II It's Good For The Island WEATHER Q “‘= The Guardian '5 For It . Sunny with a few cloudy periods and all rapier; light winds. Low-high 45 and I" ' 0 Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” . of f M t . LXXVII. N0. 134 u m“ m " u“ "" om“ C . _.. m: Murine-t. Ottawa. and for Wind d put-p JUNE 8, 1964. "Mrs-:2“ 12 incl. Ilt‘ flit )hs- CPU .m. “I'll 1 “IS bl. 'lva lrs 2m text a spi. ‘wo lied red the lay aan ian dy- mi. idi- ry. R g _ < n 1. THE CAPTAIN grins and on the open bridge with the Dr. Maurice Lebel. present It bears It. Yesterday HMCS ca Lain commander Evan president of the Society. Dr. -r Fort Erie took about 60 mem- Pile ion“ 1e“ who i. . Frank MacKinnon. PWC prin- li’ hers of the Royal Society of y ‘ ' cipal. and Dr, Leon ortie. It Canada on a cruise out o grandson 0‘ one 0‘ “he foun' sec-retary- general of the Un~ l'« Charlottetown Harbor. Here ders of the Royal Society are iversity of Montreal. l'. . o a a O a 009 em er S d e r o “ Have Cruise On Naval Shi 1 P | it was a blustery day. Sun- ped. and then started treading lwhere a submerged rock would day. A southwester streamed water, trying to swing her bows i l quite willingly tear the bottom I from the harbor mouth right iaround into the wind and out ;out of any craft. not to mention bers and their \vives. sct par and several patient sailors. mooring and into the hab went. Stern oremost There were 8500 present the and twenty-five more sang in the voluntary chmr to Christ." will light the evening ser c And Is strong only as it is stronE God." By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP) —- G c n e r a i Vanier official ence on the Family Sunday of Government House. The 76«year-old general to em age had brought a cris ulinn the family. '8 in our hands." lcross Canada who will delibc or to the family or a strength- look “PM. loading burning manilla fenders as sh into the. 1 middle of the harbor she slip lcept for one tricky little jogl part in the outdoor core the Clutching frantically at then widebrim hats. stepping jaiin- w tily but very carefully up the‘ gangway in their high heeled shoes. and keeping well to lee out of the blow. they came on board. Rapscallion boys. their eyes‘ ps to the sea and the sailor's life, ran back and fortu getting in the way and b e in g chased back by ship's chaplain And finally the long slendet ship eased her 2,000 tons out of .0 e 01’ In. Coliseum at, the Charlotte- town exhibition grounds to hear evangelist Joe Blinco open the “The greatest need for P.E.l. Is for a revival of commitment said the renowned{ Mr. Blinco. who has come tolcrusade to facilitate the expect- the Island for the first time. ed . "We are lighting lamps which lclaims that there is no parking th for coming l space for the large amount .of i zenerations." he went on in the [traffic within the general vicin- Lady v e. ‘ “the heart of a nation! in Governor- 1y opened the Canadian Confer- in an. impressive bi l in g u a I re- lizmus ceremony on the grounds Id more than 1500 guests that the development of economics and material civilization of the mod. "It is time for men With seri- Olis responsibilities in society take stock together of the problems facing us. The future. I Hc charged the 350 BOCiOIu.- Sis and welfare workers from r. air on it wide variety of family I"'"blt'ms this week to “investi- Wt’ honestly and realistically 'ose factors which. in our so- ciety, tend to be either a dan- Prime Minister Pearson also e’l into Charlottetown and the new Ito sea. Department of Transport wharf l where Her Majesty‘s Canadian 1 Ship Fort. Erie. stood along (10le l waiting to take on her complc ment of Learned Society mem- several sickly grins and quiet dignified stances all but giving way to pure, miserable ‘aban don. lstanding by the winch. ready 1m case of losing steerage to drop anchor. Then. very slow ly. using her engines and her- self as a sail. the Erie came around and began to pick her passage through waters. thanks the powers that be the ship has a draught of only 13:: or possibly 14 feet. till. “It's a cheap way to scrape the keel." said some- n SMOOTH SAILING Then it's smooth sailing. ea- All non-Catholic churches ex- cept for the entral Christian Charlottetown police warn the lpublic that Kensington Road ifrom the exhibitions grounds has been converted to a one- way street for the week of the t rongs and source tity of the Coliseum. The ltonight at 7.45 1next Sunday. 7,560 GUESTS ATTEND GoVernor General Vanier Opens Family Meeting a prayer for the success of the conference, The Governor - General. who lost his right leg above the knee in the First World War. stood throughout his half-hour ad- dress. He spoke both In Eng- lish and in French. At several points Gen. Vanier spoke of the importance. of sun- ltual values to family life and o a nation. . NEED FOR SACRIFICE "Today. as in times gone by and perhaps the more so b; cause of the gravity of our sit- uation. our country needs citi INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths 3. ll Clasal ed . . . . . . . .. 10. ll Comics ...... . . . . . . .. I . ., I. I: la . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 Kings. means. City I m Ids ...... a Prince Ca. .. .. . . I Women’s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I Even at this point there were Up in the stern a detail was I the. shallow i ' 1”“ ;i"‘1-‘t' “Depth. 25 feet. sir." 011' peated orders. Opening 0i Crusade , Attended By 3,500 la few sandbanks and things. Outside the enclosed waters ‘ where of old wooden ships came lln often the Erie opened up a ’little and sailed out for a total of about four or five miles. On the bridge. supremely un . worried by all the civilians. the ‘ officer of the watch. the naviga- tion officer. and the signallers ,went on about the business of lkeeping the ship out of tron tble. Telephones were every .where and sailors and officers were giving orders _a d taking ion in flu Down in the radio room red and yellow and white lights glowed dimly. just like in war pictures. as the crew there took soundings and went about then mysterious affairs. ‘This is a good old ship." said one of the sailors. “sh. doesn't roll and pitch around i like those cadillacs (new destro- yer escorts). bes. sailor fashion In the 1 (Continued on Page 3 Col. 6) Lady Attlee Dies Suddenly . IMISSENDEN. Eng- land ‘wife of former prime minister Church and the Salvation Army} . eld no evening service lasttlee" d'ed sunday nigh" 0f Billy Graham crusade in Prince ‘ night in deference to the cru- ; 69 Edward Island Three hundredlsade. people: i l I l | l t l l Clement Attlee (now Lord Att- , a cerebral hemorrhage. She was Lady Attlee was stricken sud- denly at their home here. She was rushed to Amersham HOS- pital nearby. where she died. At her bedside were Mrd Attlee and two of their children. Viscount Prestw and Lady They have two other children, Alison Davis ving in Lady ' , ii Engia Janet Ship- crusade goes on agalnlton. Iowa It lasts untill‘husband. Harold. is a . City. Iowa. whose! a professor t Iowa University. _ I l l l zens prepared to sacrifice their personal interest. "Canada has an honorable heritage and a prodigious den~ tiny. We are. not a powerful country. We. cannot be one of the great military powers. But we can and must find our true vocation in the best sense. as a country opposed to pure ma- terialism. To achieve this We must reconquer and resume our spiritual heritage." Speaking ‘not as a philoso- pher but as the father of a family." Gen. Vanier said that the surest way of giving the community men and women w were well-balanced and conscious of their responsibill» ties to their country was to pro- tcct the family. "For the family is capable of giving to the universe the h man beings 'who are prepared to put justice and truth before their own personal interests." Working sessions on the fans ily conference got under way at Carleton University Sunday night and will continua until Wednesday. — Countess Attlee.. , _. . -...;..~..l Artists Refine . Flag Design OTTAWA lCPI—Artists have "refined" the government ‘5 proposed maple leaf flag a spokesman in the Prime Min- isters office said Saturday. ‘ e asic design has not been altered." he st re s s e it. These are the chan es The. vertical blue bar at each edge of the flag has been widened slightly. The color has also been deepened to “bring it closer to a royal lue." 2. The size of the three red maple leaves has been reduced slightly. and their color also has been epcned. They will be close to scarlet. stem of the leave: straightened and made slightly thinner. remov ing the noticeable nodes that appeared in the original design Some MP5 had called these nodes "a plumber's lament." The changes do not imply any amen ment o e govern. ment's flag-and-anthem resolu tion now before the Commons. The. resolution described the _. It flag design only in a general I way. I l Squalls Damage 0 Florida Area l JACKSONVILLE. Fla. lAPll A squall line with winds estl-i mated at. 75 lo 100 miles an] hour cut a swath through Jack- ll sonville. Saturday. lifting roots. 1 overturning cars and toppling a EGO-foot radio tower. Electrical power was cut off to large portions of the city, and police estimated that 1,000 wires were down. No serious in- juries were reported. The remnants of the SIOI'DI‘ swept along the Carolinas ones: i Sunday. bringing up to eight _inches of rain and high winds ' to some areas. Flooding was re- l ported in rural areas. with only lminor damage in the towns l along the coast. l ‘Iyphoid Cases lop ABERDEEN tReutersl—The number of suspected or con- firmed cases of typhoid in this l Scottish city‘s 19-day epidemicl edged over the 400 mark during ! the. weekend. ‘ Twenty-three new cases were rcported in hospital to bring the 1 total of confirm cases hero to 342 and the number of sus-‘ peeled cases to 60. officials said ‘ Sunday. t Earlier Sunday chief medical. officer Dr. Ian MacQueen saldl the outlook “was a bit more. hopeful.“ but he declined tOI speculate on a trend in the out- ' break tin-til Sunday‘s final fig-l ures were in. l The number of confirmed 3 cases in this beleaguered port‘ and tourist city have more than doubled in the last eight days. 1 Beatles Spark Beirut Uproar BEI‘RUT tReutersl—Scream- ing teen-agers fought with Leb« I anese police here Sunday night. trying to storm heir way on. board the airliner carrying Brit- 1 ain’s singing Bea-ties on a Far: East tour The teenagers. mostly Eng- tish Amercan. time and again hurled themselves against a wall of police guarding the ramps leading up to the aircraft which stopped briefly for no- fuelling at Beirut. l The Beatles were on their. way to Hong Km]. l g l With nearly 3.000 members to! one or more of the Learned SoCieties conference coming to Charlottetown during the next two weeks. Eastern Provincial Airways is having trouble keep- ing up with the demand. They lcan't seem to lay on enough 'planes. And when the members of those societies get to Charlotte- ’town they are finding accom- modation space at such a prem- ;iiim that it will be surprising if {everyone is able to find a place ;to stay. Today all the members of the ‘Royal Society of Canada are registering at Montgomery Hall for the first day of business. IThe convention actually got .undereway yesterday with a ‘ride on board HMCS Erie, whose icaptain is a grandson of one iof the founding members of the {society I Involved In LON DON driven by Prince Philip wit the iQueen riding in'tffe btlck a small car. The royal 1 couple escaped injury as did the ,driver of the other car. The accident occurred near, Maidenhead, Berkshire. on the‘ road from Twyford to Windsor Castle. where the royal couple spent the weekend. Alongside Philip, in the front I passenger seat. was the Quens detective. Chief superintendent Albrt Perkins. William H e n ry Cooper, 32, was driving the other auto. He ‘ lives at the White Hart trailer camp at Holyport, near Maid enhead Cooper told a newspaperman: “There was a b mg I was not hurt. I got out and I saw Prince Philip and Mr.’ Perkins. Mr. Perkins said the Queen was in the rear of the. car. PHILIP CONCERNED “Prince Philip said to me: ‘Are you htirf'." and I said no I was all right. Then he left Mr. Perkins to talk with me while he returned to the Queen. Mr. Perkins then went away to telephone." The royal limousine was only slightly damaged but Cooper's auto was extensively damaged. One eyewitness said: .P'“ ~ ’ .. ‘4 . a“ I ) ’7' in 2’10. l m...” tAPl—A limousine.y eat? - . was in collision Saturday night wit l The Royal Society is one of ‘IIIP most prestigious of all the 21 conventions holding their an- nual meetings here over the next 1 tortnight_ about two or ‘(jbarlotietowrh three days in Other conventions which open- cd yesterday include the Cias-i sical Association of Canada and Canadian Conference of University Schools of Nursing. and today the Canadian Asso- ciation of Professors of Educa- tion begins Its three-day meet. mg. 3- o The Royal Society gets down to business with a general meet- HIE that includes introduction of new Fellows and a general symposium on “Confederation, Then and Now." Various mcclings of the so— “my are divided between Con-l federation Centre and Prince of Wales College. Queen, Prince Collision ‘After the collision the duke d the detective got out first ' ' with Mr. Cooper Then the Queen gall out, walked a few paces andl returned to her car. The duke seemed in good his I mor and the Queen was quite unperturbed." Is Gaiherin 1' susv TWO WEEKS 3,000 Will Attend Series Of Meetings Each one averages l FRENCH rooms ETAKES OVER CAR NEW YORK tAPt~~Miii'ray Arnowitz decided he didn't want anything to do with the heady - eyed passenger who slipped into the front sea- of his cab Saturday so he or- dered him out. But the passenger refused to budge and before the. mat.- ler was settled the passenger had bitten one man el times. chased Arnowitz out of his own back and tied up traffic on East, 75th Street more than two hours. Fl 3’ r. The passenger was a large French poodle owned by Flor- ence Monroe and named Car ouscl. Miss Monroe and her pa:- and Mrs. Martin hailed the cab to take Carousel to a pet hospit- tal for a checkup. The dog leaped from the back to flu. front seat next to the driver Arnowitz engaged in a stai- ing duel with his passengei before he decided to try and shove him into the back seat The dog growled and snapped at the cabbie and Arnowitz fled the cab. slam- ming the door behind him. Meanwhile, the Monrocs took turns trying to coax Carousel out of the cab. bu1 he would have. none. of it and bit Monroe eight times. Finally, a representative Oh the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ant- mals took the dog to an ani- mal shelter. Society Pushes . Quebec Claims QUEBEC ((‘Pl—The Quebec’ Federation of St. Jean Baptiste Societies called on the Quebec government Sunday to work 'or " ,a “revision to the satisfaction l Prince Philip himself one" . of Quebec" of the 1927 decision l ‘ drives the Queen when on prlv ate trips. This is the seconn time they have been in an acci- . on the. Labrador boundary made i by the British Privy Council ; The French - language patrl ‘ dent while he was driving. in lfllic OTEHNIZNIO“. 3' "5 annual: 1957 they were in a collision I meeting here. expressed dissat- near slatnesy in the Thame. lisfaction with the decision. lie-1‘ Valley. not far from Windsor They were also unhurt on that occasion. In June, 1958, Philip escaped ‘ unhurt when an auto he was! driving and a London taxi col .' lided only 100 yards from the gates of Buckingham Palacu Before his marriage to Eliza- beth he skidded while drivtngl on a country road. knockch down a tree. smashed scvera.' yards of fence and ended up I in a hedge. Philip was Windsor Great afternoon after playing polo at Park Saturday he and t at Windsor Castle of Lady Helen Windsor. daughter of the Duke l anniversary of the, and Duchess of Kent. and 13m jsion of Europe. in line of succession for the; throne. ;cause it ‘gave to Newfound-; land a territory of 112,000 square miles considered up to that. time Quebec territory." ‘SIOP Goldwater' Action gForce In US, Eisenhower Slated By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL CLEVELAND IAPl — Gm ernor William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania made h i in se 1 f available Sunday for the Repub- lican presidential nomination and Governor George Romney of Michigan hinted strongly he might plunge into a stop-Gold- water campaign. Governor Nelson Rockefeller of w York State said: still for Rockefeller." This trio of possible bill im- probable choices for the Repub- lican presidential candidacy i5 clustered in one spot -— at the Stith annual conference of U.S. governors. Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, running far ahead of the field. is going into next month's Republican convention in San Francisco with a tre- mendous and perhaps decisive edge in delegate strength. Only a handful of the Repub‘ lican governors want Cold water. But the others acknowl- edge it will be almost impos- sible to stop him Both Scranton and Romney said they want a clarification of Goldwater's views. And there may be an effort to get a clar- ification at an unprecedented summit session of Republican politicos who already are here or are coming later, IKE WILL SPEAK ormer president Dwight D. Eisenhower will speak tonight. Goldwater and former vice- president Richard M. Nixon have accepted invitations to ap- pear. and this trio and the 16 Republican governors may meet Tuesday morning. Rockefeller also had a press conference and took some swipes not only at Goldwater but also at Scranton and Ram-1 i.. NY. He said that his feeling was that if the moderate cause is going to win at the Republican convention. “then some others are going to have. to share the leadership of that cause." He sai from what he had heard of Romney's views, what he said wasn‘t too little but it. F For Speech Tonight T question whether he would support Scranton for the p a rt v nomination. be said Scranton had declared he would have to sce where Goldwater stands. whereas the New York governor would have to see where Scranton stands. Scranton said of Goldwalei that “i have a feeling that the country as a whole is beginning to think he does not measure tip to the principles of the Re- publican party." Romney said he was con. cerned "the Republican party in its 1964 convcnlion will either provide the nation the leader: ship it needs or commence the suicidal destruction of the Re publican party as an effective instrument In meeting the na« tion‘s needs." Goldwater. in Chester. Pa. to receive an honorary degree. from Pennsylvania Military Col- lege. said he felt that bower. Scranton and have made it clear they are not part of a stop-Goldwater move- mcnl. Indian Council ls Denounced By Princess MONTREAL '(‘Pi-«Khantln- eta Hom_ the former "Indian princess of Canada." said Sal~ urday that the chief of the Na- tional Ind i a n Council held an “illegal” council meeting to oust her from the chairmanship of the council's world's fair com- mittee. The striking 22 ~ year - model from nearby Caughna- waga said in a statement she was not legally suspended from the post because Council Ohief . l, C‘. wiiltnnce of Calgary had "handpicked" a few 17 directors to make the de« cision. . Miss Horn said she spoke to some directors who said they were, not notified of the meet— [I old S 3.was too ate. ‘1 t2 Cemetery Service Honors Canadian Invasion Dead by BEN wann . NORMANDY BEACHES (cm the Canada paid a stirring tribute Queen attended the christening lm its dead of the Normandy .campaign Saturday, the D-Day inva-l I More than Canadians.. joined by representatives of the I . other allied powers. gathered in' the evening sunshine at the tree - shrouded cemetery near Beny-sur-Mer where 2,043 Cana- I1 I dian servicemen are buried. Ofl these. 335 were cut down on the” D-Day eac cs. e others were killed in the bitter fighting of the next few weeks. FLOAT POINTS UP WORK OF SHRINERS The float of the Prince Ed- ward island Sirine Club illus- trates the work being done by the Shrine across the North American Continent in the field of aid to crippled children. Two girls are shown above with their muses as they ride. on the float timing the parade held by the shrine in Charlotte- town Saturday . Then. two girls have been sent to where. they received treatment in one of the Shrine Hospitals in Montreal where they receiv- ed excellent care and their ism: l ditions were groa’f improved, Some 100 Shrinch from Nova Scotia. Newfoundland and PEI. hold sessions at Prince Wales College followin g the parade. Canada's was the last event in a fiill day of ceremonials at the military cemeteries of na- tions whose troops were in the D-Day assault. At its climax. three RCAF‘ Dakota aircraft swooped in at treetop level and scattered 20,- 000 paper poppies made In Cs- nadian vetcrans' shops. PLACE WREATHS Veterans Minister Roger Tell— let placed the Canadian govern- ment wreath. followed by Sir Pierson Dixon. British ambas- sador to France, and French Cooperation Minister Triboulef, Among othcrs placing wreaths were representatives of to Royal Canadian Legion and Lt.- 6011. Guy Simon s. who com- manded Canadian corps in the Northwest Europe cam- paign. Farther west. American vet- erans saluted thcir dead at the two bcachcs where Il.S forces had come ashore. Twenty-eight US. Air Force planes flew in low over the beaches to drop wreaths into the sur. A hitch dcvclopcd in the Ca- nadian ceremony when the Uni- tcd States represcnlatives failed to arrive in time to place the US. wreath at the base of the white stone cross that dom- inates the five-acre cemetery. Just as the official Canadian party was leaving. howeter. thrcc carloads of Americans whirled up to the entrance catcs. Rctircd U.S. General Matthew Ridcway was in . load and apologized "profusely to Tcillet for missing the cer- cmon)’. \ftcr tlic ccrcmony. voung French schoolchildren began placing their bouquets of flow- ers at the monument. They had stood paticntly through the long service. clutching bundles of small summer flowers which . they had gathered in fields and gardens around Reny-Surul'or. The guard of honor for jevcnl was made up of 100 men -from tho Canadian Army Brig- ade Nuclear Rocket Unit at Socst. West Germany. plus smaller contingents of Brim lPrench and U.S. aoldte