port to the government: Charges in‘thls case do not te late to criminal charges but to ‘eriticisms of conduct, 2