‘ it It's Good For The island The Guardian Is For It Q. m . M ‘A... . All parishes repneeented as thousands Eucharistic Congress Here ‘ strata“ attend ceremony “mammmngm _____lBicycle Roadeo Honors INSIDE TODAY i Johnson. @1113 @flfltflian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY. JUNE 29, 1964. HAN WEA "MT “035 SEVEN CENTS BODY FOUND ON ROAD Police Seek Driver i In Highway Accident RCMP in the province are searching for an unidentified . motor vehicle driver following '- ' a Nova Coroner Dr. LE. Prowse vieW- ;ed the body and an autopsy was i performed. 1 The RCMP have issued an ap- eal for anyone knowing any-l thing about the accident to caili ;the nearest detachment of thei RCMP or city police immediate— .' night on the St. Peter's High- way at East Royalty. The body of the man was dis- covered by a passing motorist‘ \ early Sunday morning lying face down in the ditch. e man in his late fifties has been identified by RCMP as _. y. RCMP said the man appearedi ‘ to have been walking east on his . SUPT- McNElL own side of the road while the .d d hit-and-run car is believed to be . _ _ Nova Scotia man who has been ‘. heading west toward Charlotte. Al e e camp working in the province as a i . town. l ‘ farm hand for the last two years. 1 The accident is under inves- ‘ APPOI nimenf His name is being withheld pen- ‘ ligation by the Charlottetown ding notification of next of kin. .detachment. , ls Announced D l i Lieutenant - Governor W.J. ‘ MacDonald announced over the i tweekend that Supt. A.S. Mc- . Division RCMP here. had been i appointed an aide-de-ca [3] Hits Sombre Note _ V _ In Freedom Reference ' iiiiiiiiiZ‘ZZi’ffifgifii nipeg. joined the. RCMP in 961. m :n l l v t By KARL BAUMAN ,nearing a time of peace.’ He Since the" it? has served in all MINNEAPOLIS tAPI—Presi-ladded: the provinces exceptinl New- dent and Mrs. Johnson returned. “Today. as always. a nation found and.‘ to Washington Sunday afterito keep its freedom must be He was for a time adjutant twinding up a midwest politicallprepared to risk war. When . and training officer at. Depot l tour with the promise that. the t necessary. we will take. that Division, Regina. and command. ;United States will unceasingly risk. . . ." 1 ing officer at the Peace River i seek peace but will risk war to .At the same time. Johnson; subdivisim. He w, s a oint ‘ keep its freedom‘ I . appealed to .all. Americans to i commanding officer 0f lip Div? In a rouSing finish to his Mtn- . obey the crvrl rights law. say— 5m" hem Aug. 10. 1959 and was nesota visit. the president spoke ing “legal government dependsi prommed to his present rank to an audience estimated 'by po- uoon law-loving and lau'-abid-;Ju1y 1 19m lice at more than 100. the ing citizens." ‘ ' annu a1 Minneapolis Swedish-W. In the quest for peace. John- 'American celebration. son tol a Swedish-American Warning that war could be thelaudience. the. first goal is “re-lm" "f “in”: commander “9 price of freedom. the president .‘ straint in the use of power.” Hel “’35 mem'oned ‘" despatches said. nevertheless “I will spareg'said the U.S. is strong enoughtl and was made a" 0m?" Bm' neither my office nor myself in, to protect itself and its allies: the” "f "‘9 order M 53"" 30h" the quest for peace." ibut. hat "we 0 not advance . It was the most sombre note tithe cause of freedom by call-l ball player. he was with Win- of a two-day stay in Minnesota. ng on full might of our' -, . g ~ _ in which Democratic party military to solve every prob-5 mfg. calm-Yd ,8“; R521": faithful shelled out more ’ em." 9 '5 man" 0 ‘9 "rm r 000 in campaign funds to ‘ MUST onnv LAW . Carolyn Barbara Stanffer of Ed- the president and Mrs; i During the. war he was wrhb l the RCAF and retired with the “10mm” said' “WP 03" find' ren. Campbell. a student at. No- ”:{eer Sipgfifi 8&3} has: Tfitfiggfime m our own mum“! 5: ya Scotia Technical College and to pledge to the rule of. threats of war "we may bellaw. 7 Barbara. aVsliiid‘ent. at . { Stampede Marks Windup ‘Of Montreal Celebration MONTREAL (CPl —- What. Jean Baptiste. patron saint of! started as the wingdintg windi.p iFrench C a n a d a. Organizers to a week of merrymaking be- lsaid Friday night's ruined party came a panic ky stampede cost about $78000 to stage. which led to one man‘s death i Paul-Emile Robert. president and injured about 400 more'.‘ lot the St. Jean Baptiste Society The debacle Friday night .of Montreal. said the event was came as thousands of rain- lthe only “shadow” on the soaked persons celebrating the ‘week's events. which had been end of Ies Fetes du Canada i successful beyond expectations. Francais tried to get off St. "Let us say that in the cir- Helen's Island as a hail and cumstances. the balance sheet thunderstorm hit. could have been more tragic." ere a week 0 Jean Duceppe. organizer of the feast of St. the night. said panic hit in lit- ‘3. E “There was no riot." Mr. Du- ceppe said. “There was some local panic. but. no riot. If it d been aI riot. there would have been 100 deaths." 400.000 0N ISLAND Mr. Robert said up to 400.- 000 persons were on the. 300- acres island. Some 100.000 paid the $1 admission and others swarmed in after ticket booths closed. or climbed the fences. The dead man was Gerard Forget. 33. who died in hos- pital of what provincial medico- legal authorities said was stroke. He had a history of heart trouble. they said Inspector Jean - Paul the Montreal police said about 400 s were taken to hospital from the island. but only about 10 remained in hot;- 3‘ m W events marking l‘. ‘60 lo Albany, QCHS 3mm dean“ . 3 “ pital more. than a few hours. , ' . ' - Classified ' ' ' ' ' “147 15 There were reports of a few I i ' ' . |broken arms and legs in the Is B .l David Waddell of Albany Vil- The event run off in heavy- crush. i = i _ ' - 7 1lage school won the provincial rain. was held in the Armories.: The trouble started as the " . A “d l ‘ Md Edi‘oflal‘ ‘ llsiicycurlle Mfdegs iii)? prize her; ghtairIolttEtownf. Entries Tttgtallle'dt mobs swarmed tow a rd 5 the Thousand . ; 't'falthofthe loot of clergy I aity was - > ' ' ' ’ ' ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ‘ l at 8y n e years an I . nc-u ing our air 5. e. a-‘single. narrow exit from the ics from allI grlsnlfem Mi'itrihtfemlled'wnrd Island, moi. et‘lnfident that such demonstra. g'gzegr‘ffi': : [younger class. i ter finished outof the. top prizes. i island a ramp leading up to Edward Islllld participated in thallc and non-Cfitbouc- HE 85’ “on! would 1“" “‘9 “feet m pm.“ Co, H _ , _ . I _ g In the 12 and over class. top? _n was the {H‘si 5‘10“ MOVIE-[Jacques Cartier Bridge. People yes‘el‘dly'l Centennial Euchnb cured the visiting prelate that blind“! I“ CHM!” 9109“ . :honors went to Mike Garrett of 0'81 event. lWPre tra mpled under fool. lstlc Congress on St..'D'unsthn'l 95 pet-Ice!“ d” the"9l'0vint:e's to Christ. He rem'nded his is- Queen Charlotte High School. Billy MacFadyen of Augustinei squeezed and many became 1“ University (roman. lotion were Nth!!! to- toners that the Eucharist was the Cove School was second in the or fainted in the close. muggy m3 . priests. religious and ' church \atte'ndlnce. (“walnut the Whaling 1"“ . , ll vear and under class and . quarters. '3'“! of all ages converged on and the pivoting point in the Lorne Lawson of Stanhope‘ the university yesterday for the 7313"“ To PM"! Catholic faith. He urged his a S a n School third. I: IGNORE“ “films ' . Steal. tribute ‘0 the Most 3}“. Archbishop Baggio. who has hunt, to understand better the i . i. v In the ‘2 years and over was“ '1‘ day dawned wrth a‘few 3 ted Sacrament. a recently beenrnamednpostolic new Eucharist ,because "all‘ up to grade eight. seem“, place; thllnderclouds on the horimn. u w" rm A' ‘deledate toy South Americl. things flow from it.‘ o . went to Peter Greenan of St.:B“i "19y had been there a “v ‘ mo“ ""93". W siphon MEEch for l - Jean hm] nd m d t to‘ week. hovering over Les Fetes -‘ mom-mo "1 Nfl'm PROBLEM . 3° 8 'r spo . . "in t hedd' d equally ' -m‘ “5.,th Welcome. C P . Blair MacPherson of Flat Riv- w' 0“ 5 "‘3 3 _mp- “on M ‘ WW 0 I" m m an mg; “ml of m Bill!” Smith ‘9“ that Chi-4'- - r A > 1 e _ I People began heading for the hm I - who had WdflnCMrmnm mo. in: are facing severe ' Chairman 0f the we“. wasItsland and its relaying green. C received their “"t “9”, M.“m We“ p|« v . IS the “for” OHOI‘I- William Wallace Gauthier. wlioiOyster Bed Bridge. a son Anth- Sinclair Cumin; 0th" officialsl ery early in the day. 31" the "mm - t “m” Mémk’u-m'mu Catholic comm-es for the muss M was badlyburned in a fire. at ony. aged five and a daughter inctudedmaster or ceremonies” time the. giant fireworks dis- cmozne 0" “WW 9‘ “‘99” m, “on gay. mu'aer- PEI] V 110- 30 W “PM his home at New Glasgow on Catherine. aged three. He is also Dr. Kg. park"; clerk or that play started there were up to “d ‘fiem‘fim middle‘flen mm Macaw, H. crud any all the Indiana”!!! role “I. Sunday. June. 21. 1964 died at survived by his parents. Mr. and course. David Miller: chief jud. .000 o the island. site of the I.“ he “‘ emu” of m on on “my millt 9'” to in!” "In the. Charlottetown Hospital Spt- Mrs. Aubin Gauthier. Mayffel . gas. Cst. J.M. Eva. City Police. 1967 {Montrenllworld's fair. ’1“qu mam“ m” priests 1:: tit-hops made tram Christi-n "Incline play a major urday. June 27. four brothers. Kenneth. Vincent Cst. Waiter Pinsent. RCMP: jud- About four-fifths of the fire- - « “a. ipm- M w wee“; part in national and lnternat- m are occurred at a 6 and Alden and Laden. all at home ges Art Perry. Red Johnson. works had been set off before M on fiiebMOfl 0' ‘wocda of commendation for the 10.1“! “email Mr Gauthier who was the o and one sister. Elaine (Mrs. Douglas Hagen. Al Horne. Doug they became soaked- Only A 883 by M“: 3" m‘u‘” work of dthe mnd'nons. The Ontario bishop warned me‘ home .t the mm w“ 8:: Arthur Gallant) of South Rustico. Knox. Tom Davies. .lr. Assist- few tents and some city-owned 9:“ d“‘ W “m ‘0 Jemu Cardinal MacGulun. that the godless were making running toward 'a river um. m. The (“new Wm “kc pl.“ ants were Anne Robison. '1'. buildings were available as shel- Re 3 av His Excellency Most . .wiuinin. .1. Smith fnr too much noise. It was. be how with his mum mam on Tum. mom“ with m. “Babel ritmeraidsmancnand- rer tort people. biv. Malcolm A. Mutation. 3% of . new deem. m‘beyond what their m w“ mm m the Emma -: mm mg: M”. n m “In” ler; tlrst old post. Barbara Inspector Gilbert said that at cash” 0! C'W’mn' em“.- ..tlI m attire inch c warranted. no plead- tm Hosp“ " fa” Church South ‘ co u Nevin: official recoil-ten. one cont police estimated there P ‘. w“. whom I? 5. M . . I um to ecenv ' ' Mi“ Iphlgenie Amnault. Mrs. . were 75.000 persons on Jacques w" m‘ cy and reminded Catholics of He is survived by his wife. the “‘30- name" ""1 “h ’1'” Evelyn Cudmore. Mrs. Eunice} Cartier Bridge. about. two miles (Continued on Page 3 Col. it former Rose Marie Gallant of in the church cemetery. Reid. long and six lanes wide. . I “vanadium - mmm'mmu delegate cent experiential-mum .i . Neil. commanding officer of L '3 tie pockets. It was not gener- ‘ Peace-Ke By ROBIN MANNOCK LEOPOLDVILLE I AP l-~“’lii’l the last United Nations peace— j force troops packed to leave by ' Tuesday. rebellion. political tur- .’moil and primitive tribal sav- ; agery boiled in The Congo Sun- ‘ ‘3 y. A grenade attack shattered a .‘ wedding party attended by high iCongolese officials in Leopold- lville Saturday night. Other at- tacks were aimed at voters in a national constitutional refer- endum. In the e a s to r n provinces Communist - backed rebels waged war and in some re- gions. army officers reported. Itrihes reverted to cannibalism. l A Communist-supported rebel ‘chieftain was reported in con. trol of the North Katanga prov- ince capital of Albertville on the . western shore of Lake Tangan- 'ika. Mots-e Tshom‘be was back in 1Leopoldville appealing for unity of all Congolese to end what he called “fraticidal strife." n——- l l Tshombe, former leader of ! secessionist Katanga province, returned Friday. Another re turnee was Albert Kalonji. the so-called god-emperor of .Ba-luba tribesmen in diamond-. .rich South Kasai. EPLOT OVERTHROW l The terrorists who attacked the wedding party and voting istations were believed to have E L l the Congo River from here. where a committee of extrem‘ . ist exiles is reported plotting to t overthrow . the government of 1 Premier Cyrille Adoula'. i The terrorists lobbed three v grenades but only one exploded. {It landed under a table and wit- : nesses said about 40 guests E seriously. A w o u n d c d was Agriculture Minister Constantin Tshialamwana'. who was host at the wedding party for Antoine t i parliament and Baluba tribe V grand chief. . About 10 minutes after file i first attack. a car roared by and another grenade came hur- tling into the. party area. It ex- ploded without. serious damage. The terrorists who threw it. also scattered leaflets urging Congo- lese to vote against a proposed ‘I new constitution now up to a national referendum. i The attack on the wedding Islander Escapes From Prison Farm SPRINGHILL. N.S. (CPl RCMP were continuing th e l r search Sunday for two men who escaped late Friday night from the minimum security prison farm here. Still at large are Glendon El- . roy Yen. 23 of Summerside. P.‘ and Melvin Anthony Smith. 25. of . Glace Bay .\'.S. The police were ‘ concentrating on a wooded area; >near here. Yen had been serving a t.wo-. lyear sentence and Smith was [serving four years. Both were. come. from Brazzaville. across 5 i not acceptable THER Clear with a few cloudy intervals; light winds. Low-high 45 and 72. 16 PAGES oping Force Will leave Tuesday ,parrty followed the bombings of jtwo polling places in Leopold- li‘ille. About. 40 voters were in- : jured in one. and 10 in the. other. URGES HANGINGS Education Minister Michel Colin. who was invited to the ’wedding but did not. attend. de- } clared Sunday that public hang- tings are the only way to halt ithe bombings. . Tshombe expressed conster- ‘nation at. reports reaching Leo- ipoldville that President. Jason ‘Sendwe of North Katanga prov- {ince had been hacked to death ‘by Communist - backed rebels [seeking revenge for the massa- icre of nearly 200 anti-Sendwe insurgents in the suppression of .a short-lived revolt. in Albert- Jville late last month. Latest Imessages from Albertville indi- l rated Albertville is in the hands of Gaston Soumiallot. a pro- Communist. l Dief urges ? Separation . Probe End OTTAWA (CFH «Conservative 1Lcader John Diefenbaker said Saturday night the government tstudy of the ramifications of .separation should be stopped. “Acceptance of the possibility Canada being split cannot be contemplated. academically or otherwise," he said in a state: ment. ' "The division of Canada by 1the removal of Quebec cannot 'be considered an appropriate subject for study by an official fcommittce of the federal gov- lot i l former professional foot- ,were wounded, eight of them ‘ernment. The committee should 3 immediately told to desist. Mr. Diefenbaker issued his 1 statement to reporters after rime Minister Pearson said in a press release that the governs i in striving for world peace: monton. They have. two child-inogpr Ka'ombe' a member of ; menl's study is into the "econ. omic inter - relations between the parts" of Canada. It. was not a study of the economic eta fect which would result. from Quebec's separation. Mr. Pear. son said Mr. Diefcnbaker said the p r i m e minister's statement. made several hours after question and answer exchange ' e Commons. was merely a watered - down version eti— meshed the Liberal leader in a contradiction. M Diefcnbaker said the prime minister's revelation of- ficia'ls are studying the ramifiv cations of separation of Quebec fro the. rest of Canada “is ll case of grave misgivings." “One fact emerges . . . the government has accepted the possibility of dividing Canada ‘by setting up a committee to investigate that possibility, Mr. Dietcnbaker said. "In effect. such a study under- taken at the federal level givss official countenance to separ- atism and lends to a movement. to the over- whelming majority of Cana- dians including thosc in Quebec an importance it does not de- ‘Gilben‘, lweal'inlz grey prison clothing. serve. l l l i i l l l mm. Ont. Ice) —— Gordon iChapIin. 57»year-old Progress- ‘ive Conservative member of Parliament for Waterloo South. who died Saturday, will be hurt ied here, today. He had been in ill health for i some. months. i First elected to the House of ommons in 1902 and returned iagain in 1963. Mr. Chaplin con- lcentrated mainly on economic ‘and trade matters in Commons ‘ debates. His death leaves the stand- iings in the. 265~seat Commons t m Liberals. 96 Progressive Conservatives. 17 New mo- crats. 13 Creditistes and nine ‘Social Credit. There now are .two vacancies. l t l l l l Mr. Chaplin was a member of the Ontario Legislature from 1945 to 1948. He was the son of the late [.1. D. Chaplin. a Member of Parliament for 3'6 years who ‘served at. one time as minister? Waterloo South MP A Gordon Chaplin Dies in! trade and commerce and customs. He was arines. Ont. and ifrom Ridley College. At his death he was president born in St_ Cath- graduated of Canadian Genera Tower Limited. Call: a director of Waterloo Trust and Savings Company. Waterloo: a governor of the University of Waterloo 'and Ridley College and pres- ident of Longford Reserve Lim- ited. He is survived by his wife. the former Helen Goring. and two sons. Alderman James D. Chaplin and Richard Gordon Chaplin. both of Gall. Funeral services will he held at Trinity Anglican Church. in Ottawa. Opposition Leader ‘Diefenbaker‘ expressed shock at the death of Mr. Chaplin. He called Mr. Chaplin n val. ued servant of the people with “great. force of character and quiet competence in myth he undertook." \ l n