If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It QUEEN MOTHER Fliza- beth holds an informal con versation with men of the To- ronte Scottish Regiment, of “whith she is colonel-in-chief, after she had received a march-past Sunday on the Un- iversity of Toronto campus. The Queen Mother ended~her visit to Toronto Sunday night. (CP Wirephote) Queen Mother Elizabeth Leaves Toronto For Home Ry ROSEMARY SPEIRS -churchgoing, military gceremo- her Toronto visit preceding her TORONTO ‘CP) — Queen nial and a bit of wee ‘departure for Britain Sunday « Mother Elizabeth mingied | sight seeing on the last day of night. Dutch Princess’ Engagement * Will Be Announced Today THE HAGUE (Reuters)-The Dutch roya! family gathered at Soestdijk Palace for the con- troversial engagement today of Crown Princess Beatrix, 27. and West German diplomat Claus von Amsberg. As Queen Juliana prepared to make the announcement. of her daughter's encagement. palace and government circles showed sgns of growing nervousness as to how the Dutch people will react Police were reported to have heen placed on alert for possible anti-German demonstrations Von Amsherz. 38, was at the princess home _ Drakesteyn Castle. near Utrecht Official nervousness was caused bv the still-vivid mem- ories of the Nazi occupation, of Holland HITLER YOUTH MEMBER oo Amsherg was a member of the Hitler Youth and served witt a Panzer division in Italy| in which some of Hitler's notort- | ous elite troops were incorpor- ated. Premier Joseph Cals has said all the facts—“pleasant and un- pleasant"’—about von Amsberg will be made public. He sent Holland's leading war historian, Dr. L de Jong, to Italy to make lasi-minute’ in- vestigations. De Jong told re- porters von Amsberg had seen ne war action and had been no- — where near the scene of atroci- ties committed by the Nazis. But most observers agreed that merely because the engage- ment is so controversial, it is harmful to the monarchy as an Institution. A commentator in the Roman Catholic newspaper De Volk- skrant said: “One false step py von Amsberg and the monarchy can receive a blow from which it cam never recover.” The couple is protestant. |Maliiia Regimert, Venn nou strolled about, Most of her Sunday was de- | vaied to whe Tsronio Scottish hes been ts unit and with | iegimental -/'-es In betwee. she sandwiched aw unscheduled call for a ‘ook at Toronto's unoiinedsy 3 coitroversial e1 7 hall—a $28 - 60u.000 siructure of concave twin towers aad broad prome- mades that were crowde. ait sutprised Suuday strollers. STROLLS FREELY The Queen Motcr herself giving particuiar atiention ‘o ouluci; displays of (Continued on page 3 Col, 3) Dorion Report Expected Today | OTTAWA (CP)-—-The report of | the Dorion inquiry into allega- tions of attempted bribery and coercion by federal ministerial aides is expected to be handed to the government today. It may be made public today or Tuesday. 12 Canadians Are Winners In Sweeps Race Saturday By THE CANADIAN PRESS Twelve lucky divide a jétal of $1:120,000 be- cause they held tickets on the winning horses in Saturday's Irish Derby at The Curragh, Dublin Three men and three women will each receive $150,000 for holding tickets on winning Mea- dow Court, the favorite. Two men had tickets on second-place Convamore, worth $60,900 each, and three men and a woman will get $30,000 for having drawn tickets on Wedding Pres- ent, the third-place horse The winners reacted in differ- ent ways to their good fortune. Mrs) Huch McArthur of »Tor- ento felt so rich she was an- swering the phone with “finance company'” when _ reporters called to interview her about her third-place ticket FLEES HOME Lucien Lafontaine of Gatineant Point. Que. fled his home with his wife and refused any com: ment on his win of $150,000 for a ticket on Meadow Court Another first place: winner Marjorie Horton of Hamilton, had the satisfaction of knowing she had turned down: an offer Friday to buy half her ticket for $5,000. And shed already Canadians will- home third and win him $30,000 dollars. He said If I had my way Id still be sleeping.” PLANS VARY Immediate plans for using the money ranged ‘from a vacation in California to sending the kids through college. Mrs. McArthur had a practical thought: “Now I can get the rugs cleaned'" she said. James Smith of Winnipeg said of the $60,000 he will receive for a ticket on second-place Con- vamore: “This will take me off skid- row.” Mr. Smith had heen unem- ployed for four years following an industria) accideri and has been living on a $114-a-month veteran's allowance. More than $200,000 will be distributed to 184 Canadians whe held tickets om other horses which either did not start the race or did not finisy in the money. Each ticket-holder will get about $1,100, depending upon the size of the total pool. INSIDE TODAY : last week at bingo— {| Classified _........ 2, 23 — Rirths, deaths ...... 2 3 Perhaps the most matter-of- Comics ésenessciee cesses fact acceptance of the good for-. Women’s .............. © tuse came from logging driver | Spert -............. 4, % John Francis of Ladysmith, sae 2 BC ‘ ; He said his three children got ‘ him out of bed to watch his Prince County is... t Borse, Wedding Present, come “- OER ee I He 95M tat Sind ea OL 12 A talian lag 2A. 2, th MP Dorothy Credit, Ont., kept her drawn ticket on Meadow Court a sec- | ret from her husband uniil Sat- urday morning shortly before the race. Joe Waldner Jr., 49-year-old Langham, Sask., district farmer said he wont’ believe he’s won $30,000 until he has the money in his hand. “Coming on top of the rata we had last night it certainly made things look good fot me this morning,’ he said. Collin Kmith of Vancouver said he and his wife Carole were finding their good fortune | in holding a ticket on Meadow Court “hard to realize’, but said he plans to quit his job and use some of the money te see that his daughter Corol, 1 and son Byron, 16, go to uni- versity. TO BUILD HOME Joe Bob, of the Sugar Cane Indian reserve near Williams Lake in the Cariboo, plans to use some of his $150,000 to build a new home for his mother, Mrs. Josephine Bob, with whom he lives Le works for the St. Joseph's ssion School operated by the | Oblate. Fathers and said he will | Probably donate some of the imoney te the school. Mrs. L. on Wedding Present until a re- porter told her. She also planned to use the money for a house of her own. | lias ot he tree | of which she -dlonei-in-chief since | i377, Z . —— . Seis | jists headed home Sunday from ‘ Lalonde of Port, Hicks of Nanaimo, | B.C. didn’t know exactly how much she had won for her ticket | “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1965. 7 Viet Cong Officials Killed In Village Raid WEATHER Sunny and very warm; winds southwest’ xe Ohe Guardian \ | nor more SEVEN CENTS Wood said “IT had great for this animal during Old Week this year. The hei- mother was a champion Rvitcs taller tikchee cane years ago. ‘The heifer was the only animal lost as the other 10 cat- tle were outside at the time of the fire. The blaze, which broke out: at approximately 7:45 in the 0 x 24-foot building, which housed over $8,000. | Mr. Wood said that the struc- ture, pera cel ewe diag in repairs last year, was ally insured. He stated that without | from neighbors in _ the ae) SYDNEY, stage of the fire, his house and Claude, which is adjacent, would also | have been lost, Lloyd Balderston gave assist- ance Aye oo: the nearby Conference | Postponed ALGIERS (Reuters) — Hun- |dreds of diplomats and journal- |Algiers, site of. a 50 - country’ |Afro-Asian summit conference ithat never took place. Thes summit conference, jwhich was to have started Tuesday, has been postponed until Nov. eign ministers’ meeting, can- celled 45 minutes after it was jto have begun Saturday, now |be held Oct. 28. | The auspices for the summit | were unfavorable : even before the June 19 coup which over- threw Algerian President Ah- med Ben Bella, and, as it | turned out, made the convening of the conference impossible at this time. Man Killed In Accident HALIFAX (CP) — Joseph Acorn, 41, Spryfield, died in hospital here Saturday night of injuries re- ceived in a highway accident 24 _ hours earlier. Acorn was a passenger in a car that left the highway and rolled over near Summe; — about 15 miles from Wi N.S. no one else was inju as in the accident. Vernon {11 cattle and a large supply of | isters’ feed, resulted in damage of well |“We will not let ether people 5. A preparatory for- | | display tional Exhibition grounds of suburban | Fire Destroys Barn, Heifer At Southport Saturday A fire of unknown origin which ; buildings with his strawberry | all Saturday evening with his when he went to the aid of his broke out on the farm of Blake sprayer before the Parkdale Fire pump truck to imsure that the Wood, Sr., of Southport early Department arrived soon after- blaze did not have Saturday evening, levelled a) wards. barn and destroyed a two-year- | Mr. Wood said that Frank ‘Boy Killed | ‘Helping ‘Dad | NEW YORK (‘AP)—A of youths fatally slashed a oo year - old boy Saturday night father in a Bronx candy store chance to erupt as the wind Polite said the youths were had shifted in the direction of ing money of patrons, in- the Wood home. cluding the father, who refused de- ‘SAIGON (AP) — South Viet- mamese troops overran a Me- king Delta village 35 miles south of here Sunday and killed seven Rhodesian PM Has Firm Stand | SALISBURY (Reuters) — Rhodesia’s Prime Minister lan Smith said ‘Saturday in his first speech since the end of the Commonwealth. prime min- conference in London: Actress Weds m, Publicity Man Australia AP) American actress Jane Powell, %. and Hollywood publicity man Jim Fitzgerald, 4. were "Married Sunday ~ at” Wayside Chapel, a Methodist church in the Sydney suburb of Kings Cross. Mist Powell has been mar- ried twice before and her eldest daughter, Mona, 18, was maid ‘of honor, It was Fitzgerald's second. marriage. There were only 27 guests ‘at the--ceremony but more than 2,000 spectators. ae = Tunda Drive Launched To Save Haida TORONTO (CP) — A Canada- wide drive was launched,Satur- day for funds to preserve the famous old Canadian destroyer Haida as a permanent memorial to the Royal Canadian Navy's seamen of the Second World War. An immediate objective of $500,000 has been set. princi- pally to build a drydock here to enclose the wartime navy’s i“fightingest ship’ in a public near the Canadian Na- A small group called Haida Inc. has fought the vessel from the federal government and has undertaken to preserve her as a unique memorial. Haida, which was in on the kills of 14 enemy vessels during the Sec- ond World War, also fought in the Korean war. It is hoped to fit her out in her wartime rig So visitors can see how Ca- | nada’s seamen lived and fought.) é Delegaies from various parts of Canada gather around the registration desk in the Charlottetown Hotel lob- by as the annual convention of Canadian Mental Association got underway last Registration was fo evening owed. by and was beaten. Viet Cong provincial and local Ivan Terach, a student at officials caught by surprise in_ Roosevelt High School, died of 3 meeting, U.S. military inform- 1a knife wound in the neck a ants reported. hall-heur afer reaching “tuspi- The informants termed it the -; tal. Viet Con Police said the boy and his biggest single bag of Vie ig interfere al our affairs in Rho- desia.” A communique ' issued when the London conference ended Friday night said Britain would consider—ealling-a—constitutional conference for the self-gzovern- ing African colony. whose 4,- 000.000 blacks are ruled by 2 minority white government. This would only come if Brit- ain felt sufficient progress was not being made .in negotiations _ with’ Smith on greater black representation im the colony's government. African Common- wealth leaders’ demands for a fixed time—for~calling—the—con- ference were resisted. a Smith said he has chosen “lion te roar for whet desia.” He spoke during a ceremony where he received the award of Rhodesian of the Year from the Marandelias branch of Lions International, a service organ- ization. | Smith said: There are where revolutions -every- in Algeria and in Saigon, and there are racial jtroubles in America and even lin Britain. “All we ask is tosbe given a fair run and a chance to get on with governing Rhodesia. “The climate of negotiations is good. but the Commonwealth conference aside, I believe that we will solve our problems.” father, Max, 59, a house painter, were in a candy store in the Bathgate Bronx section when 10 youths entered and began de- manding money of patrons. The older Terach refused a request for a dime, police said, and was struck on the head. His son went to his defence and was slashed. When the boy coHapsed on the floor. the youths fled. The father picked up his son and rushed him to hospital in a taxi. “We have got @) Berlin Crisis Move Denied BERLIN (AP) — Walter | Ulbricht was ‘quoted Sunday as ‘saying his regime is not trying to unleash a new Berlin crisis but that “‘certain West German and also American circles” are. “These same people have al- ways assigned to West Berlin the role of a permament crisis- cooker,” the East German Com- in a speech before his ,party’s cen- munist party chief said tral committee last week. The speech was tural published N.Y. Taxi Founder . ven, Dies At 88 NEW YORK (AP) -— Harry N. Allen, 88, the man who put the first taxis on the streets of New York and was given credit for originating the word “‘taxi- cab,” died Saturday in his apartment. Allen started the taxicab busi- Im the Mekong raid, govern- military spokesman country hee tteday. \nesachere-in 1907 after-he be: ee re Coe helicopters and supported air force and navy came angry because the driver U. of a horse-drawn hahsom cab charged him $5 one night for a trip from 44th to 58th street. After brooding over this, he later told an interviewer, made up my mind to start a service in New York and | so much per mile.”” He solicited $3,000,000 worth of | underwriting from businessmen and opened the New York Taxi- cab Co. The taxis were four-; evlinder Darracq cars made in France. Allen soon had 700 taxis and authorization to place them at hotels: railroad stations, steam- ship lines and ferries. The cabs were not allowed to cruise the streets looking for fares, as they are today. Years later, Allen gave this explanation of how he. came to coin the copyrighted word ‘‘taxi- cab.”": “The ‘cab" part was a na- The ‘taxi’ came from a French company that made me- ters for horse cabs. called ‘taxi- Metres.” That means a meter that arranges for the ax. I Sunday in the party organ, merely combined the two." | Neues Deutschland. Allen retired in 1930. MENTAL HEALTH DELEGATES REGISTER the hotel M. Rankin, national president of the as- @ reception in lounge. Murray sociation. will welcome the more than 12% delegates ths =) : Ci wl a 2 ee morning at 9 o'clock, and ses- sions will continue with panel disenssions, the annual gener- 8! meeting and a banquet this evening. ‘See sory on page >! | Five major }fought Sunday. 'County's Addardville area officials in the war against the pro-Communist guerrillas. Other government turned the tide in a fight 20 miles west of this South Viet- namese capital and forced a Viet Cong withdrawal under heavy artillery and air attacks. In the central highlands, how- ever, the Viet Cong guerrillas held tight to a’ newly - seized provincial capital as bad fiving - air weather there prevented strikes against them. Sixty - eight US. warpianes struck inside North Viet Nam, | hitting ammunition dumps, bridges, highways and military compounds, an American spokesman said. SCORN THREAT : And in Saigon, a US. a Viet Cong threat to kill U.S. ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor and other U.S. and South Viet- namese officials. He called the threat ‘beneath contempt.” Fite Pimp ce said Taylor and the ofhers have been well protected for some time. planes, the informants said. They reported that 31 Cong, forces em- bassy spokesman brushed aside Viet including the seven offi- “{ cials, were slain and 29 taken 24 ‘PAGES US. oe Claim Biggest Single Take. prisoner. South Vietnamese of- ficers expressed the belief the Viet Cong guerrillas carried off another 50 dead in their with drawal from Tan Hiep village. “KILL OFFICIALS The informants said the Viet Cong dead included the provin- cial chief, a district chief, a pro- vincial military deputy, the po- litical commissar for the Viet Cong’s 26lst Battalion, a prov- incial deputy for. administra- tion, a deputy for economics and a district finance chief. . The Americans added that the South Vietnamese 7th .Division ordered the raid after learning of the high - level provincial meeting through intelligence in- formation. Tan Hiep is in Dinh Tuong ~ province. which the Viet Cong call My Tho province. The city of My Tho Is the provincial cap- ital. The Mekong Delta has been a Viet Cong stronghold through- out the war. .BOMB HOSPITAL The U.S. informants said the South—-Vietnamese_ troops alse destroyed. with the help of the US. warplanes. a Viet-Cong » hospital in the Tan Hiep area. The government forces scored a measure of success also by turning the fight for~Duc Hoa, 20 miles west of Saigon. The Viet Cong overran the village Saturday in a blazing fight that ‘echoed in Saigon. But a US. reported that .retreating South Vietna- mese turned and launched a counter - attack. The Viet Cong, tinder artillery and air attack, withdrew but were believed re- grouping for another assault, the spokesman said. S. Viet Nam Capital Mourns Dead In Blast SAIGON (Reuters) — The streets were filled with the clang of gongs Sunday as South Viet Nam's capital mourned its dead—victims of Friday's bomb blasts by Viet Cong terrorists. Forty-two persons were con- firmed dead and 9% injured, many of them seriously, as a result of the explosions which rocked a fashionable floating restaurant and felled evening strollers on a nearby boulevard. Sunday. hundreds of white- clad Buddhist Mourners filed through the centre of the city behind huge ornately - carved biers carrying many of the 27 Vietnamese who died. At” Saigon’s- central hospital crowds.. of “Roman Catholics gathered in a small yard where coffins had been laid out on trestles for relatives and friends to pay their last respects In one corner of the vard lay the coffin of one of the city's most popular girl singers, Phuong Thao. who was dining at the. floating My Canph restau- rant when the blasts occurred Several of her voung male ad- mirers stood around {t silently dabbing their eyes. with hand- kerchiefs. _ Meanwhite arrangements were being made for the bodies of the 12 Americans who died to be flown back to the United - States. Queen Advised To Take Rest KIRKCUDBRIGHT, Scotland ‘AP)—Queen Elizabeth was ad- vised to rest Sunday aboard the royal yacht Britannia because of a slight fever. This was announced when the Queen and Prince Philip ar- rived from a visit to South Wales. They are to spend a week touring Scotland The announcement was decided the Queen should rest hecause of the heavy schedule before her during this week's visit sad it Philip came ashore to ap- plause. of. crowds of tourists and local inhabitants of this south Scottish port and went to church FIRE HAZARD HIGH | N.B: Forests | Closed | By TH ECANADIAN’ PRESS Volunteer and forestry service personnel in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia continued to Yhattle woodland fires Sunday as } temperatures soared ta the high | 7s and low is With no rain in sight for at ,least 48 hours, the New Bruns- wick overnment closed the “woods to —Fhe han ‘went into effect at midnight Sunday Lands and Mines Minister Daiel A. Riley announced that droughtlike conditions in the last 19 days had made the for- est fir® hazard extremely hich in all areas of New Brunswick. fires were outbreaks were reported Satur- day One of the worst fires burned ever about 259 acres of slash and small timber in Gloucester being Sixteen smaller Today enty forestry service men, a number of volunteers and sever al pieces of heavy equipment were used to battle the blaze. which broke out Saturday In Nova Scotia. fires broke out in several forest and brush areas \ blaze in the Victoria beach area of Digby County burned over five acres Two small fires were broucht under control in Pictou County and there were fires reported at Timberiea, Armdale and Geir- ers Hill, all in the Halifax area. Mr. Riley said that since Fri- day, all forest service employ- ees of his department had been working around the clock to hold the New Brunswick fires in check Hundred of volunteers were also pressed into service to assist department personnel, Mr. Riley gave no indication when the ban on forest travel Sev- i might Be lifted