i' II It's Good For The Island VOL. LXXVII. NO. 144 CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN A new car ferry. to be bum for the CNR Cape Tormentine. Borden service which will rcady for 1967. i being design- ed for conversion to the Nova Scone-Newfoundland run when a causeway is built. connecting PEI. with the mainland. The announcement that ten- dcrs had been called for con- struction of the new ship came from Solicitor General J. Wat- son MacNaught in Ottawa Thursday morning. Construction of the vessel, de- scribed as the largest ice-break- ing. auto-rail. passenger ferry In the world is scheduled to be- gin in 1965. Specifications call for the building of a 6.000~ton. 400 foot long ship with a speed of 11 knots. It will carry 1.000 pas- sengers, a crew of 82 and will have space tor 90 automobiles and 24 rail cars. The new ferry will be 400 feet long and 69 wide as com- pared with 372 feet and 61 feet rt-spectively of the MV Abeg- wu. Auto decks will be 45 feet quadruple electric screw with two propellers forward and two aft. There will be stern and side loading facilities to suit e loading of railcars by the stern and of automobiles and trucks by the stern and side openings. as required by the terminals. There will be a wheelhouse. churn-com and radio room on the navigation bridge with all the officer and crew accom- modatlon arranged at the' boat deck level. The passenger ac- comm ation. consisting of will be situated on the. promen- ade deck above the enclosured lounges. cafeteria and cabins. automobile deck. The auto- mobiles and rail cars will be carried in enclosed spaces suit- ably ventilated and arranged for this purpose. The vessel will fitted with flurne stabilization tanks to re- ’Conierente Giarlottetown hosted the open- ing of the 28th Federal-Prov- lncial Wildlife Conference yester- day. The two-day meeting which Is being held in the Charlotte- town Hotel. is being chaired by David A. Munro, chief of Canadian Wildlife Services. Dr. Munro outlined the Ser- vice’s efforts in bird aid dur- ing the first part of the morning session. Some of the current act- ivities he described affected dif- ferent parts of the co ntry: local areas as well as the nation as a whole. A series of studies in connect- ion with a diversion of the As- slniboine River to skirt the del- ta marsh in southern Manitoba. which is a favorite migratory bird concentration area. is now undilr way. Construction of this c 1 water levels to' fewer plant 3- a OI'Bird Aid Eliorts t‘ The Guardian Is For It Authorised as M Danna-at. Off-ea. NEW FERRY APPROVED , Ship Slated For N.S.aNIId.‘ After Causeway Built Here duce rolling. Heeling tanks-will be installed for use when need- to free the vessel when operating in heavy ice. The main machinery will consist of four electric propul- szon motors serving the four powerful propellers. Electric :power for the propulsion motors wLII be provioet‘ by eight diesel- .driven generators. I The design of the machineryi .will be such that will give tbe| {greatest flexibility in the utill—t clan-Ian autumnal-f ‘\ "’- ttmtdlism i 70. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1964. hll‘ by the Poet Moe m ration of power to all propell- crs. Navigational equipment will consist of radar.= gyro com- pass, echo sounder. radio. radio-telephone and other elec- tronic devices of the most mod- ern type. providing the latest aids to navigation and means of communication. The ship will be outfitted with lifeboats and inflatable liferafts and the highest standards of fire protection will be provided. IPIasiic House Is Demonstrated I j WINNIPEG (CPI—A startling 'concept in Canadian construe] tion—a plastic house—was un-t veiled today at the Red River Exhibition. The house. nicknamed The Casseta by its manufacturer, is a thin - shell structural form. moulded under pressure. of polyester combined with a foam p l a s tic sandwich core. The builder claims it will not rust or deteriorate. is vir tu a1 y I maintenance-free and has great strength. It was designed in Winnipeg and will be manufactured ' nearby Transcona by or west Design and Fabrication Nfld. Legislaturel Adjourns To Jon. ST_ JOHN'S. NFLD, (CPI -— The Newfoundland Legislature was admurned Thursday until Jan. 3. 1965. Attorney General L. R. Cur- tis in moving the adjournment said "if anything in the public interest comes up in the mean- time. the house speaker will be empowered to reconvene the bonsai. '7.— 5:: Informed § ; and the studies are concerned ; with how best to bring about the ;desired effect. ‘BIRDS AT AIRPORTS . Moving on to the problem of i bird-bothered airports, Dr. Mun- Ltd. Northwest. says it is the world's first plastic home to go into production. Gilbert Rekken. a spokesman for the manufacturer. said the house is a flexible dwelling unit which can be used as a one- room apartment or combined with similar units to form an exciting complex of many var iations. Each unit costs approx imately $2,300. The basic unit Is 11 feet. six inches high by 15 feet wide at the front. Its sweeping lines taper gracefully to a 10—foot width at the rear. Length is 31 feet at the roof line and 24 feet at the base. ENDS CUT BACK The ends are cut back and enclosed in glass to provide a dramatic architectural effect. Each unit oses a living area of 320 square feet. . en said Northwest has found considerable interest in the casseta in Europe and other areas. He said arrangements have been made to manufacture the unit id'Scandinavia by Sean- more Houses A-C of Co hagen and in Common Market countries by Intervllousc N-V oi ' ‘Jut-phass. The Netherlands. Mr. Rekken said the home could be easily moved. a fea- ture particularly important in plans to assemble the casseta into motels. resort camps. serv- ice ‘stations, marinas. drive-in- restau a n d temporary buildings. Northwest expects a large market in summer cot- tages and ski lodges where transportation to remote sites is difficult. Mr. Rekken said the house tested under extreme winter conditions. has twice the insul- ation value of most other ma- terials and can be heated elec~ tricaily for a few cents a day. ARTIST SHOWS UNIQUE FLAG REGINA (CPI—It weighs 100 pounds and it flashes. It's a distinctive Canada tflsg designed by Regina art ist Ted Godwin. t e flag stands on steel legs and is made up of neon lights. The design is of a single maple leaf, vertical blue bars on the edges and 10 lights sur- rounding the maple leaf and representing the 10 provinces of Canada.‘ The color and intensity of the 10 lights can be varied with the changing fortunes a s of the provinces. says Godwin, who has the flag in front of his home. Blue can signify a time of disaster for a province and gold a (time of economic buoyancy. The single maple leaf rep- resents Canadian unity. The flag flashes on and off at variable speed. “Slow in time of peace and fast in war to keep the na- tional a n g e 1' up,“ Godwin says. ‘Any flag is good as ion" as you believe in it." he adds. “This one is contemporaneous with the times—the age at electronics.” “mag” SEVEN CENTS ODENSE IAPi—Visiting Pre- mi hev told anes Thursday the Soviet Union will !solve its farm problems within y seven or eight years or “I will i say I am not a Communist and . I will tear up my party card. i “We cannot permit people to .point at us and say the Com- tmunists cannot solve their ag- lricultural difficulties," the 70- Iyear-old Soviet leader told gathering at Dalum Agricul- tural College. Khrushchev said It is unlikely Moscow will make further pur- chases of grain in the West. Hotel Sale tHas Okay OTTAWA (CPI ~— Sale of the CNR’s Charlottetown Hotel ‘ Charlottetown to a private in- terest has the "blessing" of the Prince Edward Island govern- ment, CNR President Dona railway committee the CN was approached several yearst ago by P.E.I. Premier Walter‘ 1 Shaw to improve the hole celebrations. He said ments were not economical. Then in 1963 a P.E.I. cabinet minister approached the as a go-between for a sale of the hotel to a private pur- chaser. Mr. Gordon did not identify the provincial minister. Sale of the Charlottetown Hotel was announced several weeks ago to Island Develop- ment Company. Mr. Gordon indicated he felt the deal was a good one for the CNR. He said that some years ago a competent operator looked into the ro said that findings of a study lot the difficulty were "quite productive." Recommendations for removal of garbage dumps near the ends of runways. for draining wet areas between the runways and for removing bruit thave been made and attention is being given to scaring devices and redo distress calls. Although no fatalities (except perhaps to the birds) have oc- curred as a result of colliding planes and - ways. they have caused Air Canada about 32.000300 damage. “Wetlands” — bird breeding grounds. are under study in a 4) New Ferries Due For Nfld. OTTAWA (CP) -— Tranport Minister Pickersgill announced Thursday night the federal gov- ernment has purchased a large ferry to go into service between Newfoundland and Nova Scotia early in He also said in the Commons a contract has been let to Ms- rine Industries Limited. Sore], Que. for a second ferry to go into Newfoundland service by November, 1967. » lot d eci that he wouldn't take it for one dollar. INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths 3-1 Classified Comics Spot .................. Women’s Editorials . . . . . . . . . 0 Kings, Queens. City I Summerside . . . . . . . . 8 Prince Co. 2 Finance. Markets ._..... to Rural Churchu 12 From Gov't tnlth time for the 1967 Centennial CNR dded which has provided millions of l bushels of wheat to offset poor IRussian crops of 1963. Canada and the U.S. sold wheat to the Russans. He warned the Danes that they should not plan on Soviet purchases of their food products over a long period. Instead. he said. they should expand thezr trade with Communist East Ger- many and Czechoslovakia. “Our Communist economy t cannot be dependent on tile capitalists," he sat . N0 CONCESSIONS “I say we would sooner go to e devil than make political Iconcessions to the capitalists," I he added. recalling that former IWest German Chancellor Kon- ld :— Gordon said Thursday night.I Mr. Gordon told the Commons I R . May Be Realy “‘ a Mid-lain the'CNR decided at? ter a study that any improve- New docking facilities Borden are empec to be 'rs-ady for use about the middle of July. it was learned reliably yesterday. the department of public works by MacNamara will be used by the MV Con- federation. At present, with one dock in use by the Borden-Cape Tor- mentine ferries, there are times when the Confedration must allweeks over his The new dock, being built for t Construction. ‘ trad Adenauer had opposed I Western wheat sales to Moscow ‘ ‘ unless the Russians made polit- , ical concessions. | He pledged that Russian farm problems will be solved by his program for increased produc- ; tion and use of chemical fertil- use of irrigated land. (Continued on Page 3 Col. 3) Health Services Report Is Ready t OTTAWA fCPI The firs i volume of the royal commission on health services will be tabled I In the Commons at 1 pm. EDT 'today. Prime Minister Pearson informed the House Thursday.l Immigratio Set For Gov’t Probe By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CPI—A formal in- ,euiry is being launched to in- l vestigate changes by opposition iMPs and certain lawyers that l the immigration department has y‘kept many immigrants in jail ‘for weeks and months without ’real justification. The surprise announcement was made ‘ ommons Thursday by Immigration Min- lster Rene Tremblay, who has been under fire for several department's Ihandling of immigrants fight- ;ing deportation to their native ‘countries for major and minor offences. When Opposition Leader Dief- , enbaker repeated his request for an independent inquiry Thurs~ 1 day. Mr. Tremblay said the gov- Iernment has decided to appoint t a one-man commission to study all allegations against his de- ‘ partment. The minister said the com- ? missioner—not an official of the I hotel t wait off Borden until the dock is immigration department _ win [for Barry Goldwater disclosed Chap Iclcared by the MV Abegweit. the named early next week. His Thursday night he win I l island Hog ,hog carcasses in the pen tported so far this year, to mam- Ie-i Producers Maintain lop Position Island bog producers havelprovincial department averaged 59.3 per cent Grtade Atculture at a noon lunch Tracing the development of the z ‘ ere. Mr. MacRae ' hog Industry ltain .top place among Ca‘nadlaliirecalled that the value provmces. despite a one-man culture Minister Andrew “1 from ‘threat from Nova Scotia, Agri- ‘ . MBC' w s I'a :itiperc Iizers and through. the broader j of agri: con. .1an J a low of $251,000 in 1932 to‘ a high of 35.730.000 in 1951 which Debate OTTAWA rCP) Quebec'St ‘Premier Lesage blocked Con- tservative plans for a con-tribu- position Le a er Diefenbaker 1said Thursday in the Commons. The Conservative chief also I t ‘.to achieve a unified country is .Canada has 0 go “ca ‘!hand" to Britain for permission ‘to amend its own constitution. . Mr. Diefenbaker launched his - , tpolitical attack as the House beg , ygan debating a resolution to‘ ,seek British parliamentary per- mission or a constitutional -amendment that will allow sur- Ivivor benefits under the pro- t’posed Canada Pension Plan. All the provinces have agreed. to the change—~the Quebec Leg-l 1 “(ads w, J_ Hancox 0f Char, islature approved it—and the lonetown. - t , .. government has interrupted the '. ‘flag debate in the Commons to 'nt‘roduce the resolution_ It Charges 1 Hon. F. Walter Hyndman. former lieutenant-governor of e Province yesterday was elected president of the Cana- ian Club of P.E.I. He suc- I tSPEED IS VITAL _ Speed is vital because the tBritish election expected in Oc-. Itober could lead shortly to dis- solution of the Parliament atj Westminster. Prime Minister Pearson said: the need to go to Britain for amending permission is obso-. lete and inappropriate hilt “all we've got at the moment." I The prime minister said that‘; section 94A of the British Nont'hl America Act will be changed to: make clear that the' federal‘l government has the power to] ‘legislate for supplying benefits .to surviving or disabled persms {irrespective of age. was Lthe only major change. he said.‘ .Some language would be tidiedt I [terms of reference would be treterred to a Commons com- mittee for detailed study. ,‘ Mr. Tremblay added that he 1 will supply detailed information ‘about various protracted de— iportation cases when his de- ‘partment‘s spending estimates icome up for debate again t shortly. ‘ up. 1 Mr- D‘°f°“h3k” Charged "ml 1 An amendment had been nee-I g the immigration department bandlesmry in 1251 .when the flab been acting in an arbitrary way Irate WING" 5Y5l9m*"°“' Pay' ,. . - . ling $75 monthly at age 70 and [and \tolatlng the traditions of . — . .tablished. Magna Carta. The ancient docu- I over WM 6 . ment stipulated that justice I “UNIQUE IRONY" 'shall not be denied anyone. nor I Mr. Diefebaker said It was delayed. .a "unique irony“ to halt the —— flag debate and talk of national symbols to apply to the British Parliament for permission to amend the Canadian constitu- 1 lion. Goldwater Plans tNeg-otive Vote I h C t t C l T ' . On Rights Bill tad3...?"55T5pélirfié’vil2"22:. sti I I tution. he said. Starting in‘ 1 WASHINGTON (AP) __ Sena_ 1960 in talks with the provinces. it had come close to success. There ‘had been no justifica— V°le tion in the last 40 years for the gagninst "he Civil rights bill.jneed to ask Westminster for. .ttthtch is on the eve of appar-‘pgmission Ato amend vheItBrita ‘ - i Nortth .merica Act. was lenily. certatn Senate passage. . la position unique in the com[ This declaration by the Art-,monwealt‘h' ‘ 2""3 sena‘m- “‘0 ls Claiming: The Conservatives while in. enough delegate votes for first- t office had a pension plan ready, ballot nomination as the Repubu but Quebec was the only prov- lican candidate for president,.lnce to block it. Premier Le. ,was greeted by dismay in theisage. he said, took the “unteng Imoderate wing of the party, But able“ poeition that a province lit was viewed by southern Dem- i has the right to be first given ocrats as a boost to his chances full details of the federal gov-' in the south. ernment's lntentions_ [tory national pension plan, Op-t contended that Canadian failure I * some proposed WEATHER A few clouds in morning. clouding over about noon; light Winds. Low-high 45 and 16 PAGES Diefenbaker Says Lesage Blocked PC Pension Plan oviet Premier Vows To Solve Farm Needs Constitutional ‘ Held Mr. Lesage had wanted the powers set our in detail ‘ and blocked the constitutional amendment. Mr. Diefenbaker ;said. I Stanley Knowles (NDP—«Win- t nipeg North Centrel proposed a tformula for speeding repatria- ‘responsible for the fact that‘tlig?l 0f the Canad'a“ mnsmu' He suggested legislation by the Canadian Parliament de- claring the British North Amer- ica Act and existing amend- merits to he statutes of Canada. Then. in future. the Canadian Parliament could make changes as it wished without having to go to Britain. The provinces would need to be consulted first. but. none of them ever had opposed the prin- ciple of repatriation. he sa . Objections had been aimed at amendment tied in with the act of repatriation. Under his formula. he said. future amendments to the BNA Act would take the form of an address to the governor - gen- eral rather than an address to the Queen, as in this case. Gerard Chapdelaine ISC Sherhrooke) said Quebec would not agree to such an amend- merit when the Progressive Conservatives were in power because Mr. Diefenbaker would give the province no guarantee its laws would be safeguarded detected an attitude of growing hostility on Mr. Diefen- baker‘s part toward Quebec. If' Mr. Diefenbaker had still been in power. Quebec would have withdrawn from Confederation. Mr. Chapdelaine said Justice I Minister Favreati should imme- diately call a constitutional conference with the provinces to work out a method of amend- ing the constitution in Canada. Russia Offers Compromise Bonfire Deal GENEVA (AP) —- The SOVIet Union offered Thursday to nego- tiate a compromise agreement for a "bonfire" of nuclear bomb- ers. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis- er Valerian Zorin told chief U.S. disarmament negotiator William C. Foster the Kremlin is prepared to make a new start on the bonfire negotiations. which have been deadlocked for three months. Addressing the l7-nation tits- arm-ament conference. 2 o r i n promised to maintain a flexible position in further discussions. In other words. the Soviet Union no longer maintains its all of nothing attitude on the bonfire >1”. (Continued on Page 3 Col. smwth. according to Dr. Munro. “deul‘fi‘ eral-meece- rereuce. Seen here during a reception mun «Inner Affairs and Natural Resources. Ottawa and Hon. Lee Rossiter. mitister of industries and ne- tural resources. Charlotte- town here last night. The visitons, and Island breeders. and their wives. were guests of the P.E.I. recreation centre. of lobsters delicacy 'for the first time. I a number ofImi-nister stated. StwiuetDeputy Minister SC. Wright, and Breeders at a generous lobster‘thanked . dinner in the North River Junior secretary of the P_E‘.I. Breeders The Associ tion Junior Farmers stated. Many oftitors and. with the aid of Mr. the visitors were eating the tastyfl‘inney, [band I The a 8 0‘ I’ll? lief-3m . tonal association will be held Fri-toraatfizatton. of Con- ;Is-lami Swine k ntnuatl meetin day in the Memorial Theatre, building of the Fathers federation Memorial Complex..ion and Maritime director of t The visitors will be guests of tbetnational association. presided: revenue. It was 33.621000 in 1962} and its on the increase again. the The minister was introduced by by Frank Tinney. livestock director, : made presentations Maplecratft plates to? Z) visitors of the Island‘ Sterling Willis. president of the breeders associat- OTTAWA (CPL-The Member of Parliament for the North- west Tcrritories Thursday night appealed to Prime Minister Pearson to cancel further bear- ings of the royal commission on bilingualism and biculturalism. Gene Rheaume. a Conserva- tive. said in the Commons the commission is “doing an excel- lent iob of inflaming racial an- imosity in Canada." pie who go around terrorising and upsetting the equilibrium of the nation. . . ." The radio broadcast of the recent Quebec hearings sounded like an old record of Nazi ral- lies where people lost control of tlt‘msclves. the prime minister is sin- I He termed it "a group of peo- Noribwesi Territoriiies MP Asks Biculiural Probe End core—rand I suspect him to be ' sincere - it‘s time to put the ' good of the nation ahead of the good of the Liberal party." A t substantial body of Canadiaust wanted tbe prime minister to‘ stand up and call off the com-l mission. Mr. Rbcaumr made the re- marks during an adjournment debate. Earlier in the day. Mr. ‘ Rheaume referred to the com- mission as the "B and B gang. ' Speaker A l a n Macnaugbio‘l said this expression was not exactly dignified" for a royall co 1» FRENCH SKI Skipper Eric Taba-rly looks up from companionway of the French ketch Pen Illicit III as the craft sails itself toward Newport. RI. Thursday af- mmtsston and ruled out Mr. I Rbeeume's question on whether the commission will examine I ternoon and apparent victory in a single-banded yacht rare television. radio and newspa- pet's. ‘ ' u 'l , k a, ., .. ml. "fi": PER lEADS IN from Plymouth. England. The 44-foot ketch is largest of a dozen yachts that set sail May 23 Tabat‘ly. a lieutenant in the French Navy. was spot- ted by a plane crew that re- ported him a few miles west OEA RACE of Nantucket Lightship about 100 miles from Newport. the same time it was report- ed the British yacht Gipsy Moth III was ‘50 miles em of Cape Cod and was bellevo ed in second place. (AP Wire- photo)