59. A}. ' Here's what the Convention Hall floor looked like Wednes- day night as Democratic con- The establishment of a fund to support the Vanier institute o the Family was the 1967 cen- tennial project picked yesterday by the Catholic Women's Lea- gue of Canada meeting In Char-1 lottetown this week for the or-; ganization's 44th annual con-l vention. The project was en- dorsed by unanimous vote of all provincial presidents. The fund. to be raised solelyl h- voluntary contributions l CWL members throughout t'iel nine provinces will be left in the hands of a committee com- prised of national executive members who will prepare plans. Hermon Stevens. na- tically that "there is not one single thought of imposing any obligation whatsoever in any Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY. Aug. 26. 1904 'x members—five Conserv- atives and one Liberal—spoke in the 15th day of‘the Com- mons flag debate. There was no progress. . P ri me Minister Pearson said in the question period "nothing could be more im- portant than to bring the present debate on the flail to a decision." Clement Vincent (PC—Nico- let-Yamaska) proposed a new flag design with a single green maple leaf at the cen- ire of a cross formed by red. white and blue bars. Finance Minister Gordon announced Canada and JI- pan ave been unable to agree on a 19“ quote for worsted fabrics exported to his country by Japan. i Justice Minister Favreaa said he will investigate a llrievance against the RCMP Whic led the “blood bomb" incident in the Com- . "‘ms Monday. THURSDAY. Aug. 27 The Commons meets at 2 pm. to continue the flag de- bate. The Senate to adjourned to Sept. 15. ' Financial assistance to the ! ‘Coady international Institute in. .Antigonish. N.S.. will be the‘ low lCooperation in 1965 H nounced yesterday I ‘amount will be decided at next- iMount St land were guests of l l l I If It's Good For The island The Guardian Is For it A pEMoanrs WHll' it UP FOR THEIR MAN vention delegates erupted into a frenzied demonstration for President Johnson after his CENTENNIAL PROJECT PICKED members'llp of 150.000 there are; women who would voluntarily“ make a sacrifice to help the: CWL and the rest of Canada to: celebrate centennial year. i hr narration W E A T H E R Sunny with afternoon cloudiness; winds westerly 15. Low-high 58 and 73. Fri- day: sunny. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” .. 5“ ‘ “‘- fi‘»: nomination as the party's can. didate for president. (AP Wirephotol ~ Variier Family Institute .T a level of the CWL. I feel with agParish council Parkdale for 1;.th98 bids FECBlVGd by llle tour and supper. , i Rev. Edmund Roche. St. ; Dunstan's University. general: moderator of a forum on social action said during the morningl session that the next 36 yearsl will see a decrease of 10 Derlbeach and a toilet building at 1 beach. tContinued on page 5 col. 7) . L project for international! . It was an-‘ that thel year's convention. and will be‘; taken from general funds al-. ready existing. i the The organization also voted to program and proceed with the make an extra contribution of $470‘this year. in addition to the annual fees. to the World r- tional. president stated empha- ganizatlon of Catholic Women’s Organizations. It was further decided that French speaking and English speaking delegates would alternate as delegates WOCWO. Reports and recommenda- tions were given by national conveners in the areas of spiri- tual activities. education. citi- zensiip. public relations. organ- ization and development a Delegates attended Mass at . Mary's last evening, the Sisters of St. Martha and St. Pius X Red China Warns U.$. Warship TOKYO (AP) — Communist. China charged a U5. warship entered its territorial waters on I-‘ukien province Wednesday Peking radio said a warning issued It did not name the warship. 3' m I INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths a. :1 Sport .. Finance. markets Women‘s . .. Rural churches Editorials Kim. Gnu-s. Cit! Summerllde Prince Co. l to -tia Agriculture College here. Raspberry Crop 4 Below Normal raun'o ‘tcri Nova Sco- tia's raspberry crop this year‘ is expected to total about 25.000 l quarts. about 10.000 'flull'tl e. lowtaverage. officials said Wed I nesday. l . Gord n B. Kinsman. dl- lrector of horticulture and bid logy services at the Nova ‘Sco- said the reduced crop resulted from “so much cold. wet we" I ther." . . CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY. AUGUST 27, 1964. mafia" SEVEN CENTS 22 PAGES Johnson And Humphrey. Nominated By Democrats was drivmg went out. swerved into the x a cu ve . The accident occurred at ap- proximately 4 pm. The truck. a tractor-trailer model owned by , M.F. Schurman Company Lim- “ited. caught fire shortly after the accident. Royal- Canadian Mounted Po- Contracr let For Buildings At P;E.l. Park Dr. L.E. Prowse was called to :i" ? OTHER ACCIDENTS CAPITAL BUREAU ‘ 0F the construction of three ser-‘ nal i t Robert J. Construc-iacross amount of 541.963, it was Police also investigated thrcc THE GUARmAN 1 other accidents in the provmce . . OTTAWA _ A contract for; yesterday, none of them fatal. ‘ Six-year-old Emile Joseph Ar— I C' s I o l vice buildings in the p.111. Na- senault was seriously injured m . lenswel-V damaged There we" itio park '135 been awarded ' the afternoon when he ran 'lw" m'cul’aml .P o ' the highway near his ' tion Ltd. of Charlottetown in the i home on the St. Louis Highway 'Cross Roads in a in nor an. . and into the path of a car driven dent. No details were available. lruck~ Driver Killed n Millvie-w Accident . '. John Lawrence O’Connell. 29. iby ' of Carleton Siding was killed 'wa d yesterday when a loaded gravel i l of control at Millview ,and ‘ "eved in be suffering from I lice investigated and Coroner RCMP investigated. the scene. No inquest will be eld. ‘ .loseph Bernard of St. Ed-j r s The child. son of Mr. and " Mrs. Emile Arsenault. is be- dlml- hl'tll'l'g broken leg and concussion. He By ARCH MacKENZIE was taken to Prince County ATLANTIC CITY (CPI—Press Hospital by Rooney’s Ambul. ident Johnson received a tumul- }tuous reception at the Demo« jcratic national convention Wed- ance. The boy had been riding in the back of a truck driven by jnesday night at almost the Aubin Gallant and got off the same m°ment he was being vehicle in front of his home. .m’mlna‘e‘.‘ '0’ “New” by Alberton Detachment of the acc'amatmn’ The preSident made a sur- prise flying trip here from No one was injured in a ma- hap at Southpori in the eveng ing when a European compact“ model driven by George Yea~ Washington accompanied by the man he had just named as his choice for vice-presidential running mate. Senator Hubert . of Newcastle Bridge. . . - N.B.. rolled into the ditch. Hunfhm. or anm'a‘. . The car. which had skidded '0 "sons appearance m m. convention hail set off an en- thusiastic display of demon- strating by the more than 5.000 .deiegates and thousands of other spectators. , Johnson did not come to ac- his own nomination—he on the wet pavement. was ex- Another car was ditched at ' acci- cent by Kings. nounced here Wednesday John Mullally. MP for mount was the lowest of De- partment of northern affairs and national resources. The three buildings will in- clude a central laundry build- ing at Cavendish. a toilet and laundry building at Stanllope Brack ey The terms of the contract call rest-ed him before he could rise from his chair. For Karchesky. alias Maurice Baptistlnstltute Elects President ; Baptist Institute. Mr. Davidson. ing a life sentence for armed elected at the institute's annual;robbery. meeting here. A.I\I. Russel of Sussex, NB. succeeds Rev. For police. it was a prim catch. Ka-rchesky. 44. was the By JOHN 1'. WHEELER SAIGON (AP) — Officers of. the ruling revolutionary councill were stalled a keyi point of Maj. - Gen. Nguyeni Khanh's program for govern-i mental reform. his pledge they will return to strictly military} duties.- ‘ I Complicating t‘le situation; was a report ‘the M-year-oldi strongman has two rivals. both influential generals. for the national leadership he put in escrow on resigning the pres-i idency under mob pressure i i Tuesday. 1 Fresh riots by Buddhist andl student elements in the north1 and student threats of furtherl disorders in Saigon reflected'al rillas into the background. ' The casualty roll in Da Nang -— e s since it ay of: violent Buddhist demonstrations ‘ against the government. Roman, Catholics and the United States ‘ -soared to 1 dead and 61 wounded. Vietnamese troopsw who had kept hands off. finally N.S. Sales Tax Extension Political Crisis Described l SeriOUs In South Viet Nam Recommended In Report HALIFAX tori—.mpltcrtion of av I ‘ the N sales tax to 3‘ _. ommeaded In a report on pro- vincial - municipal taxation made public already in effect. although re ’ a suggestion to la- creaae tax to three cents acre of forest land from porters of a cent. This would be levied on prop- erties of son acres or more. the g X “VI: 1 t 'l a. min; tax sm ar 0 one and ran a , ‘ anemia disco-unlit“ ‘ «provincial land tax been if discriminates arm W lead owners of more than not acres and taxes propel-ta llo subject to manhloll 1W!“- the moon use the amen HWMI. hospital tax "an a low effective yield because of 1E narrow base or “.3313... t oath n mom ‘0. parts. um and tubes [bestialit- not be ex lil- tisd tMt‘it and be Iran-d” orwideranacrfw local telephone services. The; levy‘ on long distance calls should be discontinued. Selected services such all m- palrs. hotel and motel accom modatlon. beauty parlors and log should be taxable report says. ', . L , faults outsider-m n educa- tion- the pn- vlnc'al grants for-educatlen are the means of holding municipal mar b taxes at a level a to to that In'municlpattttaa in otaer inc the promo- ”to accept Increasing responsibility for ad- ucation coats both In amoun; total costs '0. It suggests Id .No. 1 man on the RCMP's list 'of mom-wanted criminals. ceived a tip from a man who irecognized the fugitive from lpictures published in Weekend Magazine The raid occurred at 8:3 fired in “I? air to disperse some am. in the st. Hubert demonstrators. . There were further disorders' In Hue. Students solved e Street apartment Karchesky shared with a young man. . . . Police said the young man radio station of that city. miles from the troop-guarded was .unawa" M h h d frontier of Communist North "'m'ml bBCkgmund‘ T 9y. a Viet N m taken e small. self-contained lapartment together to “cut ex- KHANH FAILED . 1 penses," K-hanh failed at a five-hour meeting Wednesday night tolHELD A JOB convince fellow megiers of tie: Police said Karchesky held a Gil-man junta that hey should fjob for a brief period with .i quit politics. ismall Montreal aluminum com- Looking tired and tense. he .pan . but was unemployed at arranged for another meeting .‘ the time or his arrest. (0511/- “He apparently had just got “The situation is very seri‘ I nut or bed." said one of the at. "'15-" he sald- "we me" in the 'resting officers. “We rabbed Vietnam“? arm-V mm“ lake [him just as he started to sip his time to think about the prob-item'- lem." ‘i Lt.-Gen. Tran Thien Kiem. one of the junta‘s most Dower- ful officers. told reporters: "We is are not even close to a deci-3' slon." l He will be held in Montreal police cells to await an Ottawa R MP escort back to King» ton. Karchesky was twtce sen- ..l Saigon where military revolu- General Myer: Kbanh have! tionary comet] met but failed headmhrtere of the joint to reach a deckrlon on a new date! of staff Wednesday la chief of government. Khalil A MOWFACID Major lsought by police. Most Wanted Criminal Arrested In Montreal MONTREAL lCP) — Adolphe item-ed to life for armed rob- for completion of the three PI‘O- Karchesky was just sitting down bery. The first time was 1945 :jects on or before Dec. 15 His . to his morning cup of tea Wed- a'ter his c on v i of i o n on 17 'l yeal- COUSlI‘UCllOH l5 “990lle . nesday when four Montreal po- charges of armed robbery. in get underway immediately. ilicemen. guns drawn. burst into "A""'“*““”""’—‘——"”‘“"". his midtown apartment and ar- will return here tonight for that . v speech—but to present Hum- / ,phrey to his party. ‘ SECRET LET OUT This was a secret he had let. PRESIDENT JOHNSON po- ciloice as vice-presidential out just before flying out of Huh?“ candidate in the November election. Humphrey of Minnesota. his Miami May Miss ses with Senator ass it on to the convention it- self. The delegates on the floor generally didn't know it Johnson picked Humphrey as. his choice for vice - president .after calling him to Washington ate in the ay. ‘ But the president maintained (AP Wirephoto) ..r ' I susoense almost in the ast mo- He was paroled May 17. 1957. m9 ' . . . . ~ but his freedom was short ' S ‘ H9 ‘1"! n b" "W‘an a ' lived. on Nov. 28' 1958' he was ond senator-Thomas J. Dodd o l Iremay. a 39-year-old Mont-l Connecticut to Washington convtcted of armed robbery of galong With Humphrey. Dodd 8 Montreal branch of the Bank MIAML Fla they would feel her full force. (AP! —— Ciei. l Businessmen and residents Descham s. a natlv o t. . .. roared along “hurricane alle 3" said the president told him he iCalixtc, queg' it mean the end ezgdhefgne Na “on “9' "m with too - mile - an - hour winds along a mo mile stretch of ‘ was being considered for the WOLFVILLE. N.S. (CPI ——?of nearly five months of free- ’8‘ - ‘Wednesday night. lashing the coastline from West Palm lylcc - presidential nomination. lRev. Eric Davidson of Steph- dom. He escaped last April llll Only last week, the RCMP re- ‘southcast Florida coast with Beach to Key Largo took llurrl- Dndd replied he did not want jenville. Nfld.. Wednesday was from Kingston. 0nt.. Peniten-ipnrtedlKarchesky'had been seen .gales and keeping the statesicane warnings seriously. ill" W'- elected president of the United tiary. where he had been serv- 'ln British Columbia In the com ihcavily populated cities in sus-l' Cleo already had killed more Then Johnson talked wlth pany of} Georges Lemay. also than 60 persons during a tour through the Caribbean. Key ipense about whether she would I ‘whip ashore. , Weakened from battles witbi of ' and Humphrey and announced that he would come to Atlantic City 3. . h ; .d to announce his choice. iscayne. 3 nc [\Sl en- . - he mountains ~ - - ~ Bill he did not wait until ar- real play oy. is the suspected i' ‘tlal island just off Miami. was I. v . mastermind of a $528,000 ron- :C‘flba- Cg” Chur'le: "my a f”; iordered evacuated for fear of a [mfg'ri 3:“th can‘;ntl("nd ‘13!" 'bery of a Bank of Nova Scotli: ""95 0mm” w" ‘ a mass ° predicted seven-foot tide. |Minnesota "imam m. 8° Emu; Karchesky's capture without ‘ a struggle came after policeire- l branch during the 1961 Domin- }hurricane - force winds about Just about eve“ worker In, f t t m ‘ ‘ d ‘. '. . .. v o reorersa ea or. an 1°“ Day Ol'day‘ “9 had bee" .15 mile; acros" idowntown Miami was sent home l told 3mm; "meet the :2," vi“. listed behind Karchesky as Can ‘ The U5. weather bl reau said . ‘Cleo probablv would whirl past leafly‘ schmls were dosw’ Hun- preSidem'” Pd? 5 second "‘05" “fluted cnm far enough at sea‘ to spare most ‘dr fi 0f pieasifle .boau “lied lWAS DEADLY SERIOUS _._.~___.-- of greater Miami's 1000 000 up the M‘a'ml River. which: A" l d. {Al . , l population serious damaflel to Winds through downtown' to es. ’ th er an‘ltim af its!“he (my. I CIGOI'S course PmPf‘l‘lY- cape battering surf' , crgwij‘l I.oef .rlepo‘i‘trers admit; I The thinly populated islands A mom’ment‘l "3"” 53"“ "’ proached the task of selecting of Bimini a d Bahama suited when draw bridges re- the vice - presidential nominee l Is Uncertain Karchesky‘s ‘ mained open and autos could (Continued on page 5 col. 4) Halifax Mayor Lays Claim lTo ‘Confederation Cradle' with "deadly seriousness. lContinued on page 5 col. 7) were directly ahead of Cleo. HALIFAX (cm __ The wpafiand the weather bureau said ther office here said Wednes- day night it. was too early t predict. whether hurricane Cleo would be felt in the Maritimes. A spokesman for the weather office said it. was expected Cleo would lose much- of her punch when she hit the colder air over the North Atlantic. The storm was off Florida Wednesday “"hi‘ By CAL uonwwav speeches of Sir Charles Tuppel. ithe townspeople what went on The spokesman said Win65. HALIFAX (or) — Mayoi Ithen pnemler of Nova Scotla: lln 1864." from Clefi likely WQUld b? Bbmll ICharles A. Vaughan says this ‘Sir John A. Macdonald, repre- i 70 mlles PEI” h0ul‘_ll the Sum“ .city, not Charlottetown. is the ‘vsenting Upper Canada and reaches the Marltlmes- Bill 1 lreal birthplace of confeder- George Brown. publisher of thel More than a score of actors will represent the fathers who will first go to Charlottetown on the Queen Victoria. replica ot ithe vessel which carried them. was too'efll‘ly l0 lell. Whether ation. old Toronto Globe and Mac- the hutrlcane would ('llllg '0 the Mayor Vaughan told a press idonald's bitter political enemy. tlantlc seaboard 0r m0“ 0“ fconference Wednesday the fath- ‘sflowfi WHAT HAPPFNED . ' ; before coming to Halifax. 0 sea. ers of Confederation meeting in . ' Th t -l . C h a riot te town in 1864 was ‘ The reconstrumm of me me e M on w” mm an to " ‘Sa'ntJh,N... r“ lcalled to discuss union of the lgzzgevfialrere ‘00 “at”; a“: 131 (I! g OJ nh . 8N“ Fudeflc’m , Atlantic provinces. .. y a pagean o s ow an .l. 0 us, (I. :siioruiv after “‘° Charfoueiowgouebec P New Design For Flag .mecting. and it was here “they :got down to the real business grips with Till. of Confederation. ' was during the Halifax visit the Fathers de- cided to meet in Quebec where final agreement for Confodei- ation was signed. Mr. Vaughan said history re : 1 problem" cords they were met with cool- . . . . OTTAWA (CPI — A Quebec “95,31!!!” “unducaplm “hmh Conservative MP. Clement Vln novv claims to be the cradle of . - ‘ l _ v .l Confedermmn... ven . proposcd a nevi flag de . sign in thc (‘ommons Wednes- JOINED MUCH LATER ‘day in the hopc it could end Prince Edward Island didn‘t the protracted debate on in. join Confederation until ‘0. issue. years after it was formed. "i Mr. \‘incent said he favors a think that proves their luke- distinctin national tlag. but warmness." ;doesn’t like the governments T prcss confcrcnce wa thrm - maple - loaf dcslgn pe- called to outline plans for the cause it was selected by a re-cnactment of th 1864 visit small group of Lib rals io- herr Sept. 3. partisan purposes and because Mr. Vaughan said the boon ‘i. has a poor appearance. Three Premiers of Nova Scotia. ' The member for Nicolet by p . Saunders 1909.1Yamaska. speaking in French. records “good fellowship said a Commons committct abounded‘ during the Halifax should be set tip to cons'dc. mcetiniz. various dcsigns and reach a p t. The book records there Wan compromise solution. 54‘i‘~- l "a note of united sentiment and He said many of his English was ed assured of re- the enthusiastic purpose of so spanking party collcagucs sup complishing the federal port the Red Ensign. but since of all the provinces." lthe Ensign did not have unlvet Mr Vaughan said this limos ;sa‘l acceptance they would be pbere was also evident. in the lwtlling to accept a entirely new sumlm control of the govern- but under a new title. mom via cable from i union menl l design without a Union Jack in the upper left corner. He personally was impressed by a dcsign featuring a green maple leaf in a white circle in thc ccnlre. The circle is super- ‘imposed on a cross made of . white and blue bars of equal width. The maple leaf symbolized national unity while the crosses symbolired Canada's ties Witt! Britain and France. he said be red cross of St. George on a white field had been flown by explorer John Cabot when he discovered Newfoundland In 1497 and claimed the island on behalf of Britain. ' The white cross represented 'a lhsnoer flown by Jacques Oak itier when he discove the gCanadian mainland ‘n 3'54 and ' claimed it for France. cent aai ' ' showed a white cross on a l field. W 0..-.