"WEATHER Cunny, clouding over thie aftérnoon Scattered showers. Warm.--Winds’ light Low-high at Chartottetown,53- and 80. If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It y Phe “Covere "ince Edward Ahan Like The Dew” sa eae, VDL. LXXIX NO. 172 : iaciennet te Sates Cane Sel Sees ene ye OTTETOWN.. CANADA, MONDAY. JULY.25, 1966. ; on eee TEN CENSE 14 PAGES TWO-DAY MEETING e -.-— "Realism Ts Wat ch - Paes a ee coe inn wniDho dahon towond = ver mea a _— - * Cy O n t rol Of C O © C B t 1 , was claimed by NA¥O.planners five-year program, based in at- usual an array of. problems, a : ate “as they prepared for a two-day tainable military Jargets that the latest being a probable. cut summer meeting of defence “we can afford. The program) in Britain's 51,000-man Rhine : ‘ ‘ a ministers, opening at the alli- envisazes an annual review in| Army as the Labor government ' A : —- ie i : ance’s headquarters here today. which-member countries ‘vill be! strives. fo put the economy of al P is aa 3 ; A. spokesman f6r Canada’s able to make amendments in the island country on a sound Government : . Defence. Minister Paul Hellyer, the hight of new situations and ‘hasis , : j = who arrived Saturday, said real- needs The prepentd British redue- 7 uti ny <a ers tion. comes at a time when On ie NC Te ° LNAT aces feadiock in Ws ef- J : ™ a E s_to agree with France on : — s « & 8 z S the status and operational Fa Out $ Y q J 5" jof the 60,000 French troops ine be im Oo al e . | West Germany RELFAST _/Reuters) The ; tran nanan e e | A. stalemate is reported in the government of Northern Ireland $e - ' : - ;}NATO council. between France is considering tough curbs on By ARNOLD AMBER rocked hy violence after inde in iS er a S jand _ its 14 partners on how freedom of ass eb! y~ after KINSHASA, The Congo (‘Reut- |pendence from Belgium in 1980, , . French troops would co-operate three days of rioting which has vers) -=~-Premier—-Leonard—Mu-_In_- Kinshasa —(formerly _ Leo | with sother NATO forces in time raised the spectre of religious of emergency. war here On a different level, President - Extra police’ are ready in de Gaulle’s demand that all for-.case further’ planned protest eign__troops_leave French soil meetings at the detention of lamba met Sunday with lead- polrdville), President Joseph Mo- ers of rebel gendarmes -from butu was. reported te have or- Kantanga province and white dered an investigation to find. mercenary troops who together why the Kantaga gendarmerie took control of Kisangani (for- units were not paid while reg- Ry JOSEPH MacSWKEN ’, * PARIS ‘CP) Defence Min ister -Paul- Hellver of Canada =. sai’. eariv ‘thdas he does not -in- [2 .. tend to “enter inte a newspaper by April has resulted in a Ca- anti - Roman Catholic. leader ymerly Stanléyville’ Saturday in ular army troops had no diffi debate’’ with Rear-Ndmira! Wil- nadian decision to shift, Cana- Rey lan Paislew should - wren ‘an attack backed” by cannons- culty; liam. Landymore dian bases. ‘ more violence. ~ ‘ and mortars ‘ ‘ a a In Paris for a NATO mig gin re will result oo eer See ee ee Details of the talks were not MIGHT BE DELIBERATE teria! -meeting._Hellver said gh ed ‘ton n the. C oe eee police have henge released, but sources close to The sources said Mobuty has gn interview he has ieee clean a ii eee - and charged Protestant crowds the government, said the mutiny not ruled out the possibility that that ‘for a. reasonahie man to i. “NATO: _ Sebo tT on demonstrating for the “release” _leaders- complained they had someone deliberately —i stopped ——<debate—with the admiral is an heeded aie ened “te rd om the moderator of the Ulster not been paid for three months, Payments in-orderto-ereate—an = axercise in. futility>” - PF o-4-2 6-4 ite enntelichin . Free Presbyterian Church Mulamba, a well-liked former incident i NATO" ial reserve Paisley. firebrand anti-Papist commander of Kisangani in the Foreign Minister Justin Bom on eens ee 8 on s special ‘Mobile reserve. oi ator and defender of his coun- northern Congo, flew there Sun-boko told correspondents in thie tne a oh ae ae a tation a te tied Sweeney Protestant heritage,” was " day to try to quell the mutiny capital-earlier: “We think that Marthées—ceiaians: tame: a com | based at Camp Gagetown, “ RB. jailed with” two - other cleray- | —the worst Congd army rebel- a compromise i« a ae and atter—publicls eriticwing the | and 24 Hercules transports ‘pur. Men when he refused to ‘sign lion since the country was ‘Continued on page 5. col. 2) “t) rhased—_for—speed—in—reaching a_keep the - peace order last any , scene’ of emergency week after being found guilty of Hellyer was expected to pur- Unlawful assembly. fe | sue in “corridor talks” if not 4°. Senior government officiat government's services - integra. tion program alleged = censor- ship The Star's story was eopyrizhted “a pSrriking Steelworkers Back The admiral_is quoted. as say- | at the conference itself the case — eens - ae wor ti sal tai de tee aia of school pupils affected by the take a“ coot,-hard—eok—at T t To R ' , wae: he meyer t's Canadian move from France te Whole question. of freedom of eit esump ion sf parliamentary. committee, the Germany assembly - follawing what are ore a Jee Sweet eee ve ME. HELLYER ; There is no question of movy- felt to have been outrageous SUDBUR Y, Ont. (CP)--- ators een at. Toronto earlier 7 “personel, was “‘tharoughly_ cen : + ing the Canadian operational: abuses of that freedom ‘Nearly 8,006 striking steelwork- the week at talks ‘supervised by s6red_ and rewritten The personnel — information uniter on or considerahly ‘hefore While Belfast counted fhe cost | # be lers voted in secret ballot Sun- W. H. Dickie, chief conciliation a yd ene included. in his draft briefing the French deadline but Hellyer of the last few. davs in brokem) @ day to support union bargain- officer of the- Ontario Jahor dé Landymore has volunteered tO wae not within his: responsibility would like to see the schoolchil- windows and looted stores, the ing. committee proposals’ that partment Pies ea) Ops appear, hefore the _ parliamen- 2. cemmander__of_ Maritime dren’ and their mothers remain government .worried over ‘the in- mean resumption of contract Mr. Soden and the union of tary defence committee when Command until school closes next July . a? en j M i . : _ 5 . ; : 7 : ‘ ‘ July or calculable cost ‘of had publicity | : talks with the. International ficials returned to Sudbury at a the ae | a . Par - : _” “Personnel information in- so. More ‘than 1,900 pupils are for the country in world press ‘ INVITATION ACCEF TED Nickel Co. of Canada Ltd. midweek with the proposals that saa: ace Ing consi’ cluding. statisties* is strictly involved. ‘coverage of fhe disorders. - - ty “i A A spokesman for Local 6500, Would, mean resumption of con- CAN BE EXAMINED a headquarters reapensitity , —————" Charles S MacDonald, Lows tend a party for 100-year-olés egrams marking the occasion | piited steelworkers-of America tract talks. That's the ‘place where he comme under the jurisdiction of er Montazue, RIGHT, who cel- to be held during the 1967 were received from Queen” iore, “cid at least 12.000 of . The Inco mines-and smelters eto atte tis Views ivhere tie =ehief_of” personnel" ~_ ape Intense Fire From Jun ap ebrated his 100th birthday Sat- - Confederation celebrations. wd eo ee ee the 16.000 strikers cast ballots — 7 - sealed a by ean “he cross-examined and ac- Hellyer added that t ralt ees as jourday: apnea ceeped. the —tand— MPs -and MEAs — visite earson. In c \ ‘Sand ‘64 per cent voted for. the pickets, not only in the Sudbury “emmnt=te—the- commitiee—for—his brief in” question was a presen- | invitation of - Premiereleet Mr. MacDonald to give best. -Dr--M- 1 Bonnet = MEA-fot —_ t= pfareaining~ committee.” area — but. at Port . Colhorne,- attions.~ the minister said tatvig,.. to “ the parliamentary’ its L arine. | Alex C ‘an ipbell (LEFT) to at- wishes on his ei a and | tel Speer deren Pe ee bie le ‘eat: 3 i (Tony) where some — 1.800 Steelworkers —Speeiieali_on—_the censorship commitiee at—its recent session caren <== == oat eee. pres dent —and— walked off the job at m process. | _ question, Hellyer said: _is7a_ few weeks ago. i SATGON (APO NOMA V tetta=“thts—ienth—on— . _— * other pone FE hal left ee —— = : “ . : 7 mese Army regulars pounced fuel depot 16 miles northwest. of tfor—Toronte—where ted oth. £ " man soecia strike toree®— ait “tarat—potire he » jcontract .talks with Inco would”. : . 7 t resume todays stand by as the wildcat strike i este Four pas me oat ae pn eT a reports of violence but tension to “allow white -~ collar = work- remaing — high . lers only’’ to eross picket lines ied marine helicopters trying 0 pany came under mortar and . erty ama CHI aa ad waar c deeds tee i : reach U.S. casualties, reported machine - gun attacks around dius of Sudbury, using a sys- ony Lema ———= to__he heavy in_one_ company. noon. He said the fighting .con- tem of passes. oe : ees > hseeond marine “COMPANY tinued ‘inte the night with. Kile a : a : “We feet “the suatiod has 1hi- Fire -calisthat ran p 40-2907 he. harsaining committee es n ras = on two companies of US. mar: the port city of Haiphong. ines Sunday with intense fe Associated -Press correspond- | . south oft the - demihtarized Z0M@. from near the - fighting dividing North and South Viet south of the demi , -Nam. The enemy. fire drove off that the marines’ zone India com- sent tovreinforce his company company still pinned: down al- CLEVEL AND TAP) ~Dwin- ! : + ma was blocked and pinned down most within shouting distance ging racial ~ disorders punctu-| proved tremendously,” said Col.| in three nights last week de- agreefl_earher in “a _ Toronto MOUNT HOPE. W.Va APY maining five were found deeper by.an_ enemy ambush about 1,- of India company. ated by sniper fire and a minor Dana Stewart of the.1,750-man | clined following a wave of fire- meeting with Inco officials to LANSING, M (AP) — the Seven miners were fount deattimterzromtd—nearly—twe— miles" 000 vards from the scene of _ of the A radio _report “received at shooting, raised hopes Sunday .national guard force called up| bombifig. City ee ee oe or at office workers to ‘cross the adseal Avestan h duateteian. in the smouldering tunnels of from the .mine entrance—all initial attack \headquarters of the ard Battal- that the crisis is over in riot- last Thursday. The rioting and) John “McCormick said there picket _Jines The vote was tion said Sunday. night profes: unrest left four dead; nearly 50 were only. 51 fire calls between called after some strikers dis- sional golfer. Tony Lema was ‘ d fter a within 700 feet of each other, Involved were India and Kilo t Side Negro ‘slums a coal mine. Saturday after within 7 j ion said one platoon of India scarred East Si rée injured and heavy property noon Saturday and early Sun- agreed with the committee’s de- aboard a private plane. that series of explosions shook tons W. A. Haslem, president of the companies. of the US. 5th Mar. conoany: had suffered, | days after the violence af slate from the mine's ceil- New River Co. th@orized that ines’ 3rd Battalion taking part © _ 3 eru ted. damage. day cision. crtaned Lia! : ‘ ings And walls deep under- one smaller alee apparen- in Operation Hastings, designed __ oe b Pam e: so nots —_—_—_———-———| .Mayor Ralph S. Locher said; Three men _ were errented Sunday's secret ballot _lol- aboard. on pate ghar goge cs ground tly triggered a series of blasts. to flush ovt and destroy a * | he: hopes ‘conditions would con-| When caught making fire - 5 lowed a. closed ‘meeting: Satur- |Hiinols’ . ‘dies aieke tine Word that all seven had per- He said the blast area apparent- Novth Vietnamese ~ division of | tinue to. improve. But after| under the porch of an a aR | say ‘attended ‘by $000 sartats.|° Tee ihiveramianll’ inueie aaa ished was delivered to. a crowd ly was’ centred nearly three between 8,000 and 10.000 men | meeting with guard officers, doned house Police “i A union spokesman ‘said after lia Jollet. Ti. ee oe of about 400 persons gathered miles from the mine entrance. believed to have ‘slipped - across | Locher: ruled -out early with-- men. had the — = ria the wieiinn (“the tava ‘wae tele =. ei oan < outside the mine, hoping that About 22 other miners were the demilitarized zone from*~ the drawal of the trocps. a - es err tee split’ on what position should plane. piloted by Mrs. Doris a six-hour rescue effort would below at the time, but» were North. : | 3t seemed a. normal’ Sunday or the wicks. ne taken Mullen ‘ef Soli = as Pp ———tind —at—teast—five—of the seven evacuated safely oer ‘Phe—fightina—eapped_a «day of _ | in the Hough district, centre of “BLAME CONDITIONS : person sboard . was not identi- alive ote Six were reported vn oee suf- reports of scattered Viet Cong ithe rioting last week. Worship--—A¢ the strife aparentiy cased DISPL TE_ FLARED is igs : Friends and —rrtatrres—et—the-fe Lminor iniuries ree_res- Kurerrittas act tts tt other — areas. pers walked to s t ore-front a “group from.the East Side : The -walkout ‘farted July 14-1 sa4a Lome Sk Gee ok victims: broke into ‘tears as the aoa ow sente superio- | of South Viet: Nam ; + churches. A~group—ot—chitdren—amt—_thre—_Gleveland—chapter of after a dispute af the Levack route te Joliet: from Akron, news was passed up to the sur- tendent -— -~ aS ere Guerrilla «squads were re- | clustered around a soldier tO Americans for Democratic A¢t--mine, 35 ‘mfles northwest of Ohio, where Lema played Sun bs that Pe vice ac) Peer reauired emergency ported to have carried out a 5 ~ f ; | look at-his bayonet. ion issued statements blaming here. when a shift. was ordered day in the Professional Golfers bealy of Lyle Bowyer of nearby aid. series of mortar attacks im CALGARY (CP)--The Herald’, . One youngster, wearing. his the riots on poor living con-‘to “the surface because some Association tournament : Maple Fork shortly after the 9 One witness called it a “‘tre- strikes following up a Saturday says a study . group of men Sunday finery, kept offering a ditions*in the slums. men began’ eating lunch’ prior The plane, owned by’ Maié am blast at the Siltex mine mendous explosion.” But other attack on a U.S. compound out- from Social Credit and other guardsman a piece of chocolate The East Side group said the to starting . line Aviation of Joliet. was of the New River Co. on the miners, working in tunnels up side Da’ Nang, im northern parties_is considering a ued cake. disorders ‘‘are the expression - Union + management negott- twin-engine Bonanza. outskirts of this southern West to’ two miles from the blast South Viet ‘Nam. political movement that could Minor_ incidents marred pot: 49 despair, of an anger that ~- - es Virginia. community. area, said they heard nothing. HIT ODL AGAIN develop into a new right wing | urday night s relative calm. is eeply ingrained in the Ne- i < DIED TOGETHER Thev said they came to the sur-. U.S. aircraft rontinued to hit party WOMAN GRAZED gra community .. caused by , P \ second body was recovered face «when told by_ telephone North Vietnamese oil storage It quotes an~unidentizied. Cal- = ioe weenep: oo a < es See me gomery “ i i i i f tl} ove- " : ’ ‘ b * So = =, eet ee —— Peer Pcie est ts «hci nn aa Vedas i. (anon = fired a truck bearing down In a move to find jobs for ae peas Tinancial ackine ne —pewe ge on__anotffer . soldier. One shot Negroes thrown out of work by paper says the movement would Common Market States tt Thestd Mending: a 2&sear- sideview mirror .on a military fairs said a job centre would be was fired when the driver: rée-— the—burnine—and—_ieoting—_the fused to halt at a blockade Businessmen's Inter - racial A ‘sniper shot shattered a- Committee pn Community Af- te e Dp vehicle in the early - morning Opened in Hough & z . old son of Alberta Premier FE. hours-Sunday. Policemen chased The ‘trouble. started about 9 NEW YORK AP) Mont- C. Manning, is “Peported to be: a man with a gun p.m. last Monday during a tav- Somery Chft, a Hollywood mav- in ccorc n arm oO IC intimately _ connected with the Guardsmen, returned fire ern dispute in Hough, a section erick whose -good looks and movement.” - from a wooded area but the where about 60,000 Negroes are conyincing performances as a Premier. Manning “has _ been sniper was nqt found. Continued on _Page 3 col 4) sensistive young man made: him Te SSEIS FAP) ; Prospects called.< the agreémert bear- losses to the common agin fund mentioned’. as a potential — a motion picture star. died- in for the Geneva round of world able.” jthat would, refund. for “a total lender of “this ~~ force. — corr Sabueney * his | - talks brighte ‘ of $60,000,000" a. year. n menton, Premier. Man- N rth. Vj Na G tti C6 | an apartmen e was : trade: talks brightened Sunday AGREEMENT DELAYED Last January the Six agreed ning drsmissed the story as Tg Oo ie am e ing OOH cits lawyer. Jack Clare- Ee pean Common Market. countries Final agreement was delayed ',, a “balanced package deal” specujation a , man, said the actor was “‘in hammered out agreement on bY a dispute between Italy and linat included agreement ona | They are just trying to mails PREMIER MANNING owar C inese Promises good: spirits when he retired for | * completing a single farm pol- Holland over fruit and Vege- single farm: policy, its joint fi- Something of statements made : 3 : { : the night at 11:30 p.m. Friday.” | i, Se tables... flancinge- and a customs union hy me and others during the advocated © include ea nationa i ee EeeTER WAEAK os Lorenzo James, Clift’s. per-} ‘After’ haggling ~for 1K, hours Italy, the Conimon Market's ti Ed sihaapinnesests introduced |@8t couple: of years pointing out economic — policy. to, ‘provide ROE O = a aE tt I ternational | Control Comm ‘sion sonal secretary, went: to awake? the vataiaiars signed an aceord \biggest. producer: of fruit and with the single farm policy the need for a new political re- adequate private and _pubiic Nat os ; eee iet of Canada, India and Poland the actor about 6 a.m.‘ Saturday as dawn broke over Brussels, Vegetables, wanted heavy prO yujy 1. 1968 But West Germany @/izament” capital for ‘the development of Nam ee ¥ ne on which operates ander the Ge- to prepare for departure on a salt ce io It demanded automatic ; BOUND TO EMERGE national resources: a system of ee cool, toward China's neva- accords ’ vacation ttip and found him The package -deal-which=--has _ n n ' . and__ Holland insisted that this Mr...Manning said the “old taxation which “should. not be repeated promises ‘to serd ‘The protest quoted by Hanoi's dead heen a point of dispute. for ‘a -— pee wR : tips ee package deal -hinge on agreed political order: is obviously dis- onerous” t6 “the extent~of--de-troops..to-her aid ‘and Peking’S vier Nam. news agency de- The médical examiner “said months, wilk pool _the farm jn- ve. h re od "uke a bids. on Industrial and farm, pro- integrating. and that! out of this stroying private and corporate New claim that the 1954 Geneva.manded that the United Siates death was Caused by “occ lustve* jets at. the six pariners—~, |TESh: 8nd Canne ruts an@ ducts in the U.S.-initiated world there. is ‘bound ‘to emerge initiative and enterprise: a so agreements on-Viet Nam are no ‘stop definitively. its air raids coronary _ arterioscleroisis. ’ ‘ France, West Germany, Italy, Juices Trom” the- United States trade TARR Th Genet ee poltiear aligament-————ciat— arevistanee—program__with longer binding and _ all other war acts against The laymen's ‘definition cf} Holland. Belgium .and Luxem- 4nd other countries Holland | So far the Common Market Preston Manning, travelling welfare. payments which must Pekimg’s drumfire attacks on North Viet Nam and Ttespéctstcn-a-serzure—wonid- ret tet houre sad E claimed such a move would re- negotiating te fitg..at the talks hin Rastern Canada wai Gat ies the ‘iahirel ouigrowth. of the the Soviet Union ‘are being: ig are! correctly implement the page of blood to the “aeart-due |: ;~In-—-completing_their single sult. in a -price war in fruits: Geneva has had incomplete di- available’ for disect comment division of productivity; a be- nored publicly in Hanoi and the 1954 Geneva agreements on Viet to hardening of the. arteries. + farm policy. the six. finally and .yegetables. ; rectives, mainly covering indus-— yj, father. however. said lief inthe trade union ‘move- ‘Chinese assertation that a halt Nam.” FINISHED NEW MOVIE ab agreed on market organizations -The—ministers—finally agreed trial products. : The Geneva ‘Preston had nothing, to-d6-Svith ‘thent ‘‘as one of the» corner- to U.S. bombings of North Viet A Japanese correspondent—in—- Cliff, _a-* bachelor, ae ba [+ MONTGOME for -their most controversial|that national governments round was made possible by the any movement such as that de- stoned of our democracy *-and- Nam is-no—ionger—a-crucial -isPeking —said _the—view_there_is turned recently from Hollywood aRY CLIFT. commodities: Fruits and vege- would be allowed fo pay export. U.S. Congré iss passing the Trade I scribed in The Herald a-vigerous trade policy for Can- sue appears to have fallen on that North Viet Nam’s Prest- after filming the motion pictyre to Eternity and A Place in te fables and dairy products, and rebates for fruit and vegetables. |Expansion’ Act which expires in. preston is employed by the ada : “deat enna thece deat “Ho Chi Minh is the great-'Tiw Defector Sun i sugar . “These rebates could be in-|July next vebr National Public Affairs. Re- Hanoi newspapers showed po- est obstacle to military inter- It was to.New York that Clift *One of Clift's- movie: ” The ministers expressed satis- creased if import taxes were! he Trade Expansion Act search Foundation. lite imterest but little enthusi- vention by Peking : ~ Would come, after completing Alfred Hitchcock : adicticn E faction with the results. But charged on foreign markets. called ‘for parallel negotiations The Herald quotes Preston in INSIDE TODAY asm for the noisy ‘support Viet North Vietnamese’ papers work. in~Hollywood, detarmined made in 1951, had its sett ng ~~. there: was little jubilation about This ruling will ‘last only until on indfStrial and garicultural a phone interview from Mont- Nam" rallies staged throughout. quoted- the: Chinese- promises to that he would not play the role entirely in Quebec City what they viewed more as a_July 1,.1969, after which the products. U.S. sales pf farm real as. agreeing with a need! Jsland news ....--+---»-- 2 China during the weekend and intervene’ but none indicated of a typical Hollywood star sum titled J] Confess, it feato-ed ———rampromise than an accord system of export. rebates. must products to the Community now for basic’ realignment of politi-| Summerside ......-----?-- 3 the loud: offers to send troops that North’ Viet Nam. considers ning himself -by a poolside in Clift-as‘a Roman Catholic priest “It is not ideal,” French Agrt be reviewed. — “Tun at--some ~Aeaeee &eal_thinkingand_ saying that a Deaths -.+++ 3 to Viet Nam “*‘at any time.’ the. time: has come to call in a_ swank. California acighbor- who heard a murder’s -coni: culture Minister Edgar- Fanre-* Under the. agreed. market’ or- |vear. new party is the only alterna:| Fditorials poccteee & TT Chinese” President tic —Shao-China - ~-hood. Staten ttt ae SOM and then was called ver told correspondents. “But it ganization for fruit’ and vege- As a trade group. the Com- tive: The Herald says Preston; Kings, Queens, City’ ....-. 5. ‘chi told a rally m Peking Fri- _Chinese adios and the Pe- “In- his motion-picture’ career, Ye testify was betier to accept the deal tables, governments would’ be mon Market has become an.in- denied -any direct -connection Women's 7 day the Geneva agreements king press continued their at- Clift was fominated for. three His other most successfu ’ than to eontinue’ negottatrots—< to _ pay fruit growers creasingly _important customer. with the study group. : Seen 2s cies sane “92 10 “mean nothing to China any- tacks on the Soviet Union dur- Xtademy Awards but never tion pietures' incinded 7» 4 for many more’. monihsy’ indemnities' of up to ~1S agricultural products The Herald ‘says. the new Comics oye oe 11 more. But. hours later, the ing the \ weekend The official won any Heiress,” Red River, The a West Germany's agriculture in case of surpluses. The Six +and' received pe ories are spelled out (Classified 1s, 3; North Vietnamese high com- Peking people's daily called So The nominations were for his fits, Lonely Hearts, and Re * minister,, Rudolf Hoecherl,'coutd submit the bill for these +al..U.S. farm exports in 1965. in-a five-page Manilesto. Goals —-——_—_—- o mand filed a protest to the In- viet aid to Viet Nam a ‘ fraud.” roles m The Search, From Here tree county.’ . ; Becertipnisl 4