"I? If It's Good For The Island WEAT HER I ‘ SnOWflurries; northwest winds 25. gusts ' c " to 40. Low-high 25 and 32. Friday: snow The Guardian Is For I. and milder. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ” VOL. N0. 285 Authorised as Second Clan Mall by the Post Office Harri-H1133; 20 Department. Ottawa. Ind for payment of postage in an]: CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1964. . Rooms were left exposed when the front half of this four-storey apartment build- Ing in downtown Montreal Jinn! ll ESCAPE IN BUILDING COELAPSE ASSOCIATION MEETS Tourist Business The province's tourist reve- provmce nue continues to soar with the in 1964. 1964 season worth an estimat- in 1963. ed 312.000.000. Hon. J. David Other members of the panel Stewart said yesterday. were Frank Storey. general As minister of tourist de- manager of the Confederation velopment. Mr. tewart was Memorial Building: Highways taking part in a panel discus- Minister Philip Matheson and sion on the industry at the an- El. Liquor Control Com- nual meeting yesterday of the mission chairman Blake Wood. P. .l. ourist Association at n his opening remarks Mr. the Charlottetown Hotel. ’Stewart said he didn't said tourist revenue. showed an increase of 16 perl cent this year over last year.‘ being approximately $2,000.000l higher than in 1963. According to Mr. Stewart. the compared to the amount of assistance pro vided by the federal and vincial governments in pro- moting the tourist industry. He said the federal government a: V‘ :2?» "n i e o 0 Interesting, Exatlng Year Value Estimated At $12 Million had $33000 visitorsldoes a tremendous amount oil 278.0001advertising and maintains nav“: re- tlona parks "which are markable attractions.“ NEEDS BIGGER BUDGET On the provincial level. Mr. .Stewart said his department‘s $413,000 than the $25. " He said he mink is not satisfied with the current. budget for 1963 was "many times more 000 budget of 1959. i the general public appreciated .amount and “it should be doubl-l . ed.” He added that more money pm. could be used for an expanded the de- camp and the operation of 1 advertising campaign. ‘velopment of provincial lgroullds ".ravel bureaus Commentinghm the 1964 sea- ms have been a spotty year with Won. Mr. Stewart said "it see o r 1\ LT.-COL. JOHNSTORE Burlington Man To Head Tourist Ass’n E.W. of Lt.-Col .Iohnstone ‘ ' 0 .me operators reporting aiBurlington was elected presl toppled into an adjoining ex- foundation was apparently worse year than in 1963. Possibly i d9“? 0‘ the P-E‘I- Tour!“ ASS” cavation Wednesday. Eleven weakened by the eXcavatlon people were kept away hecaus.!clatlon at the lanhual meetlfig tenants. trapped in the debris. next door. «This year Wm b bl , 1 _ d Ithey thought conditions here I yesterday "1 Cla'l‘ Oitelown- 6 were rescued. The building‘s (CP Wirephotm down in‘history “pm: of" tEgl £11325: in» §é%g‘lea:av:‘:iseh Tsucceeds harlcs Llnkletter of Hoover Says Commission Report Unfair To FBI WASHINGTON rAP) —- FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover boiled over Wednesday with criticism of the Warren commission and Dr. Martin Luther King. Nobel prize - winning Negro leader. In a.- ee - all '61: a group of Washington women reporters. Hoover also spoke up on civil rights. protection of the president, police corruption and juvenile delinquency. Accusing the Warren commis- Flag Debate Postponed OTTAWA (CPFThe politicalrbecause they tthe agents) were committed major m. parties furled the flag Tucsday‘sellthe In favor of working for the next seven days on the government's spending program. The Commons had scheduled to start the flag de- bate Thursday but a lengthy discussion In the caucus meet- ings of the various parties fol- lowed by a meeting of the House produced the postponemen . Silence Settles Over Altair 0i Prince Charles' Writings LONDON lAPl — Silence ‘ettled on Buckingham Palace ‘ Wednesday night over the affair of Prince Charles and his schorl book reflections about the life of the common man. Having alre a'd y conveyed royal disapproval the prince‘s writings should appear in a cat German magazine. palace otficlals declined to comment on the further airing received by been by a hundreds of hours to make it *most interesting and most ex- l all it has been. citing in the 20th Century on. ‘Prince Edward Island." P_.E-I-l The tourist industry was Tourist Association prestdent.l worth “2.000.000 to the prov- Charles Linkletter said yester- thee ‘in 1954, according to ay. ' ' . lTourist Development Minister Hg was delivering the Dr0§l'l.l. Dav'd tewart who said dents report i? aSSMla-business was up 16 per cent tion's annual meeting at 'theimver last year, Charlottetown 'Hotel. l r. Linkletter said the year r SIX SUGGESTIONS asion of an unfair report on his ment is practically nil andl“has. been one in ‘ t ‘ Mr. Linkletter' put forth six lagency. he said the commis- many times sheriffs and dep-lmaxmlum effort has been Put Suggesllons 1“ his report which ‘sion‘s report on President John utics participate in crime." riorward by 50. many segments l he §ald should receive early F. Kennedy‘s assassination was He said great progress is be-l0f our PODUIaUOfl to make the ‘ COHSIdeI‘atmn- Hoover also asserted there isl on f '1. I not‘f the . . . ported as 81mg 0 ly .police partictpatlon in crime inl terms lContinued on page 3 Col. 4) were crowded. 'I terest in our province. l In replying to questions from Mr. the government ‘would be. happy to get out of pro- wldlng camp sites in the province turn the program over to ‘delegates to the meeting. L Stewart said ‘ and private enterprise. He added. fl-owever. "if we had to rely on provid rprivate enterprise to (Continued on page 5 Col. 4' am looking forward to an even better year in 1965. how- .ver. as I think this year's pub- ’licity created a great deal of In-' ting spaces. we would not ge ‘Summerside. Senator Elsie In- man of Montague is honorary president. Other officers include: vice- president Creelman MacArthur. Alberton: sec retary-treasu rer. Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet. Char- Pictou County iTo Be Site Of Huge Plant e t i Wednesday night that the com- of personal involvementl secret service Lee Harvey 05- . .. t wald was in Dallas‘ Hoover saidseverah midwestern Cities. Hei angrily. on is a classic ex.'sald this 15 one reaslon he op-r - r, poses a national poice force.‘ .amPle-qf Monday mommg qua “If they (local police) could: I m w.d _ m in imgr-nitrite to a central clearing liousel Vie: goovérecanedngxifig "mellor inform‘atlon.uyou canldlnga . ‘ v r 0: most notorious liar in the coun- ggo‘igrgaigrm ey “cu try" for saying FBI agents in The “31' Albany, Ga. would take no ac-‘nblee'ding tion on civil rights complaints shielding an . l director cri heart judges‘ juveniles who have imes. met" ‘ He said the FBI would have Also on civil rights. Hoover;hnown Oswald, Kennedy's as. ‘dESCI‘ibEd 35 "3 scand_al"sassin. had a juvenile record if ous thing lo d0" the suspenswn the New York courts had not ‘ _ McComb, M.iss.. judge othept h secret, 'the sentences of nine men can Hoover said it is not victed of bombing and burning , agency's business to guard any- _ a church. He said the men are one, _ and the box to nearby Ostla. not young. as claimed. but This included the president of; Police said the «rated man. When the box was opened :range in age from 33 IO 44- ’the United States and those‘tlosef Dahan- 30. had been 3 sPleahan was found dazed with “Around Philadelphia. Miss..".5‘who go down to reform the mil {0“ the U-A-R and later drugsa gagged and chained to Homer continued. "law enforce-south." r 15"391- The-V 531" “‘9 MOTOC‘ an adjustable stool. 4”" ' b°“‘- bleach" ' b‘°“°." Police said the headpiece and Itlguage expert was 3" Israel] built-in shoes were adjustable.l c‘tlzen' . and old sweat stains on the They Said he denied havmglleather liner of the headpiece been a spy. but told a confused lindicated that the box Ilad been or incomplete story of a mys-‘used before, “irious appomtmem and k'dnap'l The foreign ministry said pmg from a .cafe. 0" .me “3 Hasim insisted the crated-manl Venew' Romes “'ghl'me qua" shipment was “done without ticized ' ‘ for ROME lAPI — Two United‘Egyptians wrested the box ‘Arab Republic diplomats werelaway from them by force. put lexpelled from Italy Wednesdayiit back on the truck and sped ifor trying to smuggle a chained,iaway. ldrugged prisoner to the foreign Police followed in a dramatic 'ministry in Cairo in‘a trunk chase along the highway to the his labelled “diplomatic mall-H sea. forced the truck off the Whit; 19“ Rome wane-“day road and took the Egyptians .nlg . r. Giving the case a still morer‘his macabre tone. police said film)l {seemed almost certain the dip» . British ress.r He said press and television lomatic trunk. with its built-in thgnrzatéglurli‘ellheclose to proyal protect the people from the gov- chains. metal headbrace and circles was heard to exclaim: Iernment by proclaiming what is nalled - down shoe5_ had been “The sooner all this is over and going 011- _ . used before for human cargo; done with. the better.‘ 4 The publlcatlon of these and The two UAR‘ embassy first The 16 - year - old heir to the other statements drew this re- secretariat c a u g h, trying to. British throne committed his provmg statement from the 08" ease the crated man through thoughts Hbom mOdem “'9 l" ",9, Tuesday “gm: customs at Rome's Fiumicino Paper during 16550“ at Gord'm‘ u is h‘ghly “Bramble mm Airport Tuesday night were Ab- stoun School in Scotland. Later the private essays of a school- del Noneim e] Neklawy and o Diplomats Expelled Over Man-ln-Trunk Case Later the U.A.R. t at two secretaries. press office issued a statement‘‘3_°"‘mi""s Perm'lv" . h el'flrst phase expected to be in pany will build a multi-million dollar plant in Pictou County in northern Nova ia. The plant will house new and expanded operations of the company and will initially em- to 700 people with an evntual employment of over 2.000. Mr. I begin Mlink said work would on the 250,000 are Embassy foot plant “as soon as weather with the Sayed and a] Neklawy asserted'om’ration I" APT“. the trunk was of tie trunk the embassy had The Israeli Embassy said i 1 same shipped. tl had no knowledge of Dahanfl“m would not pinpoint the plant's actual site more than paleoor aq plnoM it tout Mrs 03 ‘ Pictou County on Police said he had a MorOccan‘ Trans'canada HighwaM passport issued in Damascus in. 1961. They did not say how they ‘knew he had Israeli citizenship. . The entire complex. consist- ing of three, round buildings connected by tunnels. will But a police, spokesman added W— hat he was being clientele was mainly travellers Marshal from Arab lands. Despite his small salary. t “guarded jcarefully and is under our pro- Montgomery tection." . In Naples. police reported . ;Dahan had worked there as an “as Operaflon 'interpreter for 40.000 lire $64) a month at a small hotel whose LONDON 'Reutersl »~ Field Viscount Montgomery had his prostate gland removed a Wednesday and was in satisfac- his knowledge and was beyondlpolice search of his room turned .tory condition. a hospital spokes. Rivet) pressed for a jlottetown, who was re-elected. the be' ,issue and asked whether he ac Studies OTTAWA lCPt—The Canada .Pension Plan was approved In l principle by the Commons Wed- lnesday and now a jotnl Com- 3 mons-Senate committee will get to work on a detailed study of ' the. massive 125-section bill. l Second reading took three l days in the Commons. Although the measure was generally wel- l comed by all parties except the rCreditistes. several nays were ’heard when the Speaker asked ‘ whether it should be given sec- " ‘ond reading I On a roll-call vote no one .stood and voted against It. It jcarried 184-to-0. No Creditistle ’ members were in the House Ithe time. The plan proposes initial con- itributions of 3.6 per cent. cil- lvided evenly between employ Vees and employers, on annual iwages of between $600 and $5.. ‘000. Self employed persons would contribute the entire 3.6 lper cent themselves. Herb Gray ilk—ESSEX Westl ’said the. plan would increase ,consumer spending. employee mobility and an older worker‘s chance of obtaining a job. And _it would encourage retirement. at 65. thus opening jobs to atl Canada Pension Plan Okayed By ommons ' JointCommittee Details 'younger people and helping to solve the unemployment prob- em. Real Caouette. the. C'redltiste leader. said the pension legisla- tion is really designed to supply the government and the prov: inces with a source of capital. It was just another drain on the citizen's pay envelope. ennell tL—Brant-Hal. idimand). parliamentary secre- ytary to Finance Minister Got- :don. save a technical explana- ltio of how the government plans to integrate the Canada l Pension Plan with its civil sew- ] ice pension setup. covering 175.- ‘ 000 em He. said total premiums for ‘the two plans will remain the same—61': per cent of earnings for male. employees. five oer cent for females. In some cases benefits would increase. Louis-Joseph Pigeon lPC—Jo- liette l'Assomption Mont- claml said the farmer will be paying twice the contributions paid by the worker whose pay- ments are matched by his em- ployer The farmer should be placed on an equal footing with the. worker by having half his lcontributions made out gen- eral revenues. l Queen’s Portrait Removal . parks New Commons Storm OTTAW i Minister Tremblay A ICPI —- Citizenship said Wed- enbaker knew Mr. Tremblay said Mr. Diet- perfectly well ‘nesday in the Commons the neither the minister nor the ueelt's portrait was ordered government had issued any . . . u . ~ I ‘tcn “unfair and unjust" in its crit- ing made in solving the mur-EElam”)!C9£§$gflble091§g§ggni "eggs tia‘gncou‘rlz; $50333? 'the industry off the ground." ‘ Q “'5'” or. the FBI" , . gfgswfgalag‘: cwueglgaflgawggglfor those who came to Canada'sr cial government to see the ‘; LIQUOR AT' CAMPS? . HALIFAX ‘CP ' .‘ PreSidem removed from all . HREfm “7 “0mm of the Si“, near Philadelphia :holiday island for a vacation." need of setting up a grading. one delegate asked Whether Oripemr Munk 0‘ Cla‘rmne Sound:courts in Canada without his or report in which the FBI is re- ' ' ‘ has been a busy year in . or rating system or accom. 'rot it would be possible to sell corp- Ltd-v annflunced he 9 lthe government's knowledge. 3 He accused Opposition Leader lDiefenbaker of trying to harm ;national unity by accusing the .government of issuing the order ‘concerning the portraits. Mr. Diefenbaker was absent. j The exchange. started in the question period by Gordon Churchill (PC—Winnipeg South Centre). resulted in a good deal ;of cross-floor shouting. Mr. Tremblay at first refused .10 reply to Mr. Churchill's ques- ltions on the subject. saying he ’preferred to await Mr. Diefcn- baker's return. Mr. Churchill asked that the graph in the judges‘ lwllerc all applicants for citizen- portrait directive be tabled. A Mr. Tremblay began Ills there were cries of . shame" from the ("on- servativc benches. ACCUSATION MADE M . Churchill accused Mr. Tremblay of trying to dodge the ,cepted full responsibility for the ;directive or was trying to shift the blame to a civil servant. Mr. Tremblay said he accepts citizenship directive. The directive had been made by the registrar of the citizen- ship courts and neither he nor ‘the cabinet was aware of it be- fore it was issue . Mr. Tremblay said it is the custom for his department to provide the Canadian coat-of- arms and photographs of the Queen for the citizenship courts. In response to questions from citizenship court judges. the of- icers of his department had obtained the advice of experts on the matter. It was decided that the coat- of-arms should be in the court- and thc Queen's photo- chambers ship were interviewed a where the role of the monarchy was explained. In the Supreme Court of Can- aria. only the coat-of-arms was displayed. Bad, Weather Delays Search HALIFAX ICPl - An RCAP‘ search and rescue spokesman fill responsibility though the said Wednesday bad weather in ‘action was taken without his western Newfoundland again iconsent postponed the search for a Eldon Wonlliams lPt‘ ~ ow small plane missing in the full reply Stephenvllie area wtth four immediately. oard. possibility of direct con-lup a large and expensive ward-,man announced. " FOR TAX PURPOSES Canadians Will Receive they turned up In print in West German magazine St era. It was the subject matter of the prince's three published as- says that set palace officials on edge. These were democracy. newspapers and television. and life on a desert island. WOULD TAKE TENT the boy should have been published Der in this way." But The Daily Mirror praised Charles‘ views on e ocracy and the press and offered him a free copy of The Mirror for re. The exact route by which the essays strayed into the hands of Der Stern remained somewhat obscure. The Daily Telegraph Selim Osman el Sayed. ‘PROTEST MADE , Italian Foreign Minister Giuseppe Saragat made a‘ “mod formal and energetic r protest" to UAR. Ambassador} Ahmed Naguib Hasim. Saragat said the UAR. embassy had. exploited diplomatic immunity‘ and privilege in "evident ln- . The due" “land ide?‘ 599mm ‘ reported Charles sold them to a innocqu enou h —— lt_ turned schmlch‘lm m. 30 minim” Me out Charles would equip hlm— day was short '9" wm‘ “ wawmrml lem- 3 i money. Another stage of the mm.“ ' bladed knife. 3 Portable lbusiness was handled by the “d” {and 5 1,339th 0‘ head of a fre old it c e news a“! e M r "V0 3" “'5 lagency. Terence Smith. ‘ . . looked likely to Intrude on dell-I Since word of the man". .showed up at the Airport m a I - - 'A.R. truck which customs of~ “‘9 flroufld- ‘scripts citlstence got about. Its, m m had m However. from the fragmentalwm-th has been “unwed u fICIals 58 Hey ' k” b” that have appeared here. the ‘ghousands of pounds. f re. The w rte. run -I'e ‘ prince's views seemed little cal- __ which they had for shtpmen fractions of Italian criminal law." The U.A.R. embassy said‘ it was "completely In the dark [about the contents" of the :trunk. The two embassy secretaries l . culated to raise an wrath. .‘aboard a United Arttb jet air. For instance. he yseemed oni ; liner was labelled: From her safe ground with the passage. lU.A.R. embassy. Rome. to the that said: only if every adult foreign ministry. UAR Cairo. l has the right to vote can one mtmillvn's m a rked diplomatici hilly tlie-SIladeiinxwmcy has 'n ' Com!“ ' ' ' ' ' ‘ ' ' ' ‘ " Customs was on s s i n g It‘ In .notmr‘ observation "‘9’ Sport . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . .. lfllmugh wkhoul check when u“l .5“ " prince suggested it might be womem' agent heard a muffled cry. l » t , \ better not to vote on rigid parly """h‘" "H c in: musical instru-‘ UNITED ARAB Republic dip- foreign ministry In Cairo. are lines a sentiment frequently mm “ ' merits." one of the BMW“, lomats Abdel Moneln El Nek~ shown at a Home airport utter'ed in Britain by many not. “'9' °'°"'° ‘3'” "w ' diplomats explained. lawy. left. and Sella Osman El Wednesday night. poor to too clooe to mic; 0' -*‘~-~ ' Then the muffled voiccl Sayed. wearing glasses. hav- their desparture. A police of- Writlng about newspapers l “n”. Mme" n “sped "linto!" (help) "assu-‘ ing been expelled from ltaly flcer is at right. C h lrle 5 strongly advocated l Rum Chmd'” ' ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ ' " “ aini!" (assassins). ' for trying to smuggle a chain- (AP ‘1an via cable from r l ‘ Customs officiall sold tbcl ed. drugged prisoner to the Rome) MS! ; 7-Digit Number In 1965 TAWA !(1Pl — Canadians T . 6,300.le individual income laX‘COIII‘bE‘ Will lack the are. being labelled with another fl identifica- payers will receive in the mall tion number an coul dea number. this time for tax pur-an enelope marked "this is the computer processing in Of- poses. your personalized 1964 income tau-a. A seven - digit identification tax form." The forms Wm he malled to code such as 123-4567 will ap-. Inside will be: 1h? address appearing on tho pear on personalized individual A pamphlet explaining the ,axpayer‘s return {or the New. income tax forms being mailed new system is designed to speed nus year one majm problem i; number cards now required by all workers contributing to un- iemployment insurance. and ob- tained voluntarily by others. The latter number would be mandatory for everyone con- tributing to the proposed Can- ada Pension Plan when it starts in 1966. The revenue department lwill collect those contributions. las well as taxes. Thus it will fhave two numbers for almost level-y inconecarner. Direct mailing of income tax forms was announced Wednes- day by Revenue Minister E. .1. Demon. Until now forms have been supplied by employers and ;made available at post offices. WILL GET ENVEIDPI Over a two - week period totarting Jan. u an estimated 'r Two tax forms. one is a work- ing paper. The other. bearing the taxpayer's name and add- ress and number, is the form to be sent to the revenue de- partment. An envelope addressed to the revenue department's taxation data centre in Ottawa But I won t. stam Taxpayers ‘will still hav to pay postage. The pamphlet will advise em- ployees to tuck these forms away until they receive their th slips from employers. The ;filing deadline will still be April What if the taxpayer loses his forms? CAN oer mom: ‘ ‘ He can get other blank forms .at any post office. But these of directly to taxpayers in .lanu- up computer processing of re- an estimated one in every fivg ary by the revenue department. turns. making for faster refunds Canadians changes his address This is separate from the ‘if any. during the year. nine - digit social insurance A tax — calculating guide. If the form doesn't reach him. he also will have to pick up blank forms at the post office. Thc same will be true for those rcquired to file their first In return, Last spring for the first time. all individual tax returns were t fed into the high - speed com- pulcrs in Ottawa. The year pre- vious all returns except than from Quebec were handled in this way. The department now has the last two years' tax records 10! every individual taxpayer lit- scribed on magnetic tape. TIIII meant assigning to each tax. payer it number that the cdlr puter could "read." ' us. most taxpayer: M have a number. in January 1 Will see it for th first