‘ ‘ If It’s Good For The Island. WEATHER eae “Overcast, showers tonight: Winds south- _ The Guardian Is For It west 25, to 40. Seta 30 and 38. Sa ay: cloudy, colder, ’ ata a lee e 5 : é 4 : : 4 " = wa 7 . Me : ca ts Covers: Prince Edward Island Like The VOL. LXXIX. NO. 35 Antneroed an Second Clase Maly the, Post Oi Departmeet, ’ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1966. wrae'® SEVEN CENTS - 12 PAGES “ROLLICKING IN RIO. a Canadian teak. force which arrived Monday and will de- part Saturday. Rio De Ja- neiro” newspapers are taking. the sailors on shore leave - to Three young Canadian sail- ers, two of them wearing /wige, gambol in the main street of Rio De Janeiro, Bra- vil, Wednesday. ‘They a are from fal task for brawling and rude be- havior, but Canadian officers report that no ‘serious_ inci- dents have taken place. (CP Wirephoto by radio- from: Rio De Janeiro) U.S. Cold-War St rategist Stresses Viet Nam Danger By ARCH MacKENZIE | George F. Kennan, former WASHINGTON .(CP) An | United States ambassador to eminent cold-war strategist said | Russia and Yugoslavia, urged | Thursday the American role in | liquidation of the U.S. interven- Viet Nam, a “remote and sec- ; tion in-Viet Nam as soon as pos- ondary theatre,” threatens, 'sible “without <inerdinate dam- It world- wart if-extended and. also. | age: to our. prestige or the: sta- damages far more important bility of, conditions relations with Russia. in that) | ” 7 jarea. But he emphasized in sii! mony to fhe. Senate foreign rela- | tions committee that -“there is | {no easy way out of that con- flict"’ and that it will need mili- tary tenacity and patience. STILL BIGGEST DANGER 5 “The greatest dangers to ce_still _lie_within. our _rela- Soviet Writers _ | “it By SIDNEY WEILAND la quiet back-street courtroom | MOSCOW. (Reuters) — T.w.o|Thursday morning for a trial ex- ‘Russian writers, accused of a ipected to last two to three days. TS tions with the Soviet Union." said Kennan. He referred to the ‘‘great me vital problem of Gerprany,| — ‘}which to me, is the most intpor- tant political and geographical problem in the world. "The -di- vided country was “potentially the military strength of Ger- |many increases.’ Kennan, now with the Instt- jtute of Advanced Study at \Thursday. : Mr. McQuaid comment- ing on he -has placed % ' MOSCOW (AP) the moon, Soviet scientists said Thursday. Mstislav Keldysh, president of | the Soviet Academy of Sciences, | said, however, that*even the test flight of an unmanned pw lite to the moon and back @: is a long way off. “It would be interesting, but | such a fli;,ht cannot be planned as yet, he told a 22-hour press conference ettended: by other scientists. He indicated that ‘the ‘nat’ step likely is to be a furthef test of a controlled landing on the ‘moon, similar. to that of the historic first landing of Luna IX Feb. 3. This oe come later this year’ BATTERIES NOW DEAD Alexander Vinogradov of ‘the academy told of some of the things the camera eye of Luna IX found -in scanning the Junar ;surface. Batteries in the camera imow are dead. The surface, Vinogradov said, Russian Research Shifts To Returning Moon Flight — luna IXis herd, porous, showed the lunar surface can|cracked rock. There was no ‘support the landing ofa space- dust, but he moted- Luna's cam- craft and Russian research is jera range was limited and that. shifting .to the still-distant pros-|did not mean there was no dust pect of returning a man from |elsewhere. voleanic This. rocky desert showed the effects on lava of changes Belgian Gov't Resigns Again BRUSSELS (CP) — Bel- gium’s coalition government re- signed again Thursday—for the second. time in a week. But Pierre Harmel, the Social | Christian: premier, had to wait earth until today to present his res- ignation to King Baudouin, who flies back from Denmark this morning. The king cut short a three-day state visit to return here and face the worst political crisis of his 15-year reign. of the government Collapse foHowed the failure of attempts | to settle differences between the two partners in the coali- tion the Social. Christians (Catholics) and the Socialists— over the crisis in Belgium's free_ Raat service. . Kings MP Suggests ‘Lobster Traps Limit. CAPITAL BUREAU ‘ OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA ~~ Lobster. fisher- men should be limited to 400 or 500 draps pet heat, Melvin. Me- on the Commons’ order paper. Jigning communism through” ivate literary pipeline to the est, defied a Soviet Thursday by refusing ‘to plead | guilty. > Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli | Daniel, both 40, pleaded guilty__to.. charges:._that.. could |’ bring them seven years in jail followed by five years in exile ‘REPORTERS BARRED | Princeton University, is-credited Western reporters were™barred | with fathering the concept of ‘from. the courtroom because of; containing _ ‘an alleged lack of space, but) lback in 1947, some details of the hearings were disclosed by Tass, the So- with Dean; Acheson, -viet_ news The ‘two- agency. writers were charged cessor. ‘in allowing their ‘‘hostile’’ the Soviet Union NATO resulted. He was at odds subsequently then state secretary. and Acheson's suc- _the. late. John...Foster «with abetting’ Western a Continued on page 3 col, 4 ~~““where state’ prosecutors usually. ‘cow's Institute of World Litera: | - —gueceed in extracting some form ture, was described by Teas ee to outside Moscow. ‘ings to be used in an ideological Their denials of guilt. alter offensive aimed against the So-| nearly five months under arrest, viet state. political a tihcnaby critic | were wu in Sinyavsky, trials of this kind in Russia, |and popular lecturer at Mos-| f confession. ‘a small, bearded man. Sinyavsky, who wrote bitter Daniel, a poet and translator satires of the Soviet system un- believed to be the son of ee der the name Abram Tertz, and | lish novelist, was described as Daziiel,,.who used the pen-name | 'tall and thin, ‘with black inso- Nikolai Arthak, were taken~ to lent eyes.” SHEDIAC. BRIDGE, N.B. (CP)—Six charred bodies and a disintegrated skull were all searchers found Thursday in the | (ruins of a house in which a fam- - gent in January of last year. In Seasonal Job Decline Boosts Unemployment OTTAWA ; (CP)—A seasonal job decline boosted unemploy- ment to an estimated 359,000 in eee up 107,000 from the 1965; “level but the oeere. job picture was some- | what brighter than in January last year. A joint report Thureday by the Dominion Bureau of_ Statis- tics and the labor department said most of the job drop dur- ing the month was due: to ‘the , seasonal slowdown in outdoor work and the release of tempo- rary Christmas-season help. é The national unemployment rate went to 5.1 per.cent of the labor force, compared to 3.5 per cent in December and 5.9 per January of. 1964 it was 6.9. Seasonally adjusted, the rate was 3.5 per cent, compared to 3.4. in December and 4.2 in the previous Jaruary. ‘The labor force totalled T09S,=2 000 in January, up by 225,000 in the year. The number at work; 6,734,000, was a gain -of 273,000 in the same period, while unem- ployment dropped by 48,000. Farm ‘employment continued its steady downward trend. It was 460,000 in January, off 58,- | 000 from the same month last year. Non - fose by 331,000 or 5.6 per cent. MORE CONSTRUCTION Most of the new jobs were in farm employment |‘ primary . fields. .The DBS-labor report also said construction work in January was substan- Helly. higher than a year ont: Regional unemployment ‘rates, on a non-adjusted basis, ranged from a high of 10.5 per ‘cent in | the Atlantic provinces to a low of 3.3 per cent in Ontario. ~ Quebec had 6.3 pet cent of its labor force out of work in Janv- ary, the Prairie region 3.5 per cent and British Columbia 6.2. Of the total unemployed, ah 000 or 84 per cent had been hunting for less. than four months. .Those out of work’ for seven months or more, the 80- called “hard core’ of unem. ployment, dropped to 24,000 from’ 25,000 in December and 44, in. January of 1965. The unemployed included 302,- 1000 men and 57,000 women, 22,« 000. of them married women. INSIDE TODAY Classified ........++ i Deaths ..... agen verevers ii PORN Gh Lae AS eee Births Finance, markets’........ ‘i 9 Editorials .....-.+.+ss0005 4 Summerside .....¢..+-+++5 3 Kings, Queens, City ..;.- 5 Prince County .........- 2 4 ror industries «as |, opposed manufacturing ~ ily of nine perished earlier—in the day in~a fire. Dead are. Mr. and Mrs. Ron- ald Cormier, both 34, and oe | seven children: Georges, Annette, 11, Giselle, 10, a two sets of twins, Marcella and Rosella, 7, Florence and vain ine, 4. RCMP and volunteer saute. ers found four small bodies near the furnace in the cellar of the metal: that had been a- double bed, were two other bodies. \Also found were the remains of -baakull: and-a-few-human. bones. MOTHER SAW FIRE f The fire was first noticed tn | the two - storey about 1.a.m., by Mr. Cormier’s mother, Mrs. Richard Cormier, who livéd in a house about 75 feet away. “I saw flames ‘trom every window,” she said. ‘I ran the louse and opened the kitchen door. I yelled as loud as 1 could to try to wake then up, but no one answered, The kitchen was full of flames. "I couldn't hold ‘the door open any longer.1I couldn't wake them up, 1 don't know how T made it back to my house. 1 that.” Flames severed telephone to .turn in the seven volun- Fire Depa i Hf ‘truck, arrived, teers and a roof: Said’ fireman Paul Pellerine: ROOF FELL “Just as we pulled_into the driveway the roof of the house, collapsed, then the four walls.” There was absolutely nothing wily home, Nearby, beneath twisted | frame home couldn't talk, 1 couldn't hear. T)” can't remember’ -anything after a lines and a car had to be sent). ,|a mile away \Jalarm. By the a the Shediat‘| flames hed broken through - The Kings MP wants to know if it is the inténtion of the gov- ernment to make a trap limit ef- fective in districts 7B and 8 in Prince Edward. Island. Addition- ally, he asks if there will be a limitation’ on the operation of Jobster boats in. those...districts and ment! plans (introduce “the le- gislation. Mr. McQuaid aid that under | have between 800 to 1,200 traps. This, he feels; is unfair and is harmful not onily to other’ fish- erally. Fisheries chaud has inister H.J. Robi- icated he is think- ing of e nting with atrap- limitaton in district 8 but Mr. McQuaid said t P.E.1. fish- ermen.are.primarily.. interested. to one boat in any one lobster Six Bodies, Skull Found In House Wh ere we could do to save the house or the people.’-~ ‘Late Thursday Coroner. Dr. |Benoit Renaud of Shediac em- panelled a jury and viewed the ruins, ““Theré {is absolutely no ques- tion of an autopsy,” he said. |The remains are so horribly burned there is no chance of recognition. There is no evi- dence of foul play.” ng date ‘for’ the inquest was se The elder Mrs: Cormier said her son had been in the habit of making a high fire in the in district 7B. | |weighed 3,482 pounds, but the ibe solved,” Keldysh said, “‘be- limit on traps and one boat may | { ermen but to the industry -gen-' caused. by. temperature veria- tion, the sun's rays, collisions of micrometeorites, wind and the effects of water and gas from volcanic eruptions; Vino- *“\gradov said. Luna IX itself weighed only 220 pounds and stood about two feet high. The entire satellite rocket broke. away and. separately, he said. “Many problems remained to fore man can land on the moon, “The only one that is com- parable to the. achievement of la soft. landing is the | of soon the ee to He ‘said the problem of. safe- guarding man’s ‘stay on the moon is less difficult. “I think it is easier to solve the ‘problem of \a_ telatively | short. stay on the moon than to solve the problem of recovery.” Tobago Hails | t's Royal Couple SCARBOROUGH, Tobago (Reuters) — Cheering throngs lined the route Thursday as the Queen and Prince Philip drove around this Caribbean island. . The couple -were given a warm welcome when they Lstepped ashore at picturesque ~ 1S CRITICAL \ oF Be Peter Millman, atmosphe: search ages or of Canada's National Research Council, has criticized British scientist Sir Lovell’ for pirating . ric re- Birth Rate Declines Scarborough Harbor from the yacht Britannia, renee on her. here was a children’s rally at | ie she heard old félksongs fishing sais fn any one year of the Tobago people. 90 bel soon the gover®| Then followed the @rive| — jaround the 26-mil long’ ” ‘believed to have Mspired bog | Daniel Defoe's novel about the -@ Designer Honored WASHINGTON | (Reuters) — \The_ designer. of the celebrated ‘American U-2 spy plane Thurs- day was awarded the top U.S. scientific honor. Dr. Clarence L. “Johnson, |has specialized in designing ad- One- of the Queen's. first. en=! vanced aircraft, received National Medal of Science from President Johnson in a special White House ceremony. honoring ‘111 leading scientists. | Johnson's: award- made no men- ition of the 1960 sensation when the U-2 sply plane piloted by a they were sll very sound sleep: Aran’ over the Soviet "Union ers. ““When I went to ‘bed there was nothing unusual. When i woke about one o’clock all 9 Died df Pearkes Makes The-citation accompanying. Dr._. could see was & red glow reo the house.”' Two cars and a nearby shed | were also destroyed in the fire. L, F. M. Strong, deputy proy-| incial fire marshall, of Mone- | ton said the fire had started) from the kitchen stove. His de- | partment planned no further in- | vestigation. All the bodies appeared to be| near their beds, he said. ‘‘I a sume they did not’ know what] stove before going to bed. “The house had a poor heat- ing system,” | she. ‘sald. “And TWO WOMEN (RIGHT), be happened.” - Funeral services will be held ieaday, ld wake. tov ON a “hg ruins of a home where a © ligyed to by rolaeas, 908p 60, family of mine lost their lives Mr. and Good Progress VERNON, B.C> (cP) — Lieu- nant Governor George} | Pearkes of British Columbia sat up -in his hospital room |here Thursday for the first time | since being admitted with an) intestinal ailment last week. Mr. Pearkes was. able to {shave Himself, and, according | to his doctors, is making good | |progress. They said he may be| moved back to Victoria within week or 10 days. nae a eee ve aad Site. fonald Coranier i ~ {ment in this field. Feports. __ For 1965 there was 2,521 births ‘wecorded in the provinee com. pared to 2,732 in 1964 while in ‘December alone there were 225 year before. | Tidal Power Is Discussed - | OTTAWA. (CP)—Officials of | the federal, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick © governments Thursday talked over the ee discussed idea of nn jg Bove tric power from Bay of Fundy tides. | Informants said the officials jwould make private reports on | the meeting to their govern- ments. Exact nature of the dis- cussions was not disclosed. : The meeting was believed to ibe an outgrowth of an earlier | decision of the three govern- iments to form an Atlantic tidal | Power programming rage to in- vestigate prospects for —— 2 2 \ef Burroughs Wellcome and Co. afr a eal education: students from the |tw University sin Profi TV Deal PC Leader Declares © Whole Affair Smelly. OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition onio station had an “odoriferous Leader Diefenbaker charged in the Commons Thursday that the attempt to switch. television | channel 3 to Toronto from Bar- * rie “has all the appearances of =\a plan to make millions under > the cover of secrecy and con-| - cealment.” | “It is so smelly it requires ne ;olfactory excellence to under- | stand it,” Mr. Diefenbaker said | in a slashing mainly at Transport Minister ‘ Pickersgill. | The Commons spent a second day in arm-waving,/finger-point- ‘\ing argument concerning the ‘application of Ralph Snelgrove, Geoff Stirling and Allan’ F. Waters, co-ownérs of CKVR-TV at Barrie, to transfer their chan- | nel 50 miles south to the Toronto area. | Mr. Pickersgifl has identified ‘all three men as Liberals. Mr. Snelgrove was defeated as a Lib- eral candidate in Simcoe North in 1963. Mr. Pickersgill said Mr. Dief- enbaker ‘‘can find a secret in a Coca-Cola advertisement."’ He |eould. understand this after the |former prime minister's rela- | tiene with his cabinet... - Mr. Pickersgill said the _appli- cation of Ralph Snelgrove Ltd. will be dealt with by the Board of Broadcast: Governors and-that he could in no way interfere with the board. rected | station caitock” a |had sent out a oe ee aroma.’ eae whole thing’ {s sur- rounded by mystery and subter- ammo. wa , |was going to look after broad- | casting for the Liberals and cc. got a fair HAS POLITICAL SIDE “Men politically activated and : active politically are getting con- ee of the means of communica- - tions in this nation. ‘What's going to happen? Will they: be bey wl erate’ of those with; whom disagree?” grove is using to get into Toronto. told the ete ie Toronto it would be worth 6. 000,000 or $7,000,000. , “ SAYS 1s ‘COVER-UP’ es Mr. Diefenbaker’ said this was | a “transparent cover-up” for a suid which could not be justi- ge laltons™ for nel without permitting eee “secret plans and manipes- +2. transfer: of “T would have thought the would—have—seid_—— et 9." Me (ees thing ae He |e i ah cing * Don't pre- be brushed. aside. Tt It. has an atmosphere ad on page 3.col. 7 can't. MONTREAL (CP) — Physi- ‘of “Montreal. who took -45. sweaters belonging to of the Na- Sweaters Grab Leads To Prize sented by a brewery—for most audacious’ and | lne-making” ‘Taids: ENGINEERS ARE SECOND i ; [Sonal Hockey League from the Heart Drug Shortage! '1400-per-cent increase during the é joan Red Wings The’ spokesman said the ond prize—$25 put up by organizing committee—went the faculty. of engineering; aiding aii Montreal Forum iast ee ‘won first prize in an tac: ‘ulty ‘‘treasure hunt." The —‘‘treasure__.bunt,”” which volved a series of raids and by students throughout the city, was aimed at promot- ing the university's winter: cat-| iavival. : Seven students admitted tak-| ing the sweaters when they them at the opening of the winter. carnival on Mount Royal. Later, 33 students were charged with taking the sweat- ers. They await preliminary hearing Feb. 22. A spokesman for the compe- tition’s organizing committee said Thursday that the depart- ment of physical education was awarded first prize—a cup pre- il alee two gagged local nightclub; a six-foot | trait of Queen Elizabeth,- from the lobby of the Elizabeth Hotel: i bas; i fi brewery a personalities~ ee Blamed On Indonesia MONTREAL (CP) Dr.. Ar- | with Burroughs Wellcome sow ithur Ralph, mseketing director |is $12 for- 100: three-grain ta Dr. Ralph said in an view that much of the world's ‘supply of quinidine originates in Indonesia. He could not expliim why that source. should have tightened up in” cent months. mole- 1S LIKE QUININE Quinidine has the same cular content as fas used in the treatment of - laria, but the two differ “in” way the molecules are pat. to gether,” said Dr. Ralph. ~ (Canada) Ltd., says there is a ‘worldwide shortage of the drug quinidine. This, he said, has forced A year in the retail price sug- d by his company for the Dr. Ralph said his firm fs one the three or four major dis- butors in Canada of quinidine, which is used to treat certain sgular heart rhythms dm ‘hu- both 34, and @ : the blaze. children died man beings. There have ‘been reports. of. The suggested retail price for world shortage of quinine quinidine sulphate but Burroughs Wellcome, not distribute that drug ‘Wirephete)