“t “ emergency rescue and search | - hundreds of thousands and vnadian Pacific Airlines jetliner ” Hh li's Good For The lalend The Guardian Is For It &&: VOL. LXXIX NO. 54 From AP-Reuters ey ~~ Authorized as Second Class Mail by the Post Office Department. Ottawa and for Payment Of Festage in Cash. THIRD DISASTER IN SERIES. ~~ BOAC Jetliner Breaks Up In Freakish Air Over rwere Canadian and American | ing-707 ‘took off Saturday for ‘Japan GOTEMBA, Japan (CP)—Dis- experts. ,A member of the U.S. | Hong Kong en route to London, moval of bodies from _ the wreckage of a British jetliner that broke up in freakish air | Japanese plane. ‘ over Mount Fuji Saturday and , All three commercial planes py di killing all 124 persons | were American-made. i : | Aviation experts searching the The passengers included 89|pBOAC wreckage said Sunday Americans and one Canadian. [freak air currents and sudden Among the bodies were those ‘severe winds may have ripped of the pflot and co-pilot, found |the Boeing-707 apart minutes still in the cockpit seats of the | after its takeoff from Tokyo, 50 Boeing 707 with hands on the miles to the north. controls Japanese soldiers Saturday The disaster was the third in /night carried down the bodies a series of major air crashes of -all 124 victims and_ placed in the Tokyo area that have them in wooden coffins in a taken 321 lives in a month. \Buddhist temple in. Gotemba, 70 It followed by 18 hours a Ca- miles south of Tokyo. The Canadian was’ Theodor Vaskevich, 53-year-old engineer from Toronto. ; would crash at Tokyo's International Airport in which 64 persons, in- | cluding 18 Canadians perished.| Among the Americans were 75 Feb. 4, all 133 persons aboard ns‘on an Asian tour spon- a .Boeing-727 jetliner of All- \sored by Thermo King Corpora- Nippon Airlines were killed in |tion of Minneapolis, a refrigera- the worst single-plane crasl. im |tion equipment firm. Three top commercial airline history when |company officials and many of the.aircraft plunged into Tokyo \the firm's key dealers in. the = - “ae a United States and their wives a ered over were among the dead. . scene of the Japanese airline | Se cnet Wiiebines said they erash. Officials reported a heli-|saw the BOAC plane break copter in the continuing search |apart, then swirl down like a for bodies plunged into Tokyo jJeaf, trailing fire and smoke. may Saturday, ae two of its Its wreckage scattered over a . crew mem E And as recovery work contin- ued Sunday around the wreck- Japanese. ages of the BOAC crash Satur- | day, and the crash of the CPA DC-8 Friday night, Tokyo got a momentary shock with stil) an- | other aircraft accident. RAN OFF RUNWAY . AUS. ler—-transport, carry- Chung, whose Canadian ing only its five crew members dress was not known. wide area on the rugged slopes jof 12,389-foot Fuji—sacrec to THREE CANADIANS ABOARD |thirds of one Among the survivors of the |said. ‘Then there were CPA disaster are three Cana-|with both segments idians, Freda Yeske, 30, of Ed-|saw small dots, which monton and Vancouver; Bernard |have been fragments. Ther the \James Redisky, 23, of Kimber- Air Force C-136 tur-. ley, B.C., and Mrs. San Jen- | A Japanese. . military ad- |said he watched through | ae “as both-wings-tere-from_the | ~ aster teams have completed re- | Civil Aeronautics Board said his | the Tokyo weather bureau re- group study the two /ported severe winds over Mount weekend crashes plus that of the |Fuji, noted for freak air cur- | rents. At noon, the weather bureau said the winds at Fuji were a sustained 70 miles an hour and three hour’ later a sustained 96 |- miles an hour,-with gusts, likely to: be higher. s Officials at the scene said the |winds and air currents . could 'have, overcome? the plane, then |braced its fall. : | Freakish weather also may |have been partially responsible |for the Canadian jet crash. | Arriving from Hong Kong, ## jwas kept circling over fog-bound \Tokyo Friday, night for nearly /15 minutes it finally got jpermission for a landing Visti- bility was just above the mini- mum, officials said. DIPPED NEAR RUNWAY | The big jet suddenly dipped | when about a mile from the run- jway, airport police, said. Its |wheels plowed through 15 ap- |proach lights built out into To- |kyo- Bay. In the next. instant i |smashed into a concrete retain- jing ‘wall and ‘disintegrated in | glames. -One of those who saw the |BOAC disaster was Shizuacka | Serizawa, a weather observer near Fuji. “I saw the plane rising pex- and then saw two- wing tear off,’ he |. i i plane went down.” cadet |lars on a test, ran off the runway Miss Yeske, an Air Canada lplane and - the body spiralled ab Tackikawa Air Force Base |sales agent and Redisky, . stu-" down. near Tokyo and plunged into a (dent, were reported -in good | In: Minneapolis, a spokesman K id rice paddy. The crew walked condition. for. Thermo King, said: away unharmed. 3 | The CPA DC-8, bound from! ‘This has got to be ‘the most Sir Giles Guthrie, chairman of {Hong Kong to Vancouver and /disastrous thing -a company British Overseas Airways Corp., South American p.oints, via |could-experience.”’ He added ev- 2 “Covers Prince b CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MARCH 7. 1966. Gi Noted Ta Edward Tetand Like ‘The Deo \ arc J 99 War With Chin % -Buses, trains and airlines are arrived with a 17-man team to | Tokyo, snagged its wheels on look into the Mount Fuji crash. | approach lights -Friday might He. said it was BOAC’s first in-jand then hit a retaining wall at 550,000,000 miles of flying. ~~. | the head° of the runway. ' Also converging on’. ‘Tokyo! Minutes after the > Boe- ery one of the firm’s top deal- ers was on the plane. The trip was a reward for dealers who met sales quotas in last year. = : Huge And Costly Cleanup Is Underway In Winnipeg WINNIPEG (CP) — The big | meeting of the ‘emergency co- blizzard is over and the cleanup /ordinating committee Sunday is under way from eastern Man- 'and predicted the storm will itoba to the Lakehead. ‘leave the city with a $1,000,000 For Winnipeg, all put buried |bill. He said he hoped for fi- in the wake of snow swept by [nancial aid from senior govern- winds up to 70 miles an hour Pigs so local taxpayers won't all-day -Friday,_it’s likely to be have to bear the entire burden. the biggest and costliest in the | This was the scene—in—Winni-. city’s history. < Sunday i ns | Snow - clearing equipme ~Plows--and_ trucks went 0 | assed on non-stop under sunny work when the storm died early |. ; 5 Saturday and the metropolitan Sein ~~. icra ona area of 500,000 began to dig it- |. ity and all but a handful of tran- a oe to some yovigana cea, sit lines were .operating, some pore ec ee weekend. | with reduced runs or detours. : : Mountainous__piles_ of snow Geek in business. lined “downtown streets. feduc- Mayor Stephen Juba called a'ing traffic lanes by half or Storm Losses Extensive In Dakotas, Minnesota FARGO, N.D. (AP)—The Da-}Mettlers brought out warm kotas and northern Minnesota, |clothing, and munched on 50 hit by the worst blizzard in dec- |cents worth of candy bars Met- ades, were fanning out with |tler had bought. . “We all said quite a few Missions Sunday as the three- |prayers,’’ said Mettler. ‘And state death toll rose to 15. imy wife and boy sang that song Reports of staggering live- |Jesus Loves Me. stock losses reached civil de-} Through three dark “winter fence headquarters at Pierre, SD. It was certain to run into nights and two blustery days the Mettlers kept their lonely vigil. Saturday: ‘morning, when . the maybe millions of dollars. storm. abated, they left their Some ranchers lost entire car. They found they could herds of sheep or cattle in the |walk on the crusted snow, over three-day storm that struck Wed- drifts as deep.as 25 feet, and nesday. eee —“nede it safely home-——-- - @One ranch reported all 500 cat-| But Mettler estimates he lost ti in a herd near Timber Lake, at least half of his beef herd $.D., died when isolated without | of 100 head, worth $15,000. feed and virtually- paralysed| In Pierre, S.D., civil defence with snow. Another reported los- | headquarters told of reports of ing 2,000 sheep near Rapid City. |some- entire herds being wiped Some other ranchers on the |out. : South Dakota prairies figure In both Dakotas and sections their losses at about 50 per cent: of northern Minnesota, persons A U.S: national guard helicop-- trying auto travel for the first ter crew working for. the civil |time in four days had to pick defence—spotted—scores_of dead |their spots. Some main __high- animals. |ways were opened by snow Under clear skies, helicopters. | plows. but it will be days be- planes and snowmobiles fanned |fore normal road traffic is pos- out on emergency, rescue and | sible. search missions in an area para- | lysed by four days of- heavy | snow and high wind. INSIDE TODAY Ore family they won't need to | dig out is Hardy Otto Mettler, | i 48. a rancher near ‘McLaughlin. | aa svocececses 10 ; SD | Deaths .........e.eeeet ‘ BUNS 6. vtedcevesivvesss il STUCK IN DRIFT fb COMYCR occ ccedeecteces: i. With his wife and seven-year- Sport ee ee ee ‘ ol’ sen Mottler feft MeLauch- Women’s Peau ety icnbes es i lin late Wednesday for his ranch| Editorials... 3. ++! 3 14 miles away. Two miles from| Summerside ..........+++ 5 home the car stuck fast in a| Kings, Queens, City “.... Prince County .........- 2 drift. Old hands at bad weather, the | more. Many sidewalks remained covered waist-deep. CARS ABANDONED A total downtown parking ban warned viola-tors-would. be towed away. For most, the warning wasn’t necessary — ‘their cars were immobilized-in Garages, back lanes .and park- ing lots. Hundreds of automo biles that failed to make their destination during the. height of the storm remained abandoned. Many buried to their roofs. Supermarkets and other Saturday. night. remained open householders to replenish their food supplies. A volunteer delivery service was on the job getting emer. gency supplies.to residents un able to leave their homes. Most movie theatres opened Sunday. Y Many residential areas, par- ticularly in the suburbs, still were expected to face clogged |conditions at least until some | time today. On streets that were |open, traffic frequently was re- stricted to a single lane. |The ‘Trans-Canada Highway |was open although still snow- [ewan between -Winnipeg and Portage la Prairie, 50 miles to }the west. From Kenora, Ont., to | the Lakehead it was not cleared \to its full width. All major pro ivincial highways were open. + SCHOOLS .TO.-REOPEN.._. | Some churches held services but Sunday school was can | celled. Public schools, closed | Friday. will re-open today. The Free Press and the Trib une - published Friday although | went into effect and police | ausssedh HALIFAX (CP) — Unseason- ably mild weather covered the | Maritime Provinces during the weekend, with at ieast one maximum-temperature record falling. ; The weather office here re- ported that a reading of 46 de. grees at Summerside broke— | by one degree—a— record set | jin the Prince Edward Island | town in 1899. Weather Sets Queen Winds Up Caribbean Tour | (Reuters) Queen Elizabeth jended her five-week Caribbean \shine sudden downpours which \drenched this tourist playground Saturday. < stores, many of which opened | The Queen, who arrived here’ \Saturday with Prince Philip until 6 p.m. Sunday to allow eaves for London by air Sun.” lishment: ~~ iday night. - Philip will remain here unti) he starts his visit to the United States and Canada Tuesday. tourists joined the crowds thronging the streets Sunday to watch the royal couple drive by. In a farewell speech the Queen said her tour, which be- gan in British Guiana and con- tinued. through the Caribbean islands, had been a moving ex- perience. ie She said she would watch the progress of the Caribbean Com- monwealth countries with a new sympathy and understanding. It. was her first visit to Ja- maica since independence from Britain four years ago. MONTEGO BA Y, Jamaica tour Sunday under brilliant sun- | autopsy. , in sharp contrast to the’ The | Roger MacLaren, 169 Dorchester Dozens of North American, | while strolling along the pier Charlottetown businessman was found yesterday afternoon in his | car in the water beside the rail- |way wharf on the city’s water- | front. He E.-D.- Reid |Produce Ltd., 2 Prince Street. Dr. Allan MacMillan, coroner for Queens County ordered -an |inquest. He said the date would | be decided upon findings of an| | The body of E. D. Reid, 50,, utomobile, a 1962 model | Fairlane Ford was towed about | 2:30 from the oily waters of the railway wharf only a few feet | from shore and a short distance | from Mr. Reid’3 business estab- | The car was first noticed by Street, who reported siting the |roof of the aqua colored auto- mobile in about six feet of water Adjacent to the west side of the railway wharf. A : «Mr. MacLaren said it was ap- proximately 1:30 p.m. Sunday E. D. REID Upon investigation by Sgt. that he noticed the roof of the! Keith Wakelin and Constable }automobile submerged in water | Sydney Hurry, it was found that {about 35 feet from the shore | a left window was partially open, jline. He reported the incident to| the car was in low gear and the | Joseph (Plum) MacDonald and | ignition was turned on. All doors | City police arrived on the scene | were closed and the body of Mr. | minutes later. Reid was in sitting position in | The car was towed shoreward | the left rear seat of the auto- by a truck from Murphy's Ser-| mobile. A wrist watch on the vice Station after cables had} person of the deceased indicated |been attached to the cab and 7:55. Constable Robert Crockett RAY MURPHY of Murpiry's to the Railway Wharf where. Service Station aided with a the body..of E.D. Reid, Char- / rope tied to his waist held by lottetown businessman, was -|,Joseph.. (Plum) _ MacRonald, found in ‘the ‘rear~seat. The _ Charlottetown, is descending to automobile is pictured in “ap the engine bonnet of a 1962 proximately four feet of water. model Fairlane Ford adjacent. on the west side of the wharf ) father hadn’t returned home Sa- } |\turday night and a check with {|ternoon that the search ended ‘lof “Morell; daughters Roberta; |}19, UNB, and Claudia, 18, third- ‘year student at PWC. 4] ' | for ;|announced the group will begin Tuesday a series of hearings 4 WEATHER: Cloudy, with a few clear periods; winds south 15, shifting to 30 and 36. ‘ - Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS Risk @. west 15. Low-high ' ‘ 4 .12 PAGES’ “ By U.S. Senator ey gs _ Hearing Aimed To Reduce Peril © WASHINGTON (AP) ,— Sen- day night there is present dan- ger of war with China-and an- nounced early U.S. Senate hear- ings on that Communist-ruled country in an effort to lessen the peril. The Arkansas Democrat, chairman of the Senate foreign relations. committee and a. critic of .U.S. policy in Viet Nam, called in a statement for a searching effort “to increase . |our understanding of China.” . He said that might alter the “fatal expectancy” of war which he asserted is held by Chinese leaders and by some American officials. ._.With his committee scheduled to act. today on a $415,000,000 foreign aid authorization, mostly utheast Asia, Fulbright aimed at increasing putilic knowledge about China. He -said before fresh political on Southeast Asia it is essential to try to understand the Chi- nese and their leaders. .. SEES REAL DANGER “The danger of war is real,” he said. “‘It- is real because China is ruled by ideologicat- dogmatists who will soon have ; {nuclear weapons at their dis- and military decisions are made te jat war with the United States « | ator J. W. Fulbright said Sun-|within a year, and it is clear that some of our own officials also expect a war with China.” Fulbright said the expectation of_war often overcomes the de- |Site of both sides to avoid it. | |‘WORTH A TRY’ “Perhaps a concerted effort to increase our understand of China and the Chinese alter that fatal expectancy,” he . “Perhaps if our tions “were altered theirs too would change. It is anything but sure thing but, considering the stakes and considerifig alternative, it seems | tre se, | “There is no easy ‘us-to make ourselves ia] SE of the’ Chinese -as the decent and honorable’ people we really are, and it is not likely that the_ dogmatic men who in Pe king will soon remove the blind- ers of ideology and look at the - world in realistie and human tions and try to learn all we can about the Chinese their behavior and attitudes, and y-to-try_to find out why exactly the Chinese are so hostile to the West and what if. posal and who, though are more ferocious .in words than in ac- tions, nonetheless are intensely hostile to the United States: “In the, short run the danger of war between China .and America is can bring the two great powers into conflict with each other, Found In Submerged Cars business: associates failed to re- yeal his: whereabouts. Mrs. Reid was reported visit- ing another daughter Roberta, a second-year science student at the University of New Bruns- It wasn’t until 1.30 Sunday af- at the railway wharf where the car bearing the body of Mr. Reid was hauled from the mud- dy water. Sarvivors include a wife, the former Thelma”. Dingwell, 58 Brackley Point Road, formerly His father, J.B. Edwin Reid is residing at Rollo Bay. His mo- ther, the former Minie Frances of Dundas predeceased him in 1959. y Also surviving are brothers, Willard, Ohio; Major, Rolly accident or by design, at alm any time. “Some of our military ex- perts are ¢onfident ‘China will not enter war in Viet Nam. Their confidence would be more reassuring if it did. not bring to mind the predictions of mili- ry experts in 1950 that China would not enter the Korean War, as well. as more recent predictions about an early vic- tory.in Viet Nam. “In fact, it is the view of certain China experts in our government that the Chinese leaders themselves expect to be real. because ‘open-ended’ war in Viet..Nanr then we are facing . . . dan gers far beyond those now on the horizon. of will of the United States that would move us into a war that no one would want.” Rusk added that if the U.S. succeeds in Viet Nam ‘one hundred small countries around ee ee relief.” MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -—. Blonde Candace Mossler and her nephew, Melvin Lane Powers, were found not guilty Sunday of the murder of her husband, Jacques Mossler. ~The --12-man -jury...deliberated 16 hours, 33 minutes before clearing the. defendants of a charge that they plotted ‘brutal unwarranted murder” of the man who willed her control, of a $33,000,000 bank and loan com- pany. Powers clasped his hands and breathed a loud sigh of relief Bay; sisters Martha, Mrs. Les- (Continued on page 5, col. 6) ‘the front bumper. "reported the only articles found cet ee = Spying For | subscribers Saturday and kept) jup deliveries of Saturday I |tions on Sunday. ay {television Queen Plans | Boston Stop | | GANDER, Nfld. (CP) — An| aircraft carrying Queen Eliz- | OTTAWA (CP) Victor Spen- cer appeared on A nation-wide program Sunday night to deny ever spying for | the Russians. But he ‘admitted having made a ‘‘mistake.” Spencer, subject of headlined House of Commons debate as an alleged spy fired from the postal service, refused to blame anvone for his situation. Victor Spencer Denies + Lean’s Funeral Home-minutes. after the car was hauled from! | the water: Little evidence was found in- dicating the exact position the car left the wharf before it settled into the water a few feet parallel to the pier and! facing north. REPORTED MISSING Charlotietown police reported I've be- \that.a daughter ,Claudia about 12.50 p.m. Sunday reported her Russians But he added: | | “T don't -think that \trayed my country." : | He admitted being guilty ‘of ~ being friendly”. to Russia, be- jing a membert of the Canada- | . £ | |Soviet FriendShip Society, and.) Die P ans having the desire to travel to | a Rissa ee 8? Néld. Visit He also’welcomed the judicial | abeth back to London from a| The 62-year-old former postal, inquiry Prime Minister Pearson| sr. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP)—Op- Carribean holiday will make a refuelling stop at Boston early | jtoday. é The Super VC-10, originally | | Scheduled to take on fuel at this central Newfoundland airport. jwill make, the stop at Boston | because of weather conditions | here, officials said Sunday ‘night. clerk was- interviewed in Van- couver by Jack Weoster on the CBC program This Hour has Seven Days. He refused to say under di- rect questioning whether -he had received $3,000 to $4,000 from Russian Embassy Officials as stated in the Commons by Jus- tice Minister Cardin. has arinounced to investigate position Leader Diefenbaker his firing. will visit Newfoundland April He said he would “like the 29-30 to attend the annual con- ‘vention of the Newfoundland Progressive Conservative party. Dr. Noel Murphy, leader of the Newfoundland _ party, said Saturday Mr. Diefenbaker will ibe guest speaker at the con- mystery to be cleared up,”’ per- haps an indication that Spencer himself would like the scope of the inquiry extended to include not only his treatment by the government but the activities lover which he was dismissed. |vention, to be held in Gander. \ |in the car were an overshoe and | | boxes of potato tags. | | ‘The body was taken to hospital | ( |by an ambulance from Mac- | Leader _Diefenbaker said Satur- By BOB MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition day..the“government’s attempt to “blackmail’’ him into silence had failed and his party will in- sist on a royal commission im- vestigation into ‘‘all aspects” of Canada’s security going back to 1944, “There is still something fishy about the Spencer case,’’ he told ithe national convention of the | Young Progressive Conservative |Association Saturday night. The government promised Fri- day to hold an inquiry into the jcomplaint of: Victor George Spencer, 57, a Vancouver postal worker fired for alleged spying activity. The government insisted noth- ing was wrong, Mr. Diefenba- ker said, and when things got tough in the Commons Friday “they tried to blackmail me into silence.” Although he did not elaborate on the specific incident, Mr. Diefenbaker’s reference to |blackmail was an apparent ref- erence to a question by Justice | Minister Cardin asking if the ‘Conservative leader would tell ' when the verdict was read. His aunt gave a little cry of joy. SAYS BLACKMAIK. FAILS Candace Mossler, Nephew Acquitted In Murder Case The defence had said the proved nothing but that fendants had engaged in rid love affair. | Saturday, the |ported itself in a Hock. But. .circuit Judge Schulz decided tried long enough and: | Mrs. Mossler broke down and iwept at the verdict. | Powers, who seldom jemotion throughout the weeks trial, wore a wide as he said he is “‘very pleased’’ lwith the verdict. 3 the House what he knew about the <‘‘Monseignor affair.” There was no elaboration in the Commons. REFER TO MUNSINGER ~ Several newspapers have..in- terpreted the remark as a refer-, ence to Olga Munsinger, whom they said was a one-time clerk in a Communist embassy. She was described as a volup- tuous former ‘‘'German beauty queen."’ She apparently was de- ported from Canada and died two years ago in East Germany. One newspaper reported the the RCMP had a photograph of her, in nude, with a former Conservative cabinet minister. ‘We were not silenced,’ Mr. Diefenbaker told’ the cheering delegates at the Saturday ban- quet. “We will not be silenced. We will not be intimidated, either.’ | The government had- insisted nothing was wrong but the Con- servatives stood their ground and ‘‘when blackmail failed, the government folded.” Mr. Diefenbaker said his for- mer government never was in- volved in anything that threat- Dief Will Push Security Probe jened to ‘‘weaken Canada’s se lcurity.”” |. But -the Spencer: case had \raised serious doubts about the handling of such cases by the \justice departiént and~ the: -in- ivestigation should go back as far as 1944 to ensure everything was being done “to meet the chal- [lenge of Communist infil- tration.” \STOOD ON PRINCIPLE | Mr. Diefenbaker said his | stand was “a matter of -princi- ple’’ and he had made many such stands before even though ihe had ‘“‘to stand alone." But he had been proven right. Another battle would have to |be fought in the future to save |\Canada’s position as a mon- ‘archy, Mr. Diefenbaker said. The Liberals already had started with the resolution. last imonth by the Liberal’s student jorganization stating that - the ‘Queen of Great. Britain no ‘longer be recognized .as the Queen of Canada. “Ask Mr. Pearson about that. He’s, never condemned that de- | cision. “That’s where we're “headed now .,. step by step.”