If It’s Good For The Island 3 The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIL. NO. 226 Che Guard “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1965. eseeeneem Group Urges Against South Africa > ; ™ ems ~ speiie a “2 war Cloudy with a few clear , periods by evening: winds light. Low-high 48 and 63. Thursday: showers, warmar, nor MORE SEVEN CENTS 20 PAGES Sanctions Smuaggled Narcotics Discovered i Anglo-American Doubt Rejected By WILLIAM NEVILLE jcial groups. Its key section. went When Courier Disobeys Orders OTTAWA. ‘CP)—The 54th In- on to urge all governments to By JOHN LeBLANC LAREDO, Tex. ‘CP)—A pal- |lid little Montrealer who had a short life as a narcotics cour- fer told a jury Tuesday that Lucien Rivard directed the in- ternational movement of at least 228 pounds of illicit heroin valued at perhaps $150,000,000. While. the central figure of Canada’s scandal-in - govern- ment case looked on stolidly, \Joseph Michel (Mike) Caron, |36, recounted a series of whole- sale dope shipments into the United States by way of Europe and Mexico which he said also involved Rivard’s three Cana- dian co-defendants on narcotics conspiracy charges. Caron, serving 10 years In a U.S. penitentiary after getting caught with a 76-pound ship- ment here in 1963, said that was the third trip he was mak- Montreal by boat from Zurope. | CHEATED OF $150 | The former truck driver testi- | fied that the fourth defendant— | frail Charles Emile Groleau of | Montreal—acted as payoff man for some of his work and. ia fact, chiselled him out of $150 on one pay. Caron testified that when he Undersea Lab Called Success complained to Rivard, the al- leged narcotics king told him Grouleau--whom the U.S. gov- | ernment labels his ‘executive! officer'’— was a doublecrosser. | Caron's testimony also re- vealed ironically that his arrest | at this town on the Mexican border on Oct. 19, 1963—which touched off the whole calami- | tous chain of circumstances | leading - to Canadian political | thunder and the Dorion inquiry | —came about because he casu- ally disobeyed orders on how . to cross the Rio Grande River | LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP)—Nine aquanauts learned during 15 |days on the ocean floor that it jtakes loriger than anticipated to. |get things done. But their leader says the project shows that someday a mobile undersea Jab j will be able to cruise the seas. at this point. He had been told to wait over in Mexico for two days unfil a scheduled fiesta was in full swing at Nuevo Laredo, on the | other side of the international bridge here, and then join the (Continued on page 5 Col. 6) iter - Parliamentary Conference jover-rode some Anglo-American ;doubts Tuesday and urged mem. ber countries to introduce. sanc- itions against South’ Africa “for “its apartheid racial policies. | To the obvious delight of Afro- | Asian delegates, in particular, | the meeting of some 600 world parliamentarians voted over- whelmingly in support of a reso- lution condemning the union }governmeut for policies consti- FURROWS QUEE oe crime against ' The balloting, with voting Doris‘ MacDougall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allison Mac- Dougal of Springfield West, was named Queen of the Fur- rows last night at the Prince County Plowing Match. She was crowned by county plow- ing champion, Raynall Mac- Neill. (See story on page 3). Strengths allocated among the national groups according to legislative membership and pop- julation, was 565 to 10 with 99 abstentions. Britain=accounted for seven of the 10 negative votes, while the United States cast two of them and West Germany one. South Africa itself is not a member “ensure the immediate :arrying out” of United Nations resolu- tions on the subject, some of which call for diplomatic and economic sanctions against ‘South Africa. It was this latter provision which lay behind most of the negative votes and abstentions, almost all of which came from European countries. Herman M. Batten, Liberal MP and vice-chairman of the (Canadian delegation, said his group decided on its three ab- stentions in view of the fact the UN resolutions involved had not been approved by the Security Council. This raised some ques- tions as to their effectiveness. As well as the two negative votes, the United States delega- ‘tion cast 11 ballots in favor of the resolition and eight absten- tions. EXPLAIN U.S. STAND MOUNT ROYAL MAN WINS PLOWING TITLE Raynal!l. MacNeill of Mount Royal yesterday won _ the Prince County plowing champ- ionship at a match in O'Leary. It was the first time he enter- ed the match, held for the ' eighth time. He had a total of 634 points, while runner-up Sterling Bagiole, also of Mount Royal, had 62. Mr. MacNeill has been. president of the Prince County Plowing Match since its inception. (See story on page 3.) - Bush Fire In Dundas Area _ Is Brought Under Control A potentially dangerous bush fire was quelled yesterday by | Dept. of Industry forest service | crews. --It--burned.__a_15-acre__swath |timber covered many square {forts by them as well as help | 19-year-old wife, along the fringe of a stand of tinder dry heavy timber near | most part only by narrow roads.,|night should completely kill the | _Auto Industry . Bill 4s Slowed-— = Nand-owned- by ~Reg-- MacDor- WASHINGTON (CP) —A bill | authorizing integration of. the | Canada-United States auto in- | dustry was slowed by one-man | opposition Tuesday without | raising any marked concern | about éventual passage. | The setting was the Senate | finance committee which had logging road, the. only access to scheduled a two - day public | hearing and now is booked for | three days due to pressure of business in the full Senate and jthe* bulldozer, equipped with a the steady flow of critical inter- |\root rake that cut a firebreak Senator Albert between the heavy growth and Gore, Tennessee Demorrat. \the fire area. rogation from Dundas in Kings County. The area burned was mostly slash Late last evening the fire ‘was erations but surrounding heavy |Firemen said that miles and was broken for ithe (from _ showers forecast over- The fire is ‘believed to have started in a pulp cutters’ shack | and: spread. quickly..to_.the sur-_ rounding bush. It occurred on | blaze. ald, Souris and John Acorn, Dundas. The two properties are | back to back. } Two Dept. of Industry pump | calists” tle difficulty in reaching the fire despite poor condition of a guese government agriculture specialists arrive im Ottawa Sept. 17 to begin a week-long study of the Canadian seed po- tato industry: the federal agri- culture department announced Tuesday. the area. The fire was cut off from reaching the heavy timber. by ‘The mission will hold discus- | sions with officials of the federal trade and agriculture -depart- ments before going to’ New River Traffic Piles Up 222== i= As Barge Hunt Goes On NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP)— The stubborn Mississippi River refused Tuesday to divulge the whereabouts of a missing chlor- ine barge despite an all-out search by the military. | _ The object of the mission is and shipping ; tices, potato -breeding research, grading standards and Canada’s program for development of new plunged again into the ‘Missis- varieties. sippi River around Baton Rouge, The agriculture department groping through the silt-laden hopes Portugal will eventually water Tor a heavy -steel barge. recommend Canadian ceftified carrying 600 tons of lethal chior- ,seed stock for its deve’ ine gas in four huge tanks. program. Following the mi : At the same time, the flood- Tricky six-knot currents bul- seed potatoes will be ma ing sifuation eased’ in hurricane- feted the divers who were sent available for testing in Portugal. beleaguered New Orleans where down to investigate every for- ° * Mayor Victor Schiro said: ‘We ‘are right on top of the situa- tion.” The death toll from Hurricane Betsy climbed to 66 with addi- \ton of two victims in New Or- leans. The city counted 4) known dead; 10 other hurricane | deaths were reported elsewhere | in Louisiana: Florida reported | seven . fatalities, Arkansas four and Mississippi one. In addition to the dead, Or- leans parish (county) coroner, Dr. Nicholas Chetta, said be- tween- 50 and 60 names of miss- Ing persons have been regis- tered at his office. Damage estimates were im- possible to obtain from any of-, ficial. source. Classified .... 15, 16 | Parliament today. | i But these facts emerged: Births. 665. cocccccess The government told Parlia-| 1. Hurricane Betsy was the Deaths sta eeadeveeeneeees 3 | ment major objectives had been. most destructive storm in Lou- 0 ae “4 athieved on important sectors of isiana history. Finance, markets ...... 16 \the West Pakistari front. Only 2. Shipping interests regarded , hooks and idevices employed by the navy eign object detected by sonar- equipped navy planes, grappling electronic sounding Peace Hopes The divers located another Are Brighter grain barge—but there was still By CONRAN, FINK no sign of the barge carrying; NEW DELHI (AP) — -Prime destroyer Hyman.. jenough chlorine gas to kill 60,-| Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri 000 persons under certain con- told political leaders Tuesday ditions.” India will work for an ‘‘honor- While the methodical search able and just’’ halt in the war was pursued, river traffic was |With Pakistan, informed sources acking wu miles on both reported. . on of the seafth area. Shastri conferred with United Nations Secretary - General U Thant on details of a possible cessation of hostilities. A gov- |ernment spokesman said Shastri {will announce his decision to INSIDE TODAY |minor clashes were reported, al- | | | RINGO’S SON : essentially dead although sever- | remaining from pulp cutting op-jal areas: of hotspots remained. | here where the eight-pound further ef- |. baby was born Monday to his % : | ers and crews, as well as ai\ ¢ WI bulldozer, were at the scene. The | jfour-wheel drive trucks had lit- | ! OTTAWA ‘(CP)—Three Portu- | i | | | | | a study of government regula- | tions governing seed stock, field | inspection prac | | | | | ing under Rivard’s direction in! that year. EXPLOSION THREAT REMAINS ~\of the Inter-Parliamentary Un- ey A U.S. spokesman said the In the other two, he testified | in iederal court, he made de-| liveries from Montreal to Bridgeport, Conn., after two other defendants—Julian Gag- non and Joseph Raymond (Johnny). Jones of Montreal — brought respectively 68 and | pounds of the drug. inte) a ! Canada cast 10 "ol its 13 | negative votes reflected the view in support or the oh om lof one unidentified delegate who’ All 22 Soviet ballots backed such as the Jewish situation in ‘the resolution, as did ~ other’| the Sovet Union. The ‘spdkes- members of the Communist bloc |man.said the eight American and virtually all delegates from | abstentions were decided on by developing nations in Asia, Af- | delegates who felt the call for ei ye ae - e = the ining th ing. felt it was “‘one-sided’’ to con- 5 Trapped On Freighter on Sor Ss sete " : \SOVIETS BACK MOVE ing other racial discrimination Are Now Presumed Dead F MONTREAL (CP) — National ;quarters, some leaping into the jof injuries, but none was seri- (rica and Latin America. sanctions were decided-on by The resolution, prepared by an delegates who felt the call for | Harbors Board police said Tues- swift current of the harbor as ously hurt. iday night five men missing in TO BE ZAK ithe hot hull of the LONDON (Reuters) — | hattered freighter Fol William } Beatles drumifef “Ringe “now are presumed dead. ‘ a ; i jin his cabin. thi such occurrence in Mon- d | Piha pee ipca deed ay ‘te five crew-members treal harbor since May 6. i Pope Lea Ss 2,500 Pre ates : '7,900-ton ship lying on her side Starr said Tuesday he in- tends to call his son Zak. Arriving at the hospital in 30 feet of water. Starr, 2. told waiting reporters: “We had ’a look down a | long list and. decided on this | one—not because it’s a bit bottom. . biblical, but it's _a bit West- The Fort William, which had ern.”’ * (gone into service only last May “The mop-=~ haire@*~ large was__still steaming ..from__ nosed drummer for the pop- fires that continued to burn in singing Beatles added: “It’s | her hold. short and you won't be able | to shorten it.” : of further explosions remains Starr's own real name is The vessel was known to be Richard Sterkey: a a eae wes He said earlier he would |Carbide as scat casita not encourage his son to fol- | 20d steel plate in her general low in his footsteps unless the 478°. boy showed ‘‘talent.”’ A transport department offi- “There are too many out- (cial in Ottawa said carbide in of- work musicians,” Ringo itself isn’t explosive but it gen declared. : erates a highly explosive gas if ; water is added. Oil also was ac ener Wecaeer ar as said to be included in the cargo. “doing very well indeed,” a hospital spokesman said. Starr, describing his son, said: ‘‘He’s got a little bit of hair, bu‘ he has got a leng way to go before he gets up to us. He looks like a bit of each of us and he's got a bit of a Ringo nose.” It is the second baby within the Beatles group.. The first was born to the wife of John Lennon. ~ on the vessel's starboard side— ‘the side that was on the harbor or smoulder for a considerable time. CREW WAS ASLEEP The freighter had arrived from ‘Port Credit, Ont., via the St. Lawrence Seaway and the crew ‘had gone to bed after berthing. Then the blast, heard for two miles- around,: crashed ithrough the hold and sent flames hurtling into the pre-dawn- sky. Fifteen of the crew scambled |to safety from their below-deck wh Magn hott Bat lt Mitt tas lille tin Sct hearst eto hci bn te Boca win Dake rong are i oe — | possible cascade of flying furni- |that injured nine firemen but no The port police said danget| Then a muffled roar-from in- Rubber, once on fire, can burn” ne 4;,, |IPU committee, said the world’s | sanctions was “economically im- the vessel keeled over. She set- | Capt. Wilkinson, of Orillia, politicians ‘strongly condemn” | practicable.” \tled to the muddy bottom within |Ont., injured a leg as he was South Africa for its policy of| Britain, with a total of 1? mipates. “ \, The met rescued Capt. Sam- }members..- luel Wilkinson who was trapped| The Tuesday blast was the On that date, a 6,000 - ton Swedish freighter was heavily- ‘damaged by a three-alarm fire inot immediately found were. ithought to have made their dash for safety too late to escape a In Procession Of Penance 1% ; wishes | crew- bers. On July 31, the| By BENNET M. BOLTON jin accordance with the ltether Gedamicamt is hit ‘by | VATICAN |= CITY (AP)—Pope of the council, of-an episcopal. '{>-explosions, which killed two Paul led 2500 prelates in a pro. synod.” | cession of penance through ture or other debris shot through the ship by the “as-yet unex- plained blast. Firemen poured water from a jmen. i WILL SHARE POWER : Rome Tuesday night after re- ha t to the | ; ; The new. ne: ed. de- - rf_and nee ee into. o | — i shit 2 ee — et at Ta expecte fae “thut-were-orderedaway~as~the _Sca Ops Found. -— S81. Couneil. wit Pee bi ta‘. hail = see procession |Ccreated to carry out the idea | * C ff St. Pierre ‘moved along the ancient Romar | collegiatity—shared power by HALIFAX (OP —A six-week wall from the Church of the |Pope and bishops in running the survey showed three scallop Holy Cross‘in Jerusalem to St.|Church. beds off the French-owned is- Johns Lateran Basilica. | Progressive prelates have land of St. Pierre could be Pope Paul carried bits ci a reduction in the de- “promising” to commercial fish- wood, venerated as pieces of | cision-making authority of .the ermen, Fisheries Minister E. D. Christ's Cross. They are kept in | Vatican Curia. Its Rome-based Haliburton of Nova Scotia said the Church of the Holy Cross in \Clergy generally make a career Tuesday. : ~~“ Teorsalent: fof their posts and have a.power- The survey covered scallop This was the Roman Catholie™ tu! ema oe eee govern- |homes. beds on Nova Scotian and St. s..¢ day of the exalting of the . ie ot oe . | Missing were George Barber, Pierre banks. Holy “Cross. The procession was wo. with the pope and trans- | : i .’ Mr. Haliburton said the three . and ayer for Di- ’ [of Isliggton, Ont., chief engi- . 4. contain a ‘fair ‘abundance woe help i he TSN ae: * fer of some of the Curta's pow- |threat of a new .blast apparently jincreased. |side the hull sent the steel sides \buckling out. 1 | A CSL official said the ship ;was still too hot and dangerous for anyone to go aboard in search of the five mem. There are oil - refinery: installations |some 300 yards away and a few neer; Claude Laroche, cook, of. i inti dhould mbes i ers to the competence of all~ | Quebec. City; Arnold Urstadt, 43, {Wine amcanine to fishermen in In the opening’ ceremony Of bishops has been favored in- of Desboro, Ont., steward; Denis 1966 "” the final session -of- the council stead among council progres- Beaudoin, 33, seaman, of Cap de la Madeleine, Que.; and Jean- Charles Menard, of L'Islet, |Que., seaman. ; Firemen poured water into the 488-foot-long ship from points on nearby pier 65 and from - Meantime the transport de- partmeni’s marine regulations FADING SPARKS CONCERN branch started seeking ‘the-- —— cause of the explosion. ; i eter’s He said that ‘waters around in the splendor of St. Pi Sable Island, Middle Ground, Basilica, Pope Paul sat in robes Banquereau and Artimon Bank &%d miter of red on a throne were surveyed carefully but re- facing the worldwide assembly vealed no-commercial quantities | of council fathers. of the shellfish.” | \He announced “‘the setting up, sives. The pope said in his announce ment that details on the. work- ‘ing of the bishops senate would be announced as soon as posst- ble. . 7 ‘¥ AG | OTTAWA (CP) — The Na- *-"* = tional. Research Council is «59% j-working on a color-fast model > | that will extend the: present = | three-week life of the maple leaf flag to three months. The new fabricated nylon model will wear out before the ‘color fades, hopes Dr. L. thus fades | . ; ; : a ° : Three otitis surviors were | ome | -F he + Fl ie i A ican ie teaet| COlor-Fast Flag Is Aim trate deeply -and quickly. oe The new flags are expected to cost more, but there may be savings as a result of their extended lifetime A six-foot flag, the standard size used on buildings like post offices and for ceremoni- als, costs from $4.75 -to $5.25 a Le aaa a iE. Howlett, director of applied wwhes..bouaht in quantity s | Bhysics with the council. =| government spokesman said. The old red ensigns faded =| About 15,000 were bought just as quickly as the present ‘ last February and one esti- ‘2 mate is that about 25,000 have been bought for military and flag, he said in an interview | | government purposes. ' | Tuesday, but because of the complexity of colors, it wasn’t too noticeable. " But the striking. red maple They range in size from the | three-footers flown on ships to leaf on the white background the 15-foot giant that waves of the new flag has been the | over the Peace Tower on despair_of everyone who has Parliament Hill. seen it change to a light | + Dr. Howlett couldn't esti- mate when the new flags will be in production by-the six or seven textile mills that turn them out. The council still has .some specifications to work out. | For instance, what white | background will go best with the color | the British Admiralty red of | the maple leaf? orange. “It's rather a complex psy- | chological prob tem,”—Dr— Howlett said. ‘Our instruc- tions 4re to come up: with a damn good flag.” The problem has been found to We not the dye but the silk- | . : see screen printing process. Dr__L.E. Howlett. director_of applied physics with the Na- tional Research Council, hopes ~ | a new fabricated nylon model of ‘the Maple Leaf Flag will wear out before the storm..as the worst peace- |though the air war continued. Pa On Ths fades. . ; lime maritime disaster in the _ | There was no assurance that eo ee oe “Contrary~to public belief, US. - \Sashatri snd Thant wou'd reach a aac : completed, new flags will The red dye will penetrate | there are a great many whites 3. Offshore oilmen counted agreement or that Pakistan TUGS PLAY streams of wa- fire after an explosion in Mon- presumed dead “aboard ship. | probably be made from five | into the fibres, ensuring fast- | and we will choose the one _losses_in_ millions of dollars. | would jom in if one were ter on the burning freighter real port at 4.30 am, Five “(CP Wirephoto) pieces of vat-dyed nylon. sewn ness. Under the present | that sets off British admiralty U.S. army and navy divers) es reached. | Fort_William which eaught seaman are etill missing and © — _ Mogether, | method, the dye doesn’t pene- | red best,” Dr, \ ape a2 ay = i ; ’ | - ; : o : ¥ - : ; ; + = ‘ . “u > * ~« A erehnetn, Meh cttintoecBothe te toh rasta iP AEN SL Li LR \plucked from his eabia by crew- apartheid or segregation of ra-| (Continued on page 3 Col. 1, such=a--senate-be-==-=—-~ = LO EA NN A NN A