ta if 1t’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is Fo && Authorized VOL. LXXVIIL. NO. 14 DEFENDER OF THE REALM monwealth's fight against Britain during the Second Hitler. He is shown studying @ war map with Canadian w Jobe War, Winston Churchill Corps commeader Lt. Gen. was the sparkplug of the Com- 4 GL. McNaughton in As prime minister of Great : wnvsre ——ps ws UaSR \ By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) — Part , Y coronation and part unabashed os | political clambake, the inaugur- ation rites Wednesday for an American president will take on a gloss of Texan grandeur. “Y'all come,’’ Lyndon Baines Johnson insisted across the United States last fall in fash- joning his landslide election vic- |tory last November. They're coming, Texans and all, money in fist and gleam in eye to participate in the anoint- ling of the 36th U.S. president | and the first from the Lone Star stale. | From “onday through Wed- | nésday. Wasffington will be no | place for tightwads, politically- unattachehd citizens or most Re- + publicans,__ For. many native. | Washingtonians, it will be a {time to meditate over television | | sets behind closed doors. } More than 30,000 visitors are) expected. The White House it- self will be so full—22 guests— r 1941, and trying his hand with : Sten oe eet ane an that some presidential cousins Britain. will have to stay at hotels and) Luci Baines, youngest Johnson | (CP Wirephoto from AP). - rom AP). daughter, will be on acot. =| One Famous Churchill By THE CANADIAN PRESS Winston Churchill growled, four words in the Canadian the British prime minister de- livered in Ottawa a defiant re- ttered During Ottawa Visit. | Those lucky, well-heeled andj round of receptions, concerts | and frolics will be underwriting | with substantial contributions the estimated $1,600,000 cost. JFK'S COST MORE Saying ; 4 the burst away: of cheering died “Some neck’ — an ex- U.S. Warship | $400,000 The 1961 inauguration of the} late pfesident Kefinedy cost/ House of Commons on the aft- ernoon of Dec. 3, 1941, that have become part of the lexi- .con of famous Churchill] say- ings “Some chicken! Some neck” Three weeks after war had flamed across the Pacific and! just five days after 2.000 Cana-, view of the war's progress. He pression with special. punch in recalled previous perils after the British sense of ‘‘what the fall of France. rve!" “When | warned them (the that first of three war- French) that Britain wouldftime visits, one of almost a fight on alone, whatever they lifelong series of trips to Can- did, their generals told their ada between 1901 and 1954, prime minister and his divided| Churchill linked Canadians and cabinet, ‘in three weeks Eng-|Britons in a celebrated trib- land will have her neck wrung) ute: And Freighter me Guard. | Texas Grandeur Apparent In Plans For Inauguration less but returned a $275,000 profit, mostly for char- ity. The participants almost to ev- ery man, woman and child are there only because they have some sort of political connec- tion, Democratic party of course. | The inauguration proper will start Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. EST with the president's inau- gural address delivered before the high-domed eapital build- ings. For-weeks, special viewing stands have been erected there, at the White House and along (Continued on page 3 (Col. 5) 30 Killed In Crash Of US. Jet WICHITA, Kan (AP )— | Wooden stakes were the frozen ground Sunday to mark the scattered fragments driven imo | version of the Janker The KC-135 tacker, a modified | ing 707, had taken off at 9:28 a.m [fom Me-| prom, capel. Connell Air Base six miles .to | == of the fyelfilled jet tanker that |the south. k began dumping | crashed and turned Piatt Screet|some of its 150,000 pounds of | into af incinerator Saturday. |fuel almost i wmediately and Thirty /lives—23 civilians and seven Bi were snuffed out moment of hell. | Theré were ‘indications that | the 25-year-old pila, Capt. Ches- ter Szmue of Royalton, Ohio, tried to crashJand in a small strong enough to be able to facejejegring amid the modest resi-| of five. the quadriennial three - day | dential, homes on Wichita's northeast Side. But the plane) burrowed tm at the edge of the field its flaming fuel shot | a rush that en- guited around. A gas main |migh: in 14-de_-ee weather. The 11 homes. Biast “shattered windows” f bucked and ho in the atea were i t heat Sat rday | Red Cross offered its aid to the 200 persons. temporarily made /hometess but did not get a sin- people were treated gle request for lodging. the pilot turned south to head back to the base. He blew the escape hatch | before completing the turn. Two minutes after takeoff, the plane | crashed. | Among the dead was a family Nine children and teenagers and one unborn child were in- cluded in the coroner's list Carefully examining every piece of flesh, bone, dental work | and clothing, 10 doctors, den- tists and ~ technicians the identification of the taken Amazingly, the jured was small for of this magnitude InCollison |Probe Is Urged VANCOUVER (CP)—A United States destroyer-escort and a like a chicken.’ “Some chicken!" dian soldiers became casual- ties with the fall of Hong Kong, and when | Norwegian freighter collided. in | \the fog - shrouded narrow en- trance to Vaneouver harbor “We have not journeyed all (Continued on page 5 Col. 4) BENEFIT SEEN TO CONSUMERS Auto Agreement Signing Marks Pearson Visit End By ARCH MacKENZI~ A homey overnight ranch-house visit between Prime Minister |But despite his crowded 1965 Pearson and President Johnson |foreign schedule, there were ended Saturday with signing of | signs Jobnson was ready to go. an automaking agreement de-| The only format note in the scribed as an hisvoric step. (visit begun Friday “Eventually the consumers on | was the signing of an agree- both sides of the border will |ment to drop Norch American share in its benefits,” Pearson |tariffs for manufacturers on said most motor vehicles and the Pearson, before leaving for parts going into them, a meas- Washington and further in-/|ure designed to boost Catadian formal talks with United States | output. leaders, invited Johnson for an| Johnson agreed with Pear- official visit to Canada which |son’s suggestion that this was U.S. sources said the president ‘the first international agree- Canada-U.S, Auto Deal Seen As Breach Of Rules LONDON. (CP) Britain's; The spokesman said Canada Board of Trade considers that) allows British cars to come in the Canada-United States agree-| duty-free but the U.S. charges | ment for a tariff-fre cross-bor|a tariff .of 6% per cent. Britain der market on moter vehicles | maintains far heavier tariffs on and parts may be a breach of both Canadian and American ternational trading rules. “cars. In addition, it charges a A spokesman for the govern-| heavy road tax on six-and-eight- cant North American vehi- cle, *. ada and the U.S. wilt of 1964 shipped about £14,000,- lar 1963 period. INSIDE TODAY Hue see tense towers Hil iH Se ey i i E oe ~ , would “like very much’’ to ace | JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (CP)— cept. | No acceptance was settled. afternoon | The agreement whereby Can- | 000 worth of vehicles to Canada, | Pe? up from £5,600,000 in. the simi-)°® *|during the weekend and then drifted ashore near a headland known as Calamity Point. The 1,400-ton USS Whitehurst, | |manned mostly by ‘‘weekend | sailors,” suffered a five - foot | gash in her starboard side. It is believed the 9,477 - ton freighter | Hoyanger suffered little dam-| age. No injuries were reported jamong the 38 men on the | freighter or the 200 men on the ment ever signed at the LBJ | destroyer escort. Ranch, the president's secoad| The freighter, outbound for White House located in the |Seattle, struck the’ inbound |\serub-covered hills of ceatral | naval vessel in the first narrows Texas on the banks of the/at the harbor entrance at about muftky Pedernales River. 7 p.m. Saturday. SIGNE UTDOORS Like two ghost ships they Pe: . Johnson, Exiernal | drifted in the dense fog on a and |Strong outgoing tide toward a he | beach where they came gently to rest as, residents shouted fu- tile warnings from the shore. An hour later .the freighter was pulled clear by tugs and de-|she proceeded on to Seattle where she arrived Sunday Affairs Minister Martin | State Secretary ‘Rusk signed t |pact. in @ lawn ceremony under joak trees shaken by a bitter |Texas ‘‘norther.”” They braved }the elements without overcoats. | The ‘temperature was 37 | grees. covered various bilateral econ- {out-of the water Saturday. night omic and financial matters in-|that her rudders and one pro- volved in Canadian-US. tions and specifically current negotiations for a renewed air traffic agreement between the two countries in which Canada | Seeks more lucrative penetra- jsion of ‘the U.S. market The United Nations, Asia and other international hot spots also were covered, the two lead- ers said, Overnight, discus sions had | morning. She had been si high rela- | peller were out of the water. RE ee rats eenecinatenan MONCTON (CP)— The Mar- itime Federation of Agriculture, | | at-a weekend meeting here, cal- led for a-royal commission to | investigate Canadian egg prices. | In a statement after the meet- | OFFER ENDED BY APPETITE NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) A sign in the window of a downtown Junch counter ad- | vertised, “fish dinner — afl you can eat—79 cents.” And one man took full advantage of che offer Friday. After the -man finished six fish dinners ‘and ordered a seventh, the manager angrily called the police. However, Patrolman r= not see anything out of order. The man finished his sev- ench dinner, paid his 79 cents and left. And the manager |took the sign out of the win- | dow. Tense Egg Prices 5 R3F ing the federation said / ves law of supply ek ay gg 3 4 :§ fe f F gil i 3 iE E ? F i" iH Hl 2.3 i as if ig #2 Fase with, bitte ser — Bi 5 \ ‘ 111 “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ‘ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1965. Condition Of Ch Reported Deterioratin a Former Captor Of Churchill Critically Il JOHANNESBURG (AP) While Sir Winston Churchill | battled for life in his London | home, gne of the Boers who| captured him as a young war | co mt 65 years ago lies’ critically ill 6,000 miles away also the victim of a stroke fol- lowing a cold. The Johannesburg Sunday | Chronicle reports Jaap Botha, | 83, is in critical condition in) hospital. | Botha recently told The Chronicle how, during the Boer War, his commando group cap- | tured Churchill, then a war cor- respondent for the London Morning Post. Botha claimed | Boer marksmen could have) shot the fleeing Churchill, but | the commanding officer forbade | os Churchill was pursued, cap- tured by the Boers and put inte a_prison camp, from which he = James WEATHER Snow and occasional 15. 20 and 200 r ey . + * Royal Family. Leads ‘ ; 4 y e,8 ; = ee . g iq j ‘ad . . Pe a By JOSEPH MacSWEEN | outside Churchill's “ j LONDON (CP)—Sir Winston |ing red-brick home at 28 4 Churchill, his pulse irregular, Park Gate, that the weakened Sunday while prayers |tions of the pulse ; for him and his family were of-|were ‘not good.” im x throughout Britain and in| The 82-year-old Moran. striy- j many parts of the world. . | ing to maintain a cheerful co 7 Lord Moran, Churehil!’s phy-| tenance, began. his terse 2 sician and friend, said in an tins Friday ek ae. : evening medical bulletin that aa ‘ the 90-year-old warrior states- weakness and@- - man had “lost ground.” The’ cerebral a bulletin rest- ’ 7 ; less had # a pe ¢ A said u LONDON (CP)—There was a| ‘There will be anc death in the t oe i Y fe i if {e 4E i hizit ' i E i E a s » ‘i ile tL a 3 Ht < F ri are ; ies | i i Dief Planning 3 , . uy: vo .