re . : | ; 1,_If It's Good For The Island WEATHER The Guardian Is For It : et ace d abe oh item %s mostly sunny alxd cold. | ane "8 Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 4 VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 304 deterint os tet com naget MOB _./@TOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1965. ! for M08 SEVEN 12 PAGES Acceptance Is Church, Crown And State. [Mark Westminster's Birth \\ \\Ba CAR NREANEDY YS“ Yrpeadenik’ a Nee y. was bonkecra . %, ye (“P) '— Church, \red roses on a all altar im 1065, eight days.hefore Edward | Crown ‘and state assembled in the nearby chapel ‘of St. Ed- died. He was’canonized in: 1161 a dazzling symphony of color |ward the Confessor. The abbey, -by Pope Alexander III. land music Tuesday to celebrate founded by King Edward I as, The Royal Family signed the » 900th anniversary of one of \the centre of a Benedictine mon-' ‘Continued on page 3 Col. 6) ¢ SAIGON, (AP)—A high South Vietnamese source said today the government will accept the Viet Cong’s offer of a four-diay Ceasefire that would cover the ‘ & whe AFTER THE WEDDING _ Anne Ford, 2-year-old dau- ghter of Henry Ford II, poses with her husband, Giancarlo a short princess style dress of white silk gabardine featuring long sleeves bordered with white ermine and silver and crystal embroidery. Breakoff In Pension Plan Talks Puts Railway Unions Up In Arms *MONTREAL (CP) "= Officials jate’ wather than "deck" its own does the Quehec plan. -. of 17" railway uniols, saying | private plan with’ the \ public |_ Tuesday the unions submitted CPR-employees aré up in arms, | schemes. 7 : |@ five-point program for nego- asked the CPR Tuesday to ne-| In a decking arrangement — |tiations. stairs in her mother's apart- ment yesterday. The bride, Uriel, in lobby of Fifth. 0% % the nation's 10-best- Avenue__Apartment—in__New dressed _women.this year York. Wedding took place up- wears her wedding’ costume, a a ad | The. soaring. Gothic nave-- of the abbey, newly cleaned and sparkling in the. glate of televi- sion lights, a ae ian inaugural service a year-long round of birthday celebrations. The Queen, Prince Philip and other. members of the \Royal -Family headed a congre- |gation of 2,300 that included rep- jresent atives of international Christendom, peers, politicians anda cross-section of British and -Commonweaith notables. The Archbishop of Canterbury robed in cloth of gold, as-an abbey guest. The historic building where ail England's so- vereigns have -been - crowned. is |Gne of only two churches in the land under the jurisdiction of the Queen, not the primate. For the first time since’ the 16th century, the Vatican sent an apostolic delegate to a purely rei gioug ceremony Church of England. pestry of sky-blue, scarlet, and pink. y : PLAY MOZART _ Before the service, an orches- tra played music by Purcell, and Elgar. The -Quéen te changes in the railway | which officials said is the same| They say the employee con- sion agreement announced |@s ‘‘stacking” -- one plan is | (Continued on page 3 Col. 4) earlier this month- : h ‘ nd. | §The ‘union officials protested plan, each operating independ- | ° a t decision by CPR chairman N. ently -of the other. Shelepin L ds ters they wanted to discuss “are | generally the same as integrat- | __ net open. to discussion.” __jing—the conditionsof--one—plan~ répresentatives are mem- are modified to allow: for the | MOSCOW (AP) — Alexander bers of the General Chairmen’s | other. \Shelepin, 47, a top-level Soviet the general chairman of “all | association has received com- |Viet Nam, the official news CPR international unions. | munications from members eay- jagency -Tass announced Tues interview: | decking arrangement, they want| ‘The scheduled trip of the Sov- STRIKE COULD RESULT ja better deal than now is jiet Communist ‘party's No. 2 egotiate, then the employees ‘ARE UP in ARMS’ |Peking are fighting to influence would be within their rights to} The. 50,000 union members |the Communist regime in Hanol action. If the ‘members so de- pany's action in arbitrarily |the balance. cided, that's the way it would |breaking off discussions on the The brief announcement said | for the “occe Sir , Cc : iF ‘Centre; fo arrange the closed [Bliss master of the Queen's | ‘ollapse meting. : | Musick. ; at - r | Invitations are going out to The eae vecnh ean ; ithe 131 Liberal MPs, 29 of them -_ letening nate the vines | ° d. d senators. meme cease Inquiry Ordered ~ by Prince ‘Charles and ; | ge ovgges"s _|Princess Anne, the Queen. Mo-|__CLEETH.O R-P-E S,_England_tion—prior-to-being-moved to a f jrest of the family, they |down the nave to jwhere the Queen was in 1947 and crowned in | China Reaps § E i 1058. | HONG KONG (Reuters)— reaped a good - harvest eee Fanfani Resignation Refused | Amid Italian Political Storm ROME (AP)—Amintore ¥an- fani, criticized for his role in a purported North Viet Nam peace feeler, offered his. resig- nation as foreign minister Tues- day in the midst of a new Ital- jan political storm. Premier Aldo Moro rejected it. Fanfani acted to dissociate himself from anti-American re- marks made by his friend Gior- gio la Pira at a Dec 20 party given by the foreign minister's wife: _ La Pira had visited Hanoi. the North Vietnamese capital, and. \reported President. Ho Chi Minh told him he would go anywhere to meet anyone to bring an end to the war. After Fanfani passed this on to U.S. President John- eon Hanoi denied any- peace overtures were made. But la Pira ‘stuck to his version. At. the party, la Pira, peace- ‘| crusading ex-mayor of Florence |was said to have assailed Moro land U.S. State Secretary Dean |Rusk and declared communism \is_ dead ; vacation’ retreat, Moro cleared | Fanfani of association with la | Pira’s remarks and: added: “T | beg you, therefore, not to insist | upon your dismissal, which I do | not think I am able to accept:” | In his letter of resignation, the | foreign minister made it clear he had no intention of backing | down from what he-did in pass- | Munns, 61, says he plans to ing the la Pira report on to the | ‘‘take it easy: for a while.” He U.S. government. | Joined the Globe in <1920 and But he criticized la Pira's re- became executive editor of the marks at the party when the | Globe and Mail in 1959. foreign minister still was im | (CP Wirephoto) New York. ane The storm. broke during the . Pe rson Calls Party Caucus RETIRING W.T. (Tommy) Munns, ex- ecutive editor of the Toronto Globe and Mail, will retire at the end of the year after 4 years in newspaper work. Mr. weekend when the right - wing | weekly Borhgese published | what it called an interview with | la Pira quoting what he ‘was_| supposed to have said ‘about - Rusk and. Moro, OTTAWA (CP) — Liberal Amid the press denunications members of Parliament “will that followed, la Pira said his hold their first post-election caucus next Monday and Tues- \day, Prime Minister Pearson ‘announced Tuesday. A_ brief statement said the remarks were simply tongue-in- cheek observations made pri- vately at a social gathering. | Borghese replied that the quotes | : prime toinister has instructed * t !Janies t whip, Walker; MP-_for York lunar year festivities next | month. . A spokesman for the premiers Office, while declining to specu- late on the outcome, said the war cabinet will meet soon to decide on the offer. officials are expecting the al- lies to tacitly accept the truce, probably by issuing their own offer covering roughly the same |Period, from: one minute after ; midnight Jan. 20 through Jan 24. | High. sources said both the |Americans and South Vietnam- }ese could be expected to make | their ann mts soon. | A South Vietnamese defence | department spokesman, Capt. ‘Nguyen. Dinh Tuyen,. said he hopes such a truce will go into \effect but that no text of the | Viet Cong— offer—has--been —re« \eeived. by defence officials. His statement was the first of- ficial comment on the Viet Cong proposal. a |WILL ISSUE STATEMENT | A spokesman for the Buddhist \Institute in Saigon, probably Nam, said it will issue a com- munique soon on the proposal. | The Buddhists are expected to |wege that a ceasefire be ac- + cepted. as-a.means of. bringing at least temporary peace to this war torn land.- . The Viet Cong have pro- claimed ceasefires before for |Tet the lunar new year and the jnamese. It is a time for fam- | ilies to reunite, to worship their It was known that American’ Four Day Ceasefire Plan idicated WarCabinet Decision — Said Expected Shorty —- ing the period until midni but a U.S. spokesman later con- ceded none of the incidents was | major. For the rest of the truce the Viet Cong guns fell silent. The Viet Cong largely ignored the latter part of a %0-hour truce by the U.S. and its allies Dec. 3B. The Viet Cong announcement : came as U.S. jets spared North Viet Nar. from attack for the fourth consecutive day. A U.S. «pokesman said: even reconnais- sance planes stayed out - of North Vietnamese air space. LODGES PROTEST Ho Chi Minh’s North Vietna- mese regime said nothing about the bombing lull, but broadcast ‘activities.” It protested to the. International Control Commis- , < of Canada, India and Po- and. ; f (Continued on page 3 Col. 3) Queen Criticized LONDON (Reuters) — Queen Elizabeth came under criticism. Tuesday from some of her staunchest royalist subjects who complained her traditional Christmas broadcast wasn't re- The—-550-strong Royal- Stuart Society sent a letter to Buck- jingham Palace saying the Queen’s Christmas Day broad- cast didn’t even mention Christ inewcomers, and the 57 Liberal | ost important holiday. for Viet-|or God or the significance of Christ’s birth and life. This, _ the .letter said, must which continued te midnight Good Harvest (Reute: s)—The British govern-|new site when it suddenly tilted ment has ordered an inquiry |atid .20-foot waves and sank into the collapse of a giant oil | with five minutes: tig Monday when 18 men were; The rig had. recently struck a believed to have lost their lives |Tich source of natural gas at the in the wind-whipped North Sea. |spot. Power Minister Fred Lee| Divers made a foot-by-foot called for the investigation examination of the pipe sunk to |Tuesday night as rescue teams |the gasfield to see whether it ‘abandoned an air-sea search for still is intact- survivors. fears that the pipe had Of the 32 British, French and ‘pees vuined’ sliced. £35,000,000 American crew members | (¢195.000,00) off the Stock Ex- aboard the 5,600 - ton rig Sea change value of shares in Brit- Gen when it collapsed, 19 were _| Health Minister Henry Wedge | jancestors and to give prayers |have caused offence and confu- ‘for, a better life. sion to millions of the Queen's A_U.S. embassy spokesman |subjects.. Tsaid the truce offer had been| The society,, one of whose noted but no statement would | vice-presidents is the Earl of be made until its vague terms raha vn, ae ; ‘ could be studied completely. He oyal Advisers Ci aid Tuesday the only project (noted there was a ceasefire last |that public mention of Christ's | ao. ation for aid from the |¥ear. followed by vigorous gov- |name by the Queen must be federal health resources fund is lone an ik ie came ren in ee to —— a rela een |Cong also e 18ts, agnostics a other jeonired teainiag. facilities for |» seigmane Christians® that thie annual 5 Sa achat | The chances for a ceasefrre broadcast be ‘‘transferred in I Mr. ee ee ae jwere heightened by the com- future years from a religious te eves a as yet but ‘this js Paratively successful Christmas |a secular festival.” ae thine whieh might qualify” ‘Tuce initiated by the Viet Cong.| One of the objects of the so- jone thing Ww of the $500,000,000 The Viet Cong’s 12-hour truce, ciety is fostering interest in the Loe eae cad by Ottawa. |Which began. at 7 p.m. Deg. 24, history of the royal house of ‘Health: Fund Use | Stuart. simply added to any second | T . Crump that the pension mat-| In the case of co-ordination— |. g : Group To Hanoi _ Association, which comprises} Mr. Clark said Tuesday the troubleshooter, will visit North Charman J. H. Clark said in an jing that “if they can't get a day night. “If the CPR does not agree to planned by the vailway.” leader comes as Moscow and contemplate some sort, of strike |‘‘are up in arms over the com- |with peace prospects possibly in have to be.” pension plan and putting into | Chi r fi Shelepin, former head ofthe So- this’ year because the com- ish Petroleum when He said nursing students cur- rescued, Four- Britons and a/| was marred by 20 incidents dur- ‘The CPR announced Dec. 14 . that in view of the impending Canada and Quebec pension plans; it. intended to ‘'co-ordin- Claim Morality. § effect the CPR’s own version of what should be the plan." The Canada Pension Plan comes into effect Jan. 1, as Lenient To Prostitution MONTREAL (CP)—Chief In- spector Maurice St. Pierre said Tuesday an investigation is be- img made into claims by four officers that the morality sqiad bas shown leniency to prostitu- tion in Montreal. ; The four members” of the aquad made the. allegation after they had, been investigated for alleged breaches of discipline. | Two were found to have broken Police discipline and were sus- led Another was reprimanded for neglecting. to. make a report. The fourth was cleared. Insp. St.. Pierre said. a com- int was made against the n by the owner of a night- "The men then said a certain ' mtimber of call-girls were oper- ating in Montreal and - that: the Owner's complaint might have something todo with this,” said “Insp. St department's adminisfrative di- | vision. ““Insp. St. Pierre declined to m~ttion names. He said one of the four officers was found by _ ° the devartment to fave teen un- der the influence of alcohol when he and thé other three vis- 1 ited the club. OFFICER SUSPENDED ‘He was suspended, as was an- -.man who interferred un- duly with the club-owner. |. Commenting .on one’ wpeport ~-that the four men had com- plained about being kidnapped by other officers as well as about tutes, Insp. St. Pierre: said the kidnapping complaint may have Pierre. who heads the | resulted from what he called the need to take the four offi- jcers aside for questioning about the club-owner's complaint. Humphrey Asks | Japanese Help TOKYO (AP) — US. Vice |President Hubert H. Humphrey jarrived here by plane Tuesday night on the first stop in an As- jian tour and told the Japanese ithe United States needs- their |help in a search fer peace. land respect your counsel,” |aka Sato and Foreign ‘Minister Etsusaburo Shiina in a brief airport welcoming ceremony. “We need your help in our com- ,mon endeavors.” F Police cleared some leftist jahti - American demonstrators from the airport shortly before lthe vice-president’s jet landed. A small number of rightists, surroufidéd by police, displayed a tig placard saying “welcome Mr. Vice-president."’ : In downtown Tokyo some ‘2,000 leftists shouting ‘!war-ma- ker Humphrey go home,” marched ‘for 40 minutes shortly before Humphrey’sarrival. Po- \lice reported the demonstration | was noisy but orderly. - Humphrey, on his first impor- tant overseas trip since becom- jing vice-president, stopped off ippine President - elect Ferdin- and Marcos. ¥ = for talks en route to the | viet secret police, will lead a delegation to Hanoi shortly. It came as a halt in U.S. air raids on North Viet Nam con- tinued and the Viet Cong im South Viet Nam_ proclaimed a four - day ceasefire for next month. . The - Chinese have. been urg- ing Hanoi to take a tough line, demanding the ouster of Ameri- cans from all of Viet Nam. Pub- lic statements. here have. indi- jcated the Soviets would prefer |a softer line that could lead to jan end. of the Vietnamese -com flict. munés did a tremendous amount of work to counter-act bad weather over large areas, the iNew China news agency said Tuesday. : This—is- the—fourth— successive year a good harvest has been reported ’ The agency said summer crops of wheat, early rice, rape- seed, beans and peas were well above last year’s while results also showed increased autumn crops, including late rice, cot- jton, maize, millet, sorghum and . lsweet potatoes. from most parts of the country | markets opened in London. Laue may receive preliminary But later realization that the itraining at any one of three hos- well already had been capped 'pitals in the province, coupling | Frenchman are known to have died and virtually all hope .was | abandoned for eight men still | ready’ for the rig ‘to’ move on, |this with study at St. Dunstan's Hi se that some of the mis: 29d hopes that the pipe is safe University or Prince of Wales | cing might. be trapped in air {largely restored share values. |College. “We might have to con "( pockets in the twisted wreckage |, Jack Luand, managing diree--istruct a central building for this 5. 80 feet below the waves were tor of British Petroleum Explo- |nospital training,” he said. A Hits Mainly dashed : iration, the rig’s operators, told |figure of $1,500,000 had . been ins er hy anaes alter ' a press conference the men |mentioned during discussions se- Aas : : |lowered the huge drilling plat- | veral weeks ago with the special SANK IN FIVE MINUTES | form halfway to the water when |federal committee studying divi- | The £2,500,000 ($7,500,000) rg, By JAMES BROWN SALISBURY (Reuter s)— |Hundreds of Rhodésian motor- ists, facing their first, day of it collapsed. sion of the fund. owned by a French maritime |gasoline rationing, besieged ga- engineering firm and operated to the cause of the accident, but ($30,000,000 of the fund had been by British Petroleum, was being it is a possibility that any form |jabelled for the Atlantic Pro- ivinees, together with a share of | . Mr. and Mrs: R.D. Bragas- sa of Raleigh, North Carolina, leniency toward—prosti-} inauguration in Mana of Phil- | returned home Monday from | their honeymoon to find their | bedroom literally filled oo + ¥ “ with ; bedroom window “We have no information as| Mr. Wedge pointed out that | rages and filling stations Tues- day while many more took to other modes of transportation to beat the shortage. 3 | Rationing came into force at 'midnight Monday night, -12 days after Britain announced an oil embargo among its measures to bring down Ian Smith's white . |minority regime by economic lowered in a step-by-step opera- of machinery may fail.” . ithe remainder. ‘‘We'll likely get our share of the $30,000,000 as ? (well a part of the remaining r & |$420,000,000," he said. Claims Teens Drink Atl4 —s.c” NIAGARA FALLS, Ont Only a minority of Rhodesia’s “The average child today drinks 4,000,000 Negroes own cars or at ‘age 14," Dr. Marvin A. |motorcycles and the impact of Block told about 6 teen - age |rationing falls mainly on the delegates sday at the ninth | 220.000 white population. annual Ontario youth conference Motovists,_anxious to conserve on alcohol problems. their precious gasoline allow- Dr. Block, chairman f the ance, flocked to cycle stores. American . Medical Association's Dealers said stocks of new and committee on alcoholism, said | second - hand bicycles were this makes arguments about | snapped up by Rhodesians de- changing New York State's Je- |termined to. pedal to’ work— gal drinking age from 18 to 21 despite the hot sun. < years ‘‘slightly ridiculous”. | The gas squeeze. first since Children make a farce of le-|-the Second World War. is the gail age statutes because ‘‘de- first major blow felt by the Rho- spite all law they're drinking desians since the Smith- re- anyway,” he said. gime’s seizure of independence from Britain Nov.' 11 after Brit- INSIDE TODAY ain refused to free Rhodesia | without guarantees for eventual Chanated |. co <6 vesss 16, a | HIT: WHITE CITIZENS ao oe eeeesees eeeteees : | Trade aad econemile jeengurell ae “ah Ca aaa 9 |Wave turned Rhodesia into vir- ME Sion sek Since csset- $ tually a beleaguered territ ee sce cevorees nN jand the gasoline rationing has > pho 6 |hit the central African colony’s —_ fale Fee a te at ae 4 ‘ear - conscious. white citizens ling the papers out. He had junkyard and he had to hire-a rere eee TSE badly. — = pa iegeeat ae this. pile_ of pa- __truck to the-papers away: > Tee Gens “Cy. = Under the new regulations pers after only a few minutes Friends also filled his refrig- ery Set ene, “3 private“car owners can draw, - work. His car was too small erator with wood and his bathe | Prinee County vers from a gavage where they are to carry the papers to the tub with. balloons. ~ I t \registered, between. three and ; 3s : “¥ ¥ = . irule of the Negro majority. “Jes Impact Of Rationing five gallons a week, depending jon the size of their cars. In effect this means about 100 miles of motoring a week, a }drastically small amount in an jarea where nearly every white family drives to work. It will jpractically eliminate pléasure | motoring. | There were lineups outside the jnew gasoline control office in downtown Salisbury Tuesday ae hundreds pleaded for exemption |from rationing. But the Rhode- sians seemed to be bearing up cheerfully and some early work- ers were able to fill their tanks before jgarages applied ra- | tioning. y° |\IMPACT AT WEEKEND The real impact will be felt |by most persons probably at the’ lend of the week, when the tanks tun dry and they start drawing on their: ration. Smith was reported to have said last’ wee: Rhodesia has | supplies to meet the country’s needs for six months. ‘In Salisbury and other major |centrés motorists were trying to |band together in ‘‘lift clubs"’— sharing normally empty pas |senger -seats—to conserve fuel ” for weekend motoring The flow ‘of crude oil from the of Beira, in neighbor- Portuguese Mozambique, to Rhodesia's refinery at Umtali ~ }was stopped because of reduced jsupplies following . the British lembargo, informed sources here said. |. But a spokesman for the \Foruka refinery. stated the ‘has resa@med along the 189 pipeline. Pumping was halted for internal reasons, he added. “We are now running. nom imally.” ra By Stuart Soclety — in ew