mae ee * building—looking like a flying passengers > and final-session- of -the-Vatican=-‘strangling’- ; r If It's Good For The Island | WEATHER h : Cloudy, a few showers in the afternoon; The Guardian Is For It : winds light. Low-high 38 and 60, Wed- nesday: ‘sunny and cooler. & ? j - ee . —s a Eee e e _* é . ry) sores wee ‘Covers Prince Edward Island Like The- Dew : VOL. LXXVIIIL. NO. 225 im a ; CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1965. ane Saas SEVEN CENTS a 12 PAGES ; wav : , 7 t ' gavuas - RADICAL DESIGN COSTS $31 onsavae esrz wOOe | * * a Governor-GeneralOpens LQOUINICI [ ontr! ute i 5 : , : = q > ~ * ¢ ‘New Toronto City Hall ee ° By JOE DUPUIS ment, of erecting the building and a gold charm replica of her ; TORONTO (CP) — Governor- the building was almost as ex- husband's design. General Vanier opened Toron- citing as the building itself. But A gold medallion, especially ‘o's new city hall Monday while he ‘“‘shed ‘@ nostalgic tear’ for struck for the occasion, was tiny flags shot ftom rocket guns'the old, black-stone city hall, presented to the governor-gen- - ~ . . Spores over an e*timated 15,- across th street from the new eral. - os | ' P persons assembled under ‘one. The all-male Toronto Finnish : ; | e grey, sombre. skies Two other medals were pre- male chorus sang Finlandia as ARAB ENJOYS | i . Eulogies to the controversial sented. both by Mayor Givens. a tribute to the architect. ' es oun j radical design of the $31,000,000, Mrs. - Viljo Revell, widow of; “Let this day mark a new day | 157 SPOUSES | two-tower building came during the Finnish architect who de- in the epoch of our city,’ Mayor ? ; » ‘ e e the opening ceremonies from a signed tte edifice, was pre- Givens said in a brief address. ‘ TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - All host of speakers assembled on sented with a gold neck ebain “Let ~ people everywhere bear 8 : Zwhuriap, 67, has had ‘157 | i ° ” p ' a makeshift platform. They ins —SS—C<~;7T ]73RSté‘<it~S ~~ witness to Toronto's pride.” : wives in 51 years. | a . eluded” Prime’ Minister Pearson. . j Sented-belew-the-platiorm sere § Gace + P - If ule ae And Monday he _paid_a_trib- By MARIAN BRUCE ey, T-can't- see that-we will ever “This magnificent work—has- - ees —_ So amg — | ute to spouses that will anger The City of Charlottetown will be out of the position where we won world-wide _ acclaim. not |Drapeau -of Montreal, w ‘i o a. i { ~~ their moms: “A wife can dou-— contribute up to $20,000 towards ‘have to subsidize it.” Gam trom the architecture! and | scribed the building in an inter- NEW DELHI (AP)—United; The Sovie _ statement ap- who fee| that China is fishing ble her husband's life—pro- the cost of “Charlottetown Fes- | Cais iene Wright noted this epgineering communities, but view later, as a “monument, & Nations Secretary - General U|peared to be aimed at China, in th troubled waters,” Rusk vided there is no mother-in- »ival '65"° at Confederation pets of entertainment had to he Gay née we seine masterpiece. Thant's mission to end the fight-|which supports Pakistan and told reporters. law.” He cade’ the’ Ge iber ciates the bold and imaginative” : | The ceremony launched & ing between India and Pakistan once again has raised fears of I think the Soviet attitude has The evening newspaper Et- A resolution ‘asking that such | we don't support. it had will ants Mr. Vanier. “It takes ite week of celebrations, which will appeared stymied Monday night|@ renewal of the 1962 border | been helpful 80 far,” he added. telaat says that sprightly All an amount be guaranteed to (the cabinet in Olizee cay next place as one of the triumphs of include sym phony mage and there were signs he would conflict between India and _ Indian officials privately ack- has had a mere %® official help defray festival costs was epring when. it is asked to. give fp Canadian scene ‘aera. lle, folk daneing mil seek help fom world power CMa g sate Sec. eee iat anv, uid wives “bul 197 contact vive! pasied by a 63 vole yesterday |0.00, aud the provincial eae ili [ary <8 ay re | og Bers victories in Bigs . Under Moslem tradition a mon liget ‘when it to , ee 7 4 festival, paying homage to -the field hardened India’s stand on retary Dean Rusk advised China would be pressure by the Soviet dite oak Sut due coed oo ga —— thly city ee it is asked to give 1962, figured prominently in the TORONTO ‘CP) A 270-ton modern teen-age heat. ____|its terms for a ceasefire. to meno of the India-Pakis- re - ~~ rece — wives at one time and an un- The request for funds, made Coun. Nicholas’ aaik be tet platform ceremonies, as the crane crashed to the street in |. Pakistan made similar claims ay sda: sls dindies die theoe ous . mS limited number under con- by Col. Frank Storey, Centre such shows as Wayne and man chiefly responsible for the St. Clair Avenue in midtown Sh p li of victory on the oo _ . - tract. ‘ manager, had been discussed Shuster and Spring Thaw were project, first broached 10 years Toronto Monday injuring two eep 0 Icy wee —— Sia — fn Ali listed his conquests: earlier at an emergency coun- “‘not the form of art that should, ago and completed amid bitter construction workers, narrowly , - akistan. It no willing- Fifty wives came from cil meeting in August: have “to be subsidized.” : controversy missing a streetcar on the road Is Continued we a ee neat Khorrassan (near the Russian Main opposition to the motion Coun. W. R. MacNeill said and a family of four in a-house. ter meeting ondaay border), 30 from Azarbaijan came from Couns. John Nichol- council would be shortsighted in Mayor Philip Givens pre- sented him with a Gold Medal, _ The crane’s 200 - foot boom) the ‘city’s highest award of brought down hydro and street- merit. car lines as it fell,.and smashed through the bedroom roof of the DREAM COMES TRUE home of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony “This is the fulfillment of a! Cowal. dream for which 1. have long Mr. Cowal, 28, had walked out looked ord,” he told the of his second-floor bedroom a applau« owd. few seconds before the crane The .2-acre square on which, Struck. the throng gathered is named ‘Crane operator Richard Mem- after him. erosky, _ 50, and helper Dino Almost obscured by the flags, Farviet, 28, jumped from the bunting, speaking platform rows control cab about 20 feet up, of straight back crairs and as the crane tore loose from its benches for the 2,500 invited| base. They suffered minor leg guests was the three-storey, injuries. domed city council chamber| A. streetcar was derailed and momentarily saucer resting between the half- trapped inside when wheels moon office towers on each side. sliced live wires as the operator The 90 minute ceremony braked “about 50 feet from the opened with a flypast by five crane. . : RCAF jets, over the 27-storey The crane, erected by Contt- east tower and the adjacent 20- nental Climbing Crane Ltd., was a paricipating province. storey west block..— .. |heing used to build a 20-storey The extended program. witl Mr. Pearson said the achieve- office and apartment building.’ run to March 31, 1968. OTTAWA “(CP)—Federal is being continued for another partment announced on weekend. The department statement continuance of the five ment. of commercial ewes and areas for breeding purposes. ern Canada, and Ontario. The federal gov- ernment -contribu Ecumenical Council Opens: Final And Crucial Session VATICAN. CITY _ (Reuters)— | chzirmen, the -bishops, ‘The world’s** Roman ~~ Catholic ‘that the assembly -should finish ;foreign —pilgrims; ing speech today to the fourth risk of forcing the pace or of cred relics from the Basilica of -diseussion— Eeumenical -Council before de-. This morning, Pope Paul {s eran Cathedral. hating a controversial draft scheduled to walk in procession Wednesday morning, the decree on. religious liberty. up the Nave of St. Peter’s bronze doors of St. Peter's Ba- - The . who has so far re- Basilica between fused to identify himself with Tanks of -the Roman Catholic and the public. The bishops will either the progressive or” con-) Church's —supreme—-legislative then—begin their debates, in servative wings of the council assembly. Latin. A assembly, has sounded a cau- ' i ; ‘ : Bo is |MUST ATTEND OUTLINE KNOTTY ITEMS tious note in recent months | All the world’s more than Cardinal Doepfner, in when speaking of new ideas in ! the church. 2,000 Roman. Catholic the Holy Cross to-St. John Lat- ~-hishops-await Pope Paul's open- before Christmas, without any singing hymns, will carry ‘sa- with sed fear that | ‘ites..and. exptes invnive the entire world, | cent of the transportation costs, ———--—- with its share machine that’ of | N.B. Winery Plans To Use Blueberries | announced today. manager of Parkdale Wines Ltd {a subsidiary of the speeches only masked his se- valid reasons. Most of them agenda. He made the following When in -full production. cret worry about the danger! arrived by Monday afternoon, points: that a few theologians might be jodging in hotels, convents and Religious Liberty: The spreading false opinions” monasteries. teranen’ caused at the Isat ses about the eucharist. The pon- -At the Basilica’s main altar, sion. when ‘the conservative tiff issued a 9,000-word encycli- Pope Paul planned to celebrate minority forced a postpone-nent cal last -- weekend — reaffirming mass wit’: the 20 cardinals and ofa scheduled voting on this the basic doctrine of the eucha- | six bishops who hold office 1n document. has disappeared. confirmed. by the council. This* afternoon, he planned to perfected.” Julius Cardinal Doepfner of lead the council fathers on foot The Jews: Munich, one of the four moder- in a vast penitential procession of the draft resolution on Jews ators who take turns as council |in the southern district of Rome. and other non-Christians will be Loophole Seen £S such as ‘‘to remove every mis riages: The pope’s commissions are still studying these ‘‘partic- ularly complex problems’ and need ‘‘silence and calm.” residents of this town their first ran dry had been sunk to the 500-| e¢ree on ‘“‘the -church~ in the water from household taps in 12 foot level. Mines department of- | modern world.” ‘ days. - |ficials said it was_rare for an Decisions on this question _ A temporary line was stretch. artesian well to go dry, but it “wit}. not be published by the ofa regular water supply since | ; the 30-year-old artesian well rand j adjacent harbor of salt water . | provided a source for fire fight- dry almost two weeks 880. |ing because almost all the fire Eneugh water to exist on has | Iv (CP)—Univer- jtrucks Were equipped to pump VANCOUVER ‘(CP)—Univer the provincial mines depart- i ‘ meee | Nove: Scotia, emperienced one Of the UBC student body, said all The well is down about 300 feet | record this year. Sar one Taeeacne and will be tested for about 72) Mayor Langley said if the test pr tort ae 3 understanding.” The text in . question says the Jewish people “should never be presented as J C [ ' lary ater Ine Answering questions, Cardinal Doepner said he does not be- PORT. HAWKESBURY, N.S.|because of the water shortage lieve the decisions of the pope's (OP)=A 1% mile temporary |were # laundromat and a dry-| birth control commission, if ed Monday to a town hydrant had happened before. council, but by the pope and his from the Nova Scotia Pulp Lid., | Tankers from the town fire de- commission.” mill here to take the strain off /Partment had also been aiding — tank trucks supplying homes. jin the delivery of water. petal ge rn femepeeg in Mie A ES sity of B.C. students believe en oak itl —— | The pulp company gets its wat- they have found a loophole ee Sag ; _\er from lakes near the mill and |which would allow thousands Mayer A. J. Langley said test- ‘these were expected to see both more to_vote in the Nov..8 elec- hours. “|wells do not prove satisfactory “uring the summer to reserve A second test well is expected the town would epply to the At- 2¢¢ommodation. to begin pushing up water to- lantic Development Board for a This may lexi day, also for a trial period. ' grant to pipe water in from near- Tesidence, he éaid. of deicide (god-killing).” Birth Control. and Mixed Mar- water line was to go into opera- cleaning plant. finished in time, would be in- tion Monday night giving 2.200 He said the artesian well that corporated into the council .de- The town has been deprived |g one the shortane bean The ine would begin Monday night \town and mill through th emer- | tion. fn an artesian well drilled by |geacy. This area, like most of Peter Braun, vice-president of Mayor Langley said the only by lages, rather than depend on Student: plan to check their businesses | to close down | wells. : findings with election officers. cursed or guilty Students’ Vote | Ee legally constitute _ Mr. Desbrisay said wines pro- “pit. | duced at the plant ‘‘will be pre- dominantly marketed along the eastern seaboard of the United , States from. Boston to-Florida.” _He said it will ‘serve to stimu- jlate production of glass bottles rist, which ‘has already been'the assembly's directive bodies. ‘The text has been clarified and © be manufactured in a glass | container plant planned for the |Canadians’ lawyers lost one bat- diction \tle to gain a delay but contin- < ” New formulation Province. ee = eS TS. oe y India’s Foreign Minister 4S- Swaran Singh, Thant met pri- sistance in the cost of transport- ‘vately with the Soviet charge ing sheep for breeding purposes qraffaires, Alexei A. Rodionov. A UN spokesman said Thant three years, the agriculture de- ang the Russian discussed the the possibility of Thant’s return to : |UN headquarters in New York said in A& py way of Moscow. While UN the decision means | officials said- this would be only - year » stop to change planes. there program introduced in 1960 tO} were reports Thant wanted to provide assistance in the move- | gee Soviet Premier Kosygin. A short time after Thant met ewe ‘lambs to sheep-deficient |with the Soviet envoy, word feached New Delhi of a new So- The program applies to the yiet appeal for an end to transport. of sheep within West- fighting. A Soviet statement car-| from Western to! ried by the news agency Tass Eastern Canada and from Que gaid the Soviet government {s bec to the Atlantic provinces seriously alarmed by the hostili- the low conspirator MONCTON (CP) — Parkdale |plastic bags weighing a total 76 Wines Ltd. will establish a win- | pounds and identified it as pure | ery in the greater Moncton in- heroin, dustrial park at Scoudouc, about | 12 miles east of here, it W 45 Caron stoically but at one point The announcement was made |with defendant jointly by Finance and Indus-mond Jones of “Montreal—Jones. ‘try Minister L. G. DesBrisay |toppled to the floor with a clat- ued wi and E. Gordon Gilbridge, execu- ter as he lurched too far over Ties tive vice-president” and ‘general |in his swivel-back chair. Guards Canadian the -mitred silica will he closed to the press Prewing firm of John Labatt The New Brunswick Develop- ment Corporation assisted-in the establishment of the winery, ex- |pected to use 1,000 tons of blue- his| berries a year, adding stimulus bishops press conference Monday, out- to the blueberry industry in the : will attend the council, unless lined the controversial items on| Province. The plant is expected Vatican. sources said thse impeded by health or other the council's long and difficult 0 employ about 50 persons Rivard Jury Picked: Sees wives are jealous and intol- are kind and devoted.” erant—but spouses from—Rasht_ /son, Arthur Gormley and Frank Zakem. Coun. Nicholson said he had received a great many phone calls since the special meeting | in August, supporting his stand | -against the proposed grant. EXPRESSES CONCERN [ awyer Seeks Delay meghan, % from Baluchistan and Tehran and three Arabs. His verdict: | ‘‘Khorrassan By JOHN LeBLANC | (CP)—Lucien LAREDO, Tex. Rivard and three other Cana-- dians charged with conspiracy) ty Rift Marks ‘Arab Meeting CASABLANCA, ina huge narcotics smuggling * ‘operation heard a self-styled fel- © tell a jury Mon-| 'day they were all in the nar-| = cotics ‘‘business’’ together. ie The witness at the first day | {of their trial in this Texas-Mex- - t|ico border city was Joseph Mi-| \ehel Caron, 36, a former Mon-|: itreal waiter who was trapped );~ iby border guards: here in 1963 |with about $33,000,000 worth of \heroin stuffed in tie panels and jseats of a car heading from | Mexico City to Montreal. | Caron; serving 10 years in a \U.S. penitentiary for smuggling jin the cache, testified shortly jafter border officials wheeled in the compact fortune done up in mit conference Monday night with an open -rift |between Tunisia and the rest of the Arab world. |_| Arab foreign ministers, meet- | ing in an emergency session | just before the conference ;gan,. rejected ~a ision to boycott the meeting. -In his statement and in a na- | of having engineered {plots throughout the Arab world }to enforce Egyptian policies. UNITED STATES Disirict he- memorandum from Tunisian President Habib | | Bourguiba: explaining his. deci- tionwide speech from Tunis, Monday, Bourguiba accused He expressed concern that the | Festival program would require the city’s continued support in the future. ; “We've been told that it (Fes-( tival) was a successful show, but it’s the kind of successful | not supporting, the program, as “I think it’s right for the com- munity.” Mayor Walter Cox said the province had been lacking in the arts for a long time, and the theatre would ‘‘open-up new avenues for ourselves and our children.” He added that the program had brought in a great deal of revenue to the city and province by attracting visitors from outside. Coun. John: Morris, noting that the summer program included training in the arts for young Morocco show that has to be subsidized. people of the province, said | (Reuters)—The third Arab sum- If the theatre was full all sum- |there were. ‘two things lacking opened here mer and still didn’t make mon-! (Continued on page 5, cal, 4) SAIGON (AP) Thousands more Americans swarmed ashore in South Viet Nam Mon- Judge Ben C. Connolly will -preside at the trial in Laredo, The four prisoners listened to ‘Finds Treatment Tex., of accused narcotics j—as he told of his first meeting; smuggler Lucien Rivard of | Joseph - Ray-|- Montreal. To the latest in a long on legal manoeuvres. Federal District Judge Ben’ C; thing better than ~ quickly straightened him up un-; Connally denied a defence mo- treat a black eye: harmed \¢ion for a postponement based -'on the claim that Rivard’s law- quently used—-in— the production of synthetic fibres. ‘man; and Charles Emile Gro- jleau, described by the prosecu- tion Wednesday as “executive officer” to alleged Kingpin RI-| vard, make up the remaining | , Montrealers charged with. RiI-|Suilty or not guilty on behalf ‘vard in an alleged four-country Of the four, a move that : diiamaiiad “coumllan’. iiaicisied bh a - tank Genial ot Oregon, will change a swollen Sai ‘Sesiabaht ; black eye to an unswollen pale ithe court’s jurisdiction in line a : ADMIT SMUGGLING lwith e=rlier formal motions of Yellow eye in 90 -qinutes. When Caron was askedithe defence already ruled out| He said all that’s necessary whether he had had ‘‘business| by the judge: is: to apply a solution to the relations” with the group, the! The court itself entered not skin around the bruised- area. short, pale _prisoner_replied; | guilty pleas on behalf of the “Yes, smuggling narcotics.” |four but the defence move al- During the opening day,’ the | lows it to assert lack of juris- later, an avenue that (Continued on page 3, col. 3) efter being extradited from Canada in July. The defence countered by re- fusing to enter pleas of either |1.y Jncoh 36d ce RdWward ~—e NEW ORLEANS (AP)—Ships, planes and divers searched. the murky Mississippi River for a missing cargo of poisonous . chlorine gas upriver ‘at Baton Rouge Monday as the New Or- leans coroner's office laid out cots’in a makeshift morgue to handle a mounting hurricane death toll. o Officials: urged Baton Rouge’s wee 160,000 inhabitants to stay calm ™ _but the Louisiana state capital — « Was tense as the hunt was pur- " sued for the barge, one of many believed swamped by Hurricane Betsy last Friday. Dr. Nicholas Chetta, the coro- ner here, said bodies of hurrti- cane victims from flooded down- river towns are being brought in by boat, truck and plane. behind the worst storm in the city’s history, no one was sure how many persons were dead. - Dr. Chetta-said ‘‘we are ex- pecting as many as 200 bodies to.be brought in... in the Jones, a 28-year-old = sales- _ gtate medical association con | | : --. yer had not been able to see : ' : | donee Shas area” esiee | - hith ‘While he was ethos beetle o uaty - a] oe eres held by U.S. federal authorities ym : f Brown said the substance, plo- | meered medically by Dr. Stan- Rosenbaum of the University of day, continuing the biggest sin- \gle U.S. troop landings of the | Viet Nam war. As the main part of the 20,- Aid Black Eye 000 “flying horsemen" of the U.S. Army's ist Calvary ‘Divi-" sion. moved up the beach, they. \doctor_says he’s found some-' were met by helicopters and * beefsteak to Us. Ambassador Henry Cabot see | Lodge. . Dr. Harold Brown told the op the first field trip sinee jhe returned as ambassador last | month, Ledge also toured a vil- ilage at Da Nang, 380 miles north of Saigon, and visited a refugee centre there hefore go- ing to the troop-landing area. The arrival by ship of the ist Cavalry apparently pushed American troop” strength in South Viet Nam past President Johnson's announced goal of 125,000. No figures were dis- closed but U.S. military authorl- ties announced last week that, U.S. troop strength in South Viet President Johnson, after checking with state officials Sun- day, said the death toll: would run into the hundreds. The coroner's office officially | has identified only 27 hurricane | -Mictims. The office has proces- | sed 78 bodies since Betsy struck | last Friday, but many remain unidentified. At Johnson's direction, the U.S. navy dispatched the de- stroyer Hyman with submarine- spotting sonar gear to Baton | Rouge to press the hunt for the missing barge. Two submarine | hunter planes flew* in from Nor- folk, Va. | Nineteen navy and 13 army | divers made repeated trips be- | neath the surface to look at ob-| jects located by sensitive detec- In the confusion that lingered” tion gear. Centre of the ‘search was a. INSIDE TODAY current load.” But even the cor- — Classified ....-- 16, 1 oner's office was caught in the Saein Pee oe eee ’* , confusion of trying to determine Comies oe ee ee 9 ~ asoesd oe *_ Finance, markets ....... Oe FIGURES DUPLICATED | BPE ieee gies 7 i = ; But officials felt the police re- Women’s en eee wees 6 as os ig of Ss ports of ‘bodies flooding the cor- Editorials ..... Bee weseeees 4 FOUR US. Navy divers taining 600 tons of deadly for the barge believed to have |onet's office—running ashigh as Summerside ..-......... 3 Jaunch rubber rafts they will chlorine gas. Over 30 Navy sunk in the Mississippi River [400—may contain many duplica- Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 _use to dive from while search- ‘and Army divers arrived Mon- near Baton Rouge. tions that have swelled the fig Prince County... .. 2 ing for a sunken barge con- day in Baton Rouge to search. (AP Wirephola) [ures te an exaggerated i “ies ‘ - t : ; : ae Cre Reet unt A RR I. enact, oct BE PATI IEE a ES erento aaa ¢ + ea : : adeiaiicll iccalaaianiie.— Flying Horsemen Boost US. Force In Viet Nam Nam had reached the 107,000 mark. z SPECIALLY TRAINED | The 1st Cavalry, especially trained for guerrilla warfare |and using helicopters for mobil- ity, is expected to be deployed in_the central highlands. A spokesman said other U.S. . troops are expected to land son but--had.been delayed at sea by... a typhoon. Elsewhere in Viet Nam, U.S, military_. spokesmen __ reported: U.S. war planes kept up bomb- ing of a Mekong Delta area where a Viet Cong guerrilla regiment mally —2,000-men— was believed encamped 3) miles west of Soc Trang. The planes were trying to hit canals which the Communists might use to escape. U.S. officials said they believed the guerrillas were trapped in the region but ground troops were not . committed against them becagsse of heavy rain and the large size of the Viet Cong force, Baton Rouge Said Tense 4 AsHunt For Gas Continues section of the river near, down- town Baton Rouge —The area was closed to river traffic and 100,000 gas masks were being ‘stockpiled. The masks would he distributed if they half-inch-thick steel: tanks containing the chlorine began to leak. White House sources in Wasn- ington_said the 600 tons of gas woul enough to kill 30,000 to 60,000 persons but the deadly gas posed a threat only _if the | barge’s containers are pierced, As flood waters gradually re- ceded in greater New Orleans,. the danger of disease mounted. Health authorities hurriedly innoculated more than 400 po- licemen against tetanus and typhoid. Hundreds of volunteer workers were given shots as they helped handle the stream of Yéfugees and Wodies. The health officials ordered - public_schqols in the area closed | indefinitely. National Guards units were or- dered to Louisiana for at least four days—to beef up more than 1,000 New Orleans and Baton Rouge troops to prevent looting, help evacuate refugees and per form other police duties: Police warned that packs of | dogs running loose haven't eaten for days. <‘They are drinking stagnant water and frothing al _| the mouth."’ Police” Capt. Ed _ ; Ward Stevens said oa