‘WEATHER : . Isolated showers, not much change in temperature. Sunday: sunny and little temperature change. Low- -high 60 and 72,," * If W's‘ Good For The Island The Guardian Is For. it < nee ? . ss eervl Fdvard fland Like The Dew” . : = VOL. LXXIX NO. 189 Ae coment tesa Gin ee yvyii0- WN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13,11966. Kor MORE TEN CENTS z 22 PAGES 1 4 \t 39 - . 3 eat FATALLY WOUNDED - os” boone Man Bursts Into eo t free British | And Begins’ Firing Wildly Shot Dead In NEW HAVEN Bobbies | AP) lunchtime 2 man buecst cafeteria and e- ‘Conn Screams hiofted chatter Friday into..a. factory ont “Ss — rome — gar irene wc htty wie a es volver : <4 bE : “This-guy just vet em ge ones } : affer the other.” saida witness | “Re -ddn’t “ston : Joseph PDavis 51. wonnded . three .women 3nd 3a man hefere . he was himself ‘ata'ly wounded ear l ren bv. police One of the wounded ar ures | Persans was rensrted ir ser’ | ov condition ’ LONDON (AP)--Thiee Lon-, A young girl who witnessed Police Chief Franets Me. don policemen. wére shot dead | the tragedy said the police car. Manus. said a nantunt foe Da- ‘Friday in a massacre without |,aq drawn up alongside another Gin was tinder eat saben rents parallel in-more than 50 years, uhh < ee Hewmisseh: mot? wat of the cunfire at ‘'e Winchester lof British crime. po & : chrbhonse were received S They were gunned down) ‘two of four men in the other t 4 warrant had noon icned fer within Jsight of children. playing | jear also got out. Davis’ .arrest in comnection with By ED SIMON in the streets of a quiet resi-+ “They immediately started the —murder earlier Friday of KINGSTON. J 1p) dential district of West London. ‘firing at the policemen, who fell : ; 7 ; -damaica—-CP) — nm Rebecca’ Wilson. who. was ‘at- \Blaine Tanner crowned herself Scotland Yard at once threwjinto the road,” she said. ‘At ‘ tacked “with: # meat cleaves: i lQueen of the British “Empire ‘every available detective and the same time one: of the mea fe e—-weoded —laver's—tene.— police [Games pool Friday, picking up| suniformed—policeman—in. West in the other car started. shoot a" EA ltwo gold medals and a secind- | ‘London into a giant manhunt, ing as well. Davis and Mrs Wilson both {place -sitver-to--become-the--most:; British police and detectives SAW BODY - ! Nezunes: had heen going ¢9- : ‘ rry guns only in exceptional : sPcitgs ecessful girl swimmer in the- carry & ; ptior her witness. “I saw gether. police said i Hi t d ost. crim- Said anot Fa ‘ history of the competition oe circumstances, and m c one hody lying 10 yards from WORKED NIGHTS ‘The versatile 15 - year - old) inals do not carry guns either, | police. car. Another was Mrs Wilson. married and tle ~tyoungster: from Vancouver com- |} ‘in a tacit. unarmed truce _ be- slumpéd in a seat of the car mother of four ‘worked nights {pleted her first Games with -a| jtween. the police. and the under. 5 third) was underneath. The as 2 keypunch operator at the ‘bag of four gold medals and |. pen Recently: ROwever windscreen (windshield) af the weapons manufacturing, pfant of three silvers in her seven ficials _have expressed: alarm ati was. shattered.” the Winchester-Western. Division a San wat Ta : events, breaking a world record | ithe increasing. use. of firearms, ie dont pes ae erate al of On Mathieson Chemical POLICE IDENTIFIED Joseph went Berserk in cafeteria (and sharing in the shattering of by young -eriminals eae c N. oti 5 | In the last. five years, three out on the edge of an area.ot orp j poe Davis. 51° ‘above; of New shooting four persons, three of ‘another. : oF ; ; een fields where children «1 Pacis worked~ asa —elean-:p:— Haven._as__the—gunman__who.__ them_women_vestlerday. _-The. Mighty Mouse’ -- popped |British policemen , have heen |8r 2 P > fatally shot done was Vacation from-—schoot _were_at man at the plant until recer ik - ¥ ber blue eyes: wide ppen when, |fatally a ae =i \ spokesman for Olin. said Place in the company’s club- darted back and ‘forth ‘to “keep she realized that her-haul never stabbed to. death. {play. eras : Davis had not heen an Olin em- Nouse. & large cafeteria-recrea- an eye on approaching police. had heen. matched by .a female BOBBIES WERE ARMED Said David Hopkins, 20, who plover. < but -had worked for an ‘tion building for employees & john iChicki Coles, a Negro swimmer in the 36-year history | The last time three police. |lives nearby: a ‘independent building - mainten- few. steps from the plant aainottve who knew Davis, took of the Games. jmen. were killed in one incident; “The detectives cruised up afice company that had a cop-, Since production operations at “Oh, no I didn't even know lwas in 1910. This led to the and stopped a blue car. As. one tract to provide services. at the ‘the plant are halted for the cover behind a@ projecting wall that," the Grade 10 student famous siege of Sidney Street ‘detective got out he was shot . factors regular annual vacation shul- and “called to Davis Fepeatedty said: eaten in London's Fast End, when jp the head. The driver of the Fa “He wassremoved from his down. those in the - clubhouse jq-sive up “Beaming undet= her * ‘frog hobbies were armed with -shot- police car was shot through the | job here at our request earlier Were... primarily white collar “Chick finally ‘decaen out-- hat,’ the white. sun hat. with a iguns and directed by Winston ‘windscreen as he sat behind the thts .week.”’ said Thomas Bent- Workers. ~ ' rae ; i ¥ y frog's face on the front that her Churchill, then home secretary, wheel. = lev, ¢ampany. public -information CORNERED DAVIS exposed himeelt- “and said..‘Joe, parents gave: her as a good-luck in a battle against supnoerd ne a abe auiEcAETE A! director. Bentley declined to:say . Inside the building, Davis was. come—on out,”"" said officer Wil- ‘charm. she‘ said that the Games anarehists—————_-_ N why the request was made, cornered. in -a_ short corridor liam. Rhone. “Joe >d at him had been ‘‘all I expected a The police federation has BULLETIN _ Davis’ _Saeoting ane took linking two lunchrooms. _ He and that’s) when’ we - opened--more.” : BS ES : : r come out against abolishing the ; : wo. “ i Ciera oe = ee New- “men. in fondon yesterday, ee Lee the scene of the (death bepaie = ra hy a WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) sa g ; nee .man who sa e wilnessea = ; ane slaying. | * ‘police officer, but the House uards were reported sta . "Sat John = Widmann, — who S okesmen the shooting of three police: tells his story . television re- (AP Wirephote) {Commons later _voted_—te- g aa nn a orei in \inis fer turried a table on its side and . p ; - ~ (hanging for. all- murder. Walpole state prison, the state's used it as. a ‘shield to move in {- .-The three dead men— appar maximum: security institution. | oe lon Davis, was credited with fir- Release “Tently unarmed—were a _ detee- ing the first of the ‘several shots tive sergeant, -a detective weet Four injured guards were that hit Davis. i table and a police constable, |taken fo the anes Hospital e ates. FO ram Ne ee tkces oar waien | Statement ‘They were the plainclothes crew in an adjoining town. ‘@ ithe shooting victims was Helen | ; ‘ jof a_ cruising unmarked police | Between 50 and’ 160 prisoners = Koch, 5l..a secretary. Mrs.) MONTREAL (CP) Th A ; r ‘ear. lwere reported invotve ~ thea KUALA - LUMPUR AP) =<, “Koch. underwent surgery for! — ite roa e re! as re ic e ras ic U They were killed as they ‘ape. riot. They took over the prison Adam Malik. Indonesta’s wise: ®. several hours. \sults of a. strike vote by non-op- | J é - \parently tried to question sus- hospital area, prison officials ing: foreign. mitiister,.said__Fn- poem = -erating—railway—workers— across | a ‘ z : : sea pects. reported. s \ dav his country is ready to join \Canada will be considered here| HALIFAX (CP/—Rear - Ad- 13 or 14 of its 23 destroyers in to meet ~ commitments. Last ~~ Maiaysia in fighting eommnu- CEMAN |Monday, Aug. 22 at meetings of |miral William Landymore made active operation. {year only half that ane had nism. POL Admiral Landymore's fore-| been obtained. »— publicly Malik also told_a press con- ference here his country wel- eomes a Malaysian offer to sup- port its re-admission to the United. Nations . Indonesia quit the UN tn an- | ger-Jan—2, 1965, hecause -Ma- ! lavsia. was. elected ‘to the UN - Security Council Mahk’s visit and his state. ments indicated relations. be | tween the two countries have | come full’ circle since Indone- sian—President—Sukarno's_slide_ into a figurehead’ role began Oct. 1 last with an attempted Communist coup. Sukarno was) the moving spirit behind Inde fesia’s “erush Malaysia” cam- paign ak The “crush Malaysia” policy ~ called confrontation—was_for- mally ended Thursday. with. the Signing of a peace agreement in Jakarta PRAY FOR ACCORD The pact was solemnized in a Moslem ritual at the National Mosque here marked bv pray- ers for “eternal friendship” be- tween the twe-recently warring tountries Malik and Malaysia's deputy prime minister. Tun Abdul Ra- zak—hoth of whom signed the Peace pact in’ Jakarta—ar- rived m separate planes within minutes Of each other. Thev eto waleamed—he—a—cheering: weeping ‘crowd of 12.909 persons {hat iammed the international airport & MR. MALIK At a luncheon following the ceremony, Malaysia's Prime | Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and Malik--in almost identical words called on both their countries to forget the past and “look forward to a bright fu- ture.” z Both Razak and Malik. toid a press conference that” Malaysia and Indonesia will co-operate in the economic and | technical fields and will not hesitate ‘‘to jom: forces. to fight common dangers. especially commun- ism." . : Razak and Malik both con- firmed that Indonesia-Malaysia diptomatic—retations—wihe-—-re-— sumed ‘very soon.” Asked when, “weeks or oe me zak replied. “‘Hours.” | said Frank. SHOOTS | _WILDCAT HALIFAX (CP) “You i never know —what- the day will bring,” says city traffic policeman Frank Carver, Thursday he had to shoot a | wildcat. Coastable Carver was pa- | trolling busy Quinpool Road in the city’s west end on his mo- torcycle when H. R. Nicholson ran out and said he had a wildcat in his’ backyard. “I thought he was joking but I went in to see anyway, It was.a wildcat, sure. enough. crouching behind a bush, Constable Carver fired one shot from his pistol, wounding the cat. which tried to escape. However. Frank cornered the animal and dis- ‘patched it with a second shot. “T wasnt taking any chances.” he said. ‘There were about 200 kids at Horse- shoe Island beach just a few hundred féet away.” What the wildcat was doing in a congested residential dis- trict is not. Known: Pr: cial, forestry officials will take the hade fer laboratory —stiniy+te+ an attempt to find the answer. ithe workers’ negotiation com- imittees. | | R. C. Smith,| chairman of the negotiation committee of of + |Association ‘Non-Operating Railway Unions, jand T. W. Reid, chairman of | {the Federation .of Shop Craft | 'Unions, Division 4 rail’ employ- ‘ees department, made the an- inouncement in a joint statement | 'Friday. The two groups represent a | \total of 78,000 railway.workers-| jemployed by the CNR, CPR and, four other railways. ldrastic cut {public Friday his prediction that the Canadian navy will face a in |power shortage. He blamed the shortage on a! jdrop in recruiting and. re-enlist- | ment due~-in-large part to the | federal government's program | for unifying the armed forces. By May, 1967, he said, the | jnavy will be so short of men) lit will have to take another six_| ,or seven destroyers out of com- lm ission, This would leave only | | By JOHN SHORT | SASKATOON (CP)—The . con- ference of western Liberals this jweekend will fail unless. it at- tains more than a _ manifesto burdened with criticism, Ray ‘Perrault, leader of the British \Columbia Liberal party, said iFriday. mia In an’ address at the opening *sof~the two-day conference,, Mr. Parliament Takes Recess: ClamorStilledTo Whisper’ Ry JOSEPH MacSWEEN TONDON (CP) With debaf- ‘nz clamor stilled to a whister, Parliament rose for its summer recess Friday after the Labor government's waze-price freeze policy became law in. the final hours Prime Minister ‘ Wilson. ‘ivan: fehed into the mist.” ak ane newspaper put ft, for a vacation -in the Scilly Isles at the end of a touch paritiamentary The new ernment enforce. a session. act -ziving the rompulsorey powers to wage-price freeze if a voluntary standstill fails, was easily the most. contentious leg- islation of the session. It re- ceived roval assent The. big topic of dihcussion the end. however, .were Wi- sideways shoffle” of his ‘Wednesday night. M. did not pronounce at least on the new erder of precedence of his min- cov- rn son's cabinet | Wilson. a isters Michael. Stewart, 59. shifted from. foreign minister” ta eco- nomics minister. said his swap with George Brown, 51. elevated him from sixth place to third in the. ministerial lists STAYS NEXT TO WILSON Brown, who rembins Wilson's deputy, retains his No. 2: posl- tion in the cabinet Herbert Bowden. #1. hitherto No. 4 as leader, of the House of Commons. does not consider | his switch to Commonwealth af- | fairs.a demotion although the) post has been ranked No. 9. Such confidence is not shared, | it was reported. by Arthur, Bot. | tomley. 39. ‘the formér Comfhon- | wesith minister who was shifted | down to the overseas aid port-| folie” Parliamentary observers | cav Roattomiey has been. moved! nearest to the-door.* i after he made ehanaes |, jaffecting six cabinet posts Rowden’s accession at the Com. monwealth office will mean no change’. in. the government's Rhodesian policy. One Tory newspaper comments that his appointment is unusual in that “he has never been to the Com- monwealth”’ His travels have been confined to Europe. a Commonwealth office spokes- man. said INSIDE a Island news Summerside Deaths Editorials athe Kings, Queens, OH pn Women's Sport 4 ay i ~-Finanee,- “marthete- Comics Classified (Bago ewee Informants have stressed that | | | Saskatchewan wants \ every). dollar of Canadian investment we can find, but, if for a iew j r | | MR. PERRAULT Perrault ‘and leaders of the three other western provinces agreed positive action must be taken to ensure that Western Canada. receives increased con- sideration in federal planning. Mr. Perrault, Saskatchewan Premier ‘Ross Thatcher, Mani- itoba. Leader Gil Molgat and Adrien Berry of Alberia agreed the conference should support \freer trade and maximum op- portunity for foreign investment land endorse the private enter- prise system. Mr. Thatcher said the “flame >of federal liberalism’ le burning ‘Liberal Leader | Expresses Views * low in the West with forces ‘in | disarray and confusion.” | “There is almost a complete breakdown in communication between. provincial associations and Ottawa,’ he said. ‘“‘The} party's’ provincial leaders are seldom consulted by the govern-| ment about anything.” He told about 400 delegates | that western Liberals. will ‘‘ask SLOXPOCO. ou. and insist on | Theing — consulted, |help the federal party out of tts dilemma in Western Canada.” SAYS CAPITAL NEEDED Discussing foreign -invest-| ment, Mr. Thatcher said ade | quate Canadian funds are not | | available to develop Canada as | | fast as its people demand. jidecades some foreign ownership is. necessary to obtain’ new imines and industries, I think’ few will object.” Mr. Thatcher called tor aj} \more responsible and rational approach to public spending and, \wélfare generally,” because |huge deficits at a time when ithe econémy buovant are inexcusable." , | Mr. -Molgat made it clear that | he believes the gathering was not -convened to divide the eral .party He said lack of western repre | sentation in the Commons) makes ‘recognition of western) viewpoints: difficult” and exe pressed concern that this \eck might contribute to a softening in the party's determination to maintain a strong central, gov- érnment i ‘We want the tights of each province to. be respected, but we want: no. special status. for anv one province,’’ he said” Mr. Berry said he was con- cérned. about the “decreasing value of human dignity.” ‘tast was contained the number of.jfor a |SAID BRIEF CHANGED jhis brief were changed on De- lfence Minister Hellyér’s instruc- | |tions before he was ‘allowed. to |present of ithis has never been 80° Dial in the text | secret meeting of recently fired as sea pelicy, re-"| He’ charged that portions of | it to the committee, The admiral’s original version | year up to late June. jfull “We will still have a uicteul jof a brief. he said he prepared \of 1,500 men required to ne the | \remaining commitments it the ‘fighting ships in. service by next |Parliamentary defetice commit-!overage ships are retired,’ International, | May because of a growing man- jtee in Ottawa last June 23. the | jadmiral, | operations icriticising ~defence~ leased an_uncensored-version_ of | ihis brief here Friday. Ne | said. Our present net loss rate | of about 65 men per month will | chief after publicly make it necessary to reduce six | jor seven’ additional ‘to maintenance crew by ee | 1967, destroyers | at which time two will be | indergoing modernization. “more positive’ ap- | | bell had met alone with Mr. | discussions with Graham Rogers last year and only 60 per cent \proach to manpower problems | Darling to discuss increase’ im! and others regarding conditions In |with emphasis on what was be- }rates on the Borden—Tormen- | 9¢ the Borden-Tormentine: ‘ser- \the next 12 months 2,600 new- jing done to. improve the situa- {kine ferry and also the implica-| yice and tentative arrangements entry seamen would be needed 'tion. on the Landymore ssid all | mission, Ottawa, stating: said the navy had obtained only jthis material was censored from | | very much surprised to read in| a little more than 70 per ¢ent jhis brief. It had been changed | the paper that Premier Camp- its srecruiting requirements |to take a Opposition | | --Walter R. Shaw, and Howard Darling, chairman | trade, tourist bodies, and others, | Canadian—Maritime © Com- | “T was | | of ‘tions of a rail- strike that has q Adams along’’) Skvdiver amiles as Dave he , “skips os poisford, B.C, _*REEAS A BIRD He's 12,000 feat up“ ahd. in the midst of amine ) over the mount airie eit, Ab ofeslong free fall as the aye Leader Comments On Meeting “Jeader .of the | been mentioned for the near | opposition, last night comment. | ' future. “We will then have only 13\ed on a meeting held Thursday | jor 14 out of the 23 destoyers in | hetween Premier Alex Campbell comimission—nine iEast Coast and four of five on} |the West Coast.” Admiral “I presume, said Mr. Shaw, that powerful provincial organ- |izations such as the board of | would have had an opportumty lof presenting their strong pleas |to Mr. Darling regardifig these two important matters. “Earlier in the . year I had were made to have strong dele- | gations and outstanding private | citizens presént the case for . | this province at the earliest op | portunity. Now the opportunity hae Wie lost. Shaw continued, “Our in- nuaosial groups have been ignor- led and not even the top officials. |of the government - transporta- tion division were notified re- |garding their meeting One man, the Premier. is apparently under the mistaken notion that his representations powerful. “Without” taking” any? “crept away from the. premier. 1 peidd like to. say. that’s now” 200d enough.. From lore experience, I have found that the strength of our case in any.matter .vésts chiefly in the support that’comes from important groups: PROBLEM. REQU “The, Aroblen,. Said Mr. Shar of costs of transportation “4nd - the” hold-up at service as Phe ra ySult of a strike requires the full cial, groups freprésenting agriculture, our business, Aourist. trade/and every ye ot our economy.” oO” “Mf. Shaw continyed’to Be. 1 would’ have verygiePRya. indeed to “have contributed / Avhat ever influence | Wave personally ta these diseifssions. Now 1 only represént the’ keen disappoirt- |ment/ot many people whotere fully prépared to works tn our Anterests, but who “aparently 4 have not been asked to submit Aker views. on matters of “ mendous importance to this’pro- tre vince, I trust that we may not | have a repetitioh of this one maa | authority predominating in handling grave pulic “issues 19 ‘| the days ahead.”’ In conclusion Mr. Shaw ‘stated, 1"This practice would tinge’ too JY much/of a one man authority fr F CE ah | could not do other than re- ae - Tt dice the strength of our tet is opened by photographer- | represeniation ~ when all out Chutist Brent Lee. (CP Wirephote) people are working together '® ward a common, objective.’ ‘i 4 6 ’ pr are all we Z “\loud voice of influencial provine <7 ome” Fe Sf