- Enea _pages on unsafe projects.” Tax Increase In Brita _ tourist trade. & product If It's Good For The Island | The. Guardian Is For It’ e Guardian a “Covers Prince Edwaid Island Like The Dew” Authorised e2 Second Class Maf by the Post Office Department CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, MAY. 5, 1966. France Infor Flights Are Te Sparks Island Discussion By NEW MATHESON $1.95 to $2.15 cents per pound, Lobster prices were being dis-|Mr. O'Brien does the market eussed freely at fishing centres news report for, the Bureau of to him late yesterday afternoon. An earlier suggestion that lob- ster prices would be forced down , around this provinces, and in}Fish and Wildlife Service in the by large holdovers said also that Maritimes yesterday it ‘was Boston area, e competition from crab meat learned, following publication was injuring the lobster price! here yesterday of results of a HIGH CENTRE , survey instituted .at the request | Mr. Gillis told The Guardian of Hon. Andrew MacRae, P.E.I. that Lobsters were. bringing 70 minister of agriculture: ‘cents per pound in the Digby Earlier suggestions that large area yesterday, which must holdings of lobster meat carried |have made. it the high centre in over” from-tast-year-would- hold-the-Maritimesyesterday. for_the prices down this. season, were (tasty delicacy of. the sea. said tn he not founded in fact, by! Alaskan crab: meat _ supplies two men who were ‘involved in|are- very light’) =Mr>-O'Brien the survey. s told: Mr.~Gitis, who was talking HEADED SURVEY | _ Reid Sangster, director of marketing for this _ province, headed up the survey. for. this | province. But he had ‘‘valuable | from Mike Gillis, who does the! CBC _fishermen's broadcasts and the Atlantic region ‘fisheries weekly TV program The Guardian learned last ev- ening, for example, from Mr. Gillis that Nova Scotia lobsters were selling for 78 cents in Bos- ‘possibilities. It was difficult last evening to get price quotations on the Is- land- at many places, but Mr. \Sangster said he had. fotind the offering price ranging from 45_ cents to 57 cents per pound after talking to buyers, or fishermen at such widely scattered places | as- Murray Harbor,Morell,. North . Rustico and Tignish. . é UNREST IN CHINA Influential Elements : Survey Of Lobster Prices © pe over France or to land, nesday, 8 “WEATHER sunny and alittle warmer; light and 50. Friday: Cd Mostly winds. Low-high 30 cloudy with a few showers, Not MORE SEVEN CENTS ‘oA - 20 PAGES rench President ontinues 1 NATO counet!, the “organiza. has | tion's political body, in Paris. By DAVID MASON: PARIS (AP) — France ‘told the NATO Allies it will re. | view every month its permission | Strasbourg, has been ‘for their military planes: to fly|out European leaders on the in- | possibility of moving. both mill- formed sources reported Wed-|tary wnd=politieal headquarters jof NATO to London. This means flights over or! Policy — sounding PARTNERS WERF TOLD -about 40—minutes—but—emerged-Mao Tse-tung's teachings.” ton Wednesday and this is the | equivalent of slightly more than 84 cents in Canadian currency. John O'Brien told Mr: Gillis yesterday that the supply - of, landings in France by Allied air- , 4 ‘craft could be terminated on 30| The French decision for @ ‘days notice, the sources said, Month - to - month re - examt- There was no sign this was nation of Allied flight privileges about to happen. \starting June 1 was communt- Seek Reconciliation By RENE-GEORGES INAGAKI Kremlin of plotting with the | TOKYO (AP)—China’s. army | United States against China. Y in the aes } eee eat “yg rs pewapaper reported Wednesday »- pene of pro-Soviet The move was the latest in cated to the NATO partners ing that there is a rebellious group Clements in China, possibly in President de Gaulle’s program | Tuesday. selling’! group possibly Themmit| The United Slates directs to remove France from the mil- itary activities of the North At- lantie Treaty Organization. T ‘about 100,000 separate airplane jand helicopter flights over t eame as Britain announced |France in the course of a year George Thomson, the No. 2 and would be most affected by minister in the British foreign |the move. Other major Allies # loffice, will go to Washington | @ffected include Canada—with |and Ottawa to discuss NATO two RCAF installations questions generally. and the |in France—West. Germany and prospect of moving political and | Britain. ‘military headquarters of the Al-| In the past. permission for overflights and landings have is—teurrently ; wholesale at a ranging from i the~Chinese~Communist~party;influential.--places,----conceivably- sega ————____—_—_———jand the survival of Mao Tse- might. explain why the Soviet or " tung's “ideology ‘is at stake: It |leaders have seemed. restrained ix Men seemed to hint that. influential:'in dealing with cascades of | elements seek. a reconciliation anti-Kremlin vituperation from | \with the Soviet Communists. —Peking.. The Kremlin has re-/£ Escape Le | ‘The editorial tm Liberation Plied only with appeals for v* ; [Army Daily, broadcast from ,World Communist unity. | ° Peking, was the latest of recent! Analysts have suggested that Exp osion statements indicating ‘concern any significant change in lead- VISITING THE SAGUENAY lottetown Harbor Wednesday, Governor and Mayor of Char- LEFT) are Lieulenant-Gover- Henry H.W. Plant, On; : in the Peking Politburo about jership or policies in China| ' j-: yor RONTO UEP) no ur trends -among—intellectuals-—and- might _clear- the_way_for_mend-_ RCN, commander of the heli-’ wag welcomed. to the province lottetown. Seen aboard the "0, Wt. en . ta ee ene ion |bee ONTO occ men vlawnf, some sections of the armed ing relations” with the Soret ee ree ee ae “ec Bemis, Uscleaaal Saguenay FRONT = TRE ses-Premics-Wtr-tke FOE. Official apt eg reaction | ae Oo ee te ee forces. ‘party. That eould mean much eo which docked, in .C eel cniienstatoanendguneererrareesrenetnemise Serene a ee i 72s eoewe [mm Ottaws-to- ee tine Sap ‘ ae zat their way out of a storm sewer |. Fithat. -no-cdifficulties -are—anticl ing year... The _1965_author ‘economically and perhpas in| ee tee are canada h ad been “horny Wednesday after» the»project _ The . editorial said there are ‘Cae ee aes or = was blasted by an explosion inthe party certain “‘anti- modernizing China’s armed . s France agreement lapsed some . : and. caved la. Bea party” persons who wear ‘a |forces. | ; nN IX i efa S months. ago, officials said. If Allied military overflights é 4 ‘ : were to be harred by Franee, The present-Politburo—in—Pe- \king seems set against a re- \versal of policy which would; permit better relations. The Kremlin leaders are accused of’ Two others ‘were trapped for’ |" veil of Marxism-Leninism and oe ATTACKS DE GAULLE an East-West barrier in effect Meanwhile, Representa-|would be erected across Fv ‘Ohio) Wedensday delivered the |Iron Curtain. Military flights latest U.S. attack on ‘de Gaulle’s |are not permitted over neutra’ \Kuropean policies before the Switzerland. and Austria. | European Consultative Assem- | Allied officials consider th» Nominated AtConventio1 from the sewer about two, “The activities of these anti- blocks away from the explosion. |party, anti - socialist elements All six were taken to hospital, are not an accidental phenome- where three. were in serious/non,” it said. “They are re- TeVisionism and reversion to’ condition’ with burns. |sponding to the great interna- bourgeois — meaning capital Cha Ides . : : . ist ee co ‘Thomas tional anti-Chinese chorus of the —!deas. | ilson said the explosion was imperialists, modern revision- | eaused by “‘gas of some sort,” \ists and various reactionaries to ALTACE is ae ee edi- | | a ani perhaps a pocket of methane revive the Chinese reactionary | All | eS + a At a joild som... ie Queens nominated Mrs. Jean |Leod, both of Charlottetown. ion for the fifte and sixtn um | Canfield of Crapaud as their} Mr. . Jobnston’s nomination tricts of Queens Charlottetown | candidate. ~ : was moved by Jack Smaliwood Liberals chose. ir candidates| Mr. Bianchard’s nomination | of Charlottetown and it was was moved by William Ellis and | seconded by Fulton Robertson gas which could form naturally ‘class which has been struck eh in the swampy ground. _|down.”” ; . 4but jit made clear that others | for the May 30% election. . : ; " , Oe swampy round. —_ oy om soewet a aoa ates snare! Gordet L. Bonet vas ot ewes or sie: Eugene ae aaa Roots: be o - Jeod,._Conservative. fina nce lerans Federation the UN make lem. torial is the intellectual class, _ the anti-party activities of right-| wasHINGTON (Reuters) — opporunists within “the: Democratic “Sewator Stuart ‘Symington Wednesday charged Britain, West - Germany and). other U.S. Allies with failure to Joseph Revell moved the nom- | leader, spoke to the meeting fol- ination of Gordon Bennett and | lowing the nomination of the - |it-was seconded by William Ste-'| candidates. . Mrs. Jean Macdonald — was venson, they too are from Chaf-| ‘The meeting was chaired by nominated assemblyman — and | lotletown.- Addie Macdonald and — lloyd Edward"B. Brown councillor for! The nomination of Joseph Ray-| weeks was the secretary, the 6th district. Mrs. Macdon-| mond MacPhee was moved by = Field Marshal as Blanchard councillor for the 5th | district. Both were unopposed in their nominations. from an electric wire providing CHARGE PLOTS light in the sewer had. ignited| This seemed an indirect’ way WiDk the gas. of saying that pro-Soviet ele- |Party. Gerry Gallaher,” secretary of |ments should be rooted out. By | Editorials int he official Pe- = hi the ieteeeeteeel vrai fe pgege ens modern re-|king People’s Daily have ers nion (CLC), sai e visionists,” the Chinese Commu- warned against anti-pai ele- |}; i i blast ‘‘demonstrates the need /nists mean the Americans and |ménts but have said” ri de- ee aA tine wire ae for further action for work stop- the current Soviet leadership. spite ups .and downs Peking : : ; aera fe \Peking has been accusing the communism would win out. peinay with prosperity than se-j| ald’s nomination was opposed by |G.GK. Peake and seconded by a Jack W. Johnston who she de | Vincent Macintyre. Ali from |, ‘The senator, a member: of. the | = a | feated-on_the-first-balot.—Mr./Charlottetown.—_______|_ ° senate’s foreign relations and | Brown defeated Joseph’ Ray-| Edward (Eddy) Brown was l n nominated by Dr- Wendell Mac- Begins To Create Outcry: tees, told -a press conference | ation, also on the first ballot. the United States itself is ‘‘over- | SECOND WOMAN seconded by Lester P. O’Don- By HAROLD MORRISON’ | LONDON (CP) — Cost-weary committed’ around the world| Mrs. Macdonald {s the second | nell. and will have to reduce its com- | woman nominated py the Lib-| Mrs. Macdonald's nomination mitments unless the Allies are |erals in this election, earlier | was moved by Gilbert Gaudet persuaded to do more. — the Liberals in the first district and seconded by Robert Mac- | Britons began tooreact Wednes- day to James Callaghan’s un- expected budget jab—the tax ‘on jobs. An outcry ‘against inevita- LONDON (AP) -— Field Mar- | shal Viscount Montgomery’ said | Wednesday that although’ he-still | feels U.S. Gen. Dwight D. EFisen- | hower was an inexperienced and politically - uneducated supreme commander during the Second World War, it was not entirely his fault. the Allies -didn't beat 2\the Russians .to Berlin. E| In a BBC interview, Montgom- \ery said the blame rests pri- ! marily on U.S. president Roose- velt and British prime minister Symington returned in mid- a | With the extra. 10-per-cent jciation said the joh tax wil Fopean tour fos eee a tariff on manufactured products cost insurance companies £9,- \visited West. Germany, France to be lifted in November, some |000,000 a year, which may have and Britain. ‘British ear -manufacturersof- tobe borne-by--higher-insurance | ‘Rich and powerful though we Beats eal the United States cannot fered small immediat: ice | i i tlle ediate price |premiums. Commercial tele- continue indefinitely to both f% ble price increases resounded | cuts. vision said it may have to | from the barbershop to the ws i f ri nance and defend the so-called : ; slathis’ <haise = sehiehs tenon Resentment against the mann- lenarge more for advertising. \tree world with such little sup- Sve Rigedhecet lg cake alte i e ewes Garages said they will haye to'yort from our friends and Al- ; ; charge more for car repairs. Crys sa ae what wil be In eect x man- "Ani mit soen through. the ie, Mee mtr abo power subsidy: of $1--an -em- |heartheat.of British _society— ” os ployee per week is beginning. to 'taxes. piled on taxes—with the hat neve See | facturing industri ) oe eer ™ (cal directive’ or blueprint about i leapturing the strategic central \European capitals of Berlin and ,, |Ptague before Stalin could grab ‘|them. . e Higher prices. are antieipiid for theatre . tickets, — haircuts, laundry, cricket matches,. bank services, hotels, restaurants and \bly in Strasbourg. He accused |question of guarantees. for over: \de Gaulle of trying to destroy the Atlantic Alliance and block European unification. YA French delegate, Michel de Grailly, _ealled Hays’ speech \singularly insolent.” - De Gaulle has announced | |France will no longer particl- ‘pate in NATO's integrated mill- |tary structure, and he has or- dered withdrawal ofall Altied- military forces—including Ca- nadian—from France ‘by April 1 : of the Atlantie Allian and he wants to retain. |military operations by its a ce, | the \flights and landings by NATO) | r : the most jaircraft to be one of ‘important questions: te he nego- |tiated. with France in eonnee- ltion with her withdrawal from INATO military activities. The United States has already lbeen restricted in its European ment to halt refuelling of clear bombers— over Spain. The. agreement followed the [collision of a bomber and @ ; - iItanker during a refuelling op- But he says France remains leration in January. Three of the _leammitted to the political prin- |four nuc Expresses Views | ciples lear weapons bomber carried fell on Spanish soil but didnot explode. LowTemperature ‘Hinders OTTAWA. (CP) — Snow and low temperatures have delayed spring seeding in most of the Prairie grain belt, thé Dominion Bureau. of Statistics reported Wednesday. fy ; The federal agency said in its first telegraphic crop report of the year that only a _small amount of seeding has been even independent public schools. Employers in the service in- chistries will have to bear the tax—-ranging from $3.75 a week ae up a other segments islitter of higher. living stand- oe . of British society. ‘lards just beyond the one’s C _Commissioner Is Urged - 1 E: The British Insurance Asso- | grasp: i Parliament for mate employees down to} ’ 5 } p , $1.20 for girls. But in most |~ A A Gl cases these ‘higher costs, begin-| T R ° ec t ance . ning Sept. 5, will be . passed | i 0 esign at 1 . along fo the consumer. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The chancellor's new tax) OTTAWA—(CP)—RC 2 punch is expected to net the | tasioner etek a ances WEDNESDAY, May 4, 1966 treasury almost $1,000,000,000 should resign in the face of a The Commons wound up the electoral redistribution, debate direct conflict between his own | sworn evidence and a statement. by Prime Minister . Pearson, this year and lesser amounts in | following years. .* ; Mortgage companies estimate’ after-hearing complaints from Manitoba MPs. 2 In Council Speech abs Pati api Hi cemend | OTTAWA (CP)—External AL| “So, as I see it. the root (MP -David-Orlikow. said Wed- | © “Opposition Leader — Diefen- short! oe ar TY; cent. .2irs_ Minister Martin suggested | problem | of findi nesday. - |. a baker said opening Commons shortly to seven or 7% per ce “lWednesday night sharing ;Probiem . is ae iInding #0Me@ wither. thecommissioner. had — committee meetings to televi- Haircuts may rise by one |. for United Nations ‘peace- flexible relationship between not told a true story before the | | sion or radio. broadcasts would. eliminate the problem Munsinger judicial. inquiry ‘‘or | shilling (15 cents). keeping forces be decided it at \peace-keeping and peace-mak- | a " | & that FORESEF. BIG RISE ‘all possible before such forces ing, especially where compara- jelse he's not competent. at his =~ of raising a quorum. Since the tax will be borne are organized and deployed. tively large forces are required. job,” the New Democrat’ mem- | ~ State Secretary Judy La- by all the service -industries— He also suggested in a speech “I would like to suggest two [ber for Winnipeg North said in| © Marsh announced appointment “ of Jean Sutherland Boggs as Iain Mae- | ¢o the council of the World Vet-|kinds of answer tho this probs “ interview. ! n either case if was the com- {missioner's duty to quif. first woman director of the National Gallery. from food to clothing— the clear that UN forces are~ not: spokesman, estima in ! Phe first is not—to—set—our- S | | a ae Commons Wednesday the price expected to be permanent fix- tights to ‘igh: to prefer, when Mr. Orlikow referred to the The | Dominion Rureaw—of increases’ will be formidable and ltures. dver Mu way be desirable the commissioner's testimony be | Statistics reported snow. and will.be higher ‘than the .ore-per-| He mentioned that the UN | : ; : fore Mr. Justice W. F. Spence | low temperatures haye de- sending sof observers to the that Mr. Pearson had asked him | layed spring planting o Prairie grain. THURSDAY, May 5 ~The commons meets at 2730 cent “increase in living costs force in. Egypt has been there | * p “tow it / t estimated by Callaghan. . nearly 10 years and said in such rea slearly be tiadooints tet 1964 about any impropriety | The tast-five budgets, he-said, |circumstances-‘‘the —-UN-—-may-4a--tH¢s jon fhen—t=make -every +2 anythingpf a scandalous na- | had added £1,000,000,000 . ($3,- jfind itself upholding the - status ture about any MPs. 7 : : | 3 effort to find an agreed system | ; ¥ ; i il Age a derinite cominttmeme (of cost-sharing before’ & lores Tquniuitly “eoliradiese oy aaa p.m., to. discuss changes in the aati in ae i ai te : men. is organized and deployed. * ‘Mr. Pears in the Cofnn Combines Investigation Act. gougers will be referred fo the |He added: | rh d kind of answer LS ihe haat ale Lae Peet The. Senat eets at 3 p.m prices and in-| “Tf a large force, and there- | eee cur swer, Tuesday. ~ Senale .m Oi Pees government's board for action. ‘I would suggest, is to be found ; “Police officers are trained to | lin the concept of a regular re- The fore relatively heavy costs are \give testimony which is precise, comes \ 5 board is under orders to keep jinvolved, the question arises as INSIDE TODAY wage and price rises moderate. |to how the expenses are to be view of thes mandate of “ peace- \eorrect, exact,"’ said the NDP But so far it has failed to halt shared... / - keeping force, especially when | member. “Tf they have. any | pay ae a steady climb in living cost¥iin:iNodcost-sharing scheme will icollective assessment is NOt recervations any nuances, they | a a The new. tax is designed as |be acceptable for long unless |28reed as the method of finane- sre trained to give those so! * Ra AC : a deflationary step, to sop up the®.leading states pay’ their ing the force. there will he no’ misunderstand- | - ee ee a some. consumer purchasing |share. But one lesson we have| Informants said the Canadian | ing.”’ oe ee eee crecienrgs - power and help the manufac- learned i that there is little sched pad oan to raise fae There Ah age further con. iti ei ae Spent --- ete ie 3 turing industries» which will get |h of this happening because |matter at the summer meeting fidence between the government | ie A 1 fveuEdes back in refunds more of the job thie will always be states [of the UN's 33-nation peacekeep-|and the commissioner, Mr. RADIANT QUEEN MUM moet Uc hngg A a ie tax than” they pay in: Some |whose interest-is- not to upho! ing group. ‘ Orlikow_said_ | : er tistorials SB veeeenes 4 Rritish automobile manufactur- the status quo in a particula® Mr. Martin's statements were’ Mr. Orlikow_ said he has_ not Queen Mother Klizabeth ar- with official” and inofficial Summerside SN era 3 ers estimate they will be able |situation or who oppose outside included in a text of the speech yet had a _chance—in the Com-_. rived yesterday at_Vancourer "greeters. Queen Mother arriv- Kings. Queen’.’ City... 5 to cit the price of their pro- intervention into what seems tovssued to the press before de- mons to suggest that the com- International Airport, smiling, ad by jet from a visit to NeW | Prinee County 2 ibe domestic affaires, jmissioner should resign. Zealand, ducts ‘waving and ‘shaking hands aan Hivery, ‘ g 2 \ done and this is confined to southern districts in the Prairies. : However, warm weather would allow field operations to become general next week over ~{most of Saskatchewan and Al- ‘berta. Up to two weeks of warm |weather would be needed for inortheastern Saskatchewan and jmuch of Manitoba. I> Throughout the Prairies |moisture supplies aré generally good, said the report, based on information from _correspond- ents, grain’ men and other ob- | servers received up to Tuesday. | Spring seeding weather in the Maritimes has been generally cold and dry. In Prince Fd- ward Island farmers have been lable to ‘plant some early po- ltatoes in light sandy: svil which jis dry. First seeding of grain jand potatoes in Nova Scotia's ‘Annapolis Valley occurred a |month ago. Some seeding is un- |der way in the central area of Gusbec MP Ha | OTTAWA (CP)—The resigna- ition of Conservative MP Clem- lent Vincent, who plans to. enter |Quebee provincial, politics, was \formall¥ announced to the Com- imons. Wednesday. | Speaker Lucien Lamoureux said he has asked for a writ jof election .for Mr. . Vincent's jriding of Nicolet-Yamaska. This igives the government six {months ,in which to set a date ‘for a byelection. Under redistributron, the rural riding is to disappear into two \others in the next federal etec- tion. { 1 \ s Resigned Seeding the province but elsewhere lit- tle has been done, | Seeding of grain, potatoes, and early horticultural crops is lwell under way-in New Bruns- lwick, but growth has been slow, \A little winter kill hasbeen Te- iported on hay and pasture land. | In Quebec, field work was dis- {conti leold and rain but farmers are lmaking progress in preparing ithe soil for seeding. | In British Columbia, severe lWweather has delayed. operations jin the central interior. In the ‘Okanagan Valley, usually cool ‘nights in the south during bloom have reduced fruit crop pros- |pects. In the central interior, cool April weather followed. a snow storm early in the month, idampening prospects. . -Commons Debate ‘Concluded OTTAWA (CP) A uency. that would cover three- quarters of Manitoba drew’ crit- icism from that province's MPs ronstit- mporary Ne ’ « ae ‘ nued last week because of — Wednesday as the Commons te- - distribution debate drew to a close. Robert Simpson (PC -Church- ilk said his constituency would hecome the largest of any out- side the ‘Territories. The Manitoba Boundaries. Commission had a population of 600 people to Churchill, This would give him a formid able 191,000 square miles of terrilory .to cover in the next ‘election ‘ “The north has heen igriored for too long and this is just an other example of the fact that -peéple-.who don't live. there don't know it,’ Mr. Simpsos said. As. the five-day dehate ended, Chief—Electoral Officer__Nelsos Castonguay was in Halifax dis cussing Nava Senta objectiont iwith the commission there, “Electoral & F added 20,000 square miles with