If It's Good For The Island .The Guardian Is For If his @mtrdiom [—— VOL. LXXVII. NO. 133 téi.n Postmaster- General John Nicholson left. Is greeted by Gordon Cunningham. center, district director. Saint John. NH. and George Buderski. POSTMAST'E‘R-GENE Authorised ss Depaan Ottawa. superintendent of Operations. Saint John. both of the postal service as he steps from the Department of Transport jet which brought him here last JOHNSON CAUTIONS TURKS Nli‘OSlA lAP! »-— The armed But a high source said in An- kara that Turkey had aban- doned ‘folitr‘e lebmgienany d0ll(‘(l "for the time being“ ident Johnson advised against it_ in Ankara. Prime Minister ls- mct lnonti called an emergency cabinet meeting to discuss the Cyprus situation and the ad- vice against an invasion said to have been given by President nitzcr. supreme allied niander in Europe. By BEN WARD DOUVRES la DELIVRANLE iCPt—lt's D-Day plus 20 years and about 200 Canadians ‘i' roaming F r a n c e‘s Normandy beaches recalling the historic invasion that. cracked Hitler's forlreSs Europe. _In 1944 nearly 3.000 Cana- dians hit the beaches in the first Allied assault wave and another 7.000 poured in later that day. Canada‘s official party is headed by Veterans Minister Roger Teillet and includes Lt.- Gcn. Guy Simonds who led a Canadian division in the battle of northwest Europe. Other Canadians have arrived I" rCs'lmcntal and Royal Cana- AS""‘lllll(iSll I 'i' I up the idea of landing any I “for the time idea of a landing after Prcsm 1 House declined comment on re ports Johnson had warned Turo Johnson and Gen. Lymann Lem- 1 51 com- ‘ G ,l to I. ian Legion four groups or M private holiday trips. LONDON (AR) a Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery 0f brltaln declared on a D-Day that Gen. nirht Dwight . Eisenhower of the United States i, never really understood the l “megy of the Normandy cam- } High and eemed "to get the: Whole thing muddled up." Montgomery's use of the an- :llversary program for renew- ng criticism of Eisenhower ap- rflired to shock many listeners t: the TV program carried by 0 British Broadcasting Cor- BBG to hem him right. b e BBC was sdiedulcd Io Iroadcsst tonight s film record- “! of fumes president Eisen- a personal nature were not keeping with a program that was dedicated to demonstrating the teamwork that D—Dsy's success so years ago.» RAPS STRATEGY ration. Many telephoned the hower's war-time strategy check whether they had his memoirs published in d i an ii shortly shertsrd, declined comment on the criti- ho clam but it “’6‘. who was supreme Allied resented it. I Isa-I Class Hall by the Post us for puns-s of put“. WEATHER Sunny with a few cloudy periods: light: “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Office In on. R ARRIVES IN cmr night. He will adi'css the an- nual meeting of the Maritime Branch. Canadian ters Association at noon to- day as the Association closes its 30th annual session. Cyprus Has Invasion Alert ‘anding “Feare After the 2"z-hour meeting. a r Greek population of Cyprus In forces of Cyprus and Greece spokesman said: "The Cyprusjevent of a Turkish invasion of were placed on emergency alert ‘ crisis has been pushed into a l the east Mediterranean island. Friday night against a possible Igrave phase by the Greek-Cyp-i invasion of Cyprus by Turkey. iriol administrators." The Turkish sources said both formant said Turkey had given ing from a military and politi- . . L. In Washington. the key against an 'n i n h t' . . said. “The presidén‘t’asdgh sugimme Minister Ismet Moon- on Cyprus ' cal viewpoint and had told the ' Tu‘ s it would complicate the White i Middle East situation. Lemnitzer flew into Ankara i'l‘hursday unexpectedly. John- son ‘sent a message to Tiirkis gest to Prime Minister InonulThWSday‘ ington if convenient iit matter is still under discus- 'on." Formal ceremonies began Fri- day afternoon at the little vil- lage of Douvres la Delivranc‘" where 1,200 - grave British cemetery is located. Although most of the graves are British. a scattering of them represent other Allied nations. including Canada. There also are 82 Ger- man soldiers buried there. The front row of graves in the beautifully - tended cemetery. now a blaze of color with roses and early summer flowers. con- tains eight graves. six of them Canadian. NAMES ENGRAVED Engraved on the simple grey headstones are the names oi Pte. H. Birch. Pie. 1“. Makowt- chuk and Pie. V. C. Paulsen. Canadian Scottish Regiment: Ptc. E. J. Deiamere. 1st Cana- Monty Levels New Blast At General Eisenhower commander In Europe during the Second World War and Montgomery's superior. After the Montgomery broad- cast. some military experts on London newspapers expressed regret over his statement. They took the view that remarks of .. 5 went into Montgomery criticized Eisen- in 1058 a television interview lsenfio £10,000 national guardsmen had‘ . ibeen called into action to de- house fire in the city's west end reece had pledged to come: fend all coastal areas. , he. aid of the predominantly' lContinued on page 2. col. 6) ‘ victim Friday night. was known that he W played s historical part "the possibility of visiting Wash-I Call 30,000 MEN High sources in Nicosia said Canadians Roam Beaches On D-Day Plus 20 Years. dian Parachute Battalion: 1.. Cpl. J. H. Greenwood, Royal Canadian Signal Corps: and Pie. . M Auriat. North Shore. New Brunswick. Regiment. Johnson and Lcmnitzer had ex- But a ranking government in- amined the possibility of a land- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1964. i 1 Cheers Labor Postmas- . Byelecfion Win I LONDON IReuters) - spirits ‘in Britain's opposition Labor ,iparty rose sharply Friday 101- lowing a stunning victory in a byelection. The Labor triumph in a crit- ical three-way contest for the marginal seat at Faversham in Kent. near London, sparked hopes the party would capture on. Returnsdrom Thursday'si'elec- Labor' a 4.941‘3vote‘ margin the Conservatives —- 20 tim greater than at the 1959 gen- eral election when the Labor candidate won the seat by oniy 253 votes. The Faversham seat. was va- cated by the death of the 1959 winner. Labor's Percy Wells. Returns gave Labor's Ter- ence Boston 24.749 votes. Con- servative Mrs. Elsie Olson 19.- 808 and Independent Russell Eckley 352. m in power in the fall general elecfi ti ~ tinting-va'nnounced Friday, gave- over" ‘low Paving Bidders i I l I winds. Low-high 40 and 60. Sunday: sunny becoming cloudy. "OTTH’XQRE SEVEN CENTS l4 FACES Columbia River Debate Is Concluded In Commons Warren And Island . Warren Maritimes Limited and. Cornwall was 3311.830. Other Island Construction Limited sub- | firms and their bids were is- i mitted the lowest tenders for land Construction. 5313.950; resurfacing two sections of the Matheson and MacMillan Limil~ Trans Canada Highway between t ed. $319,495: Curran and Briggs Charlottetown and Borden. ILimited, 5334.255; and Morri- The Warren firm's bid on : son and MacRae Limited. $346,- pavmg 6.3 miles of the high- 235. way from Charlottetown to’ Hotel Sale 5 5.4 miles between Cornwall and Churchill. Other firms and their bids on this section were ' ' r Warren Maritimes Limited. ‘ $317,762: Curran and Briggs . Limited. $318,887- Morriso In Commons Matlieson and MacMillan Limit- ed. CAPITAL BUREAUI Tenders were opened in thel 0'“ THE GUARDIANI office of Highways Minrter OTTAWA—Continued specula- Philip Matheson. a tion that. the. Canadian National ‘ hotel Charlottetown will be sold ‘ . a group of businessmen S . ‘ reached the floor of the Com- mons again Friday. t ome days ago Hon. J. An- A C d gus MacLean asked if the hotel a e fins to be sold and Transport, inister J.W. Pickersgill said; D e would take the matter up with the railway. ’ . . On Friday. Queen's MP Heath i W’NMPEG (cw—Mate sec-l Macquarrie asked Mr. Pickers- i rehary Lamontagne sald here” still if he was now in a position 7 Fnday that persnns Who talk to indicate whether the hotel lot separate or 355mm" Slates m. would be transferred to man-ii“ .Canada. and “'i‘.” .are i patient With negotiation and compromise are dangerous ex-i tremists. I He did not refer by name to uebec Resources Minister. Rene Levesque. but referred to: several statements attributed‘ .9! recently to Mr. Levesque. LO - 58.1“ '0‘ P aigemenl other than the CNR. Speaker Alan MacNaughton ‘ ruled the question should be put on the order paper. Outside the i Q house Mr. Macquarrie said he‘ intended to put the quest! on the order-pauper as he ' there is ,somecredence. cent reports about the the hotel must be on guard against and. cry out against one thing: Ex- I Fire Claims .1 Sixth Victim tremism." the federal ministerI told the anitoba centennial, corporation. “Now is not the lime tori reasonable men to talk of sep- arate states, associated or not. Now is not the time for men to announce they are impatient. with negotiation and compro-l misc. “Now is not the time to de- nounce the concept of co-oper- ative federalism—before It has 3 City Clubs Remain Closed It will be “the first of next week" before the P.E.I. Liquor; Control Commission gives fur-I t'her consideration to the appli-‘ cations of Charlottetown clubs for licenses to sell liquor to! bars. The clubs the Granada. .. the Rod and Gun and e been teSted' ; Sportsman-S _ have been cl05_j Mr. Levesque has called for ed since June 1. Since th a t l the division of Canada into two time. they have. been unable to j “associate states" — Quebec qualify for liquor licenses un~l and the rest of the country. H l Island Construction submitted a low bid of $316.8l0 :l'or paving ‘ . . n» and MacRae Limited. $320432; um m o d e r a re Canadians r I Senate Vote Expected Soon By ARCH MacKENZIE of power. that otherwise would OTTAWA (CPI—The Colum-he returned to BC. from the bia River debate, 20 years long. flowed from the House of Coni- 1 mons into the Senate Friday on a vote of approval of 108 to 16. The dissent to the huge power .‘and flood-control project came i from 15 New Democrats in the Commons — the only party to. ibuck it consistently—and from.‘ lSaskatchewan Conservative C.l 0. Cooper of Rosetown-Biggar.‘ l Fewer than half the 262 Com- mons members were on hand— three seats are vacant—~for tne vote which followed a three-day ebate rehashing all the pros This is a half-share of the benefits to be conferred to '11! US. by river control in Canada from three storage dams. The US. also will pay another $69.- 000.000 for flood - control ben- sills and the total will more than cover the costs of the dams which are to be com- pleted in 1974. Total Columbia development. including Canadian power gen- eration as a result ol the oil- year treaty will make possible capacity of some 4.000.000 kilo- and 00"" wait; or one-fifth of Canarias The resolution goes to i.ie l total hydro capacity now. i Senate Tuesday and is expected i to pass airl speedily. well y ' 200 Attend Hearing On GETS 8 YEARS Samuel Result-k. disbarred Toronto lawyer Fridav plead- ‘ ed guilty to 28 of 3] cliarzcs of theft involving $340302 The 42-year-old Resnick returned voluntarily to Canada alter spending almost a year in ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline set by the government. The. Cana- ‘ than and US. governments its" ' Egg-’i' He “'5‘” “mine?” '0 twill exchange instruments or B. I r 1 “a”. "I per“ 9” I311" lratification. The US. Congress , 5m Tile the“ '"VOIVed 9mm" approved the 1961 treaty speed- ICU turn I clients and a controversy ‘in that year. ‘ GIVES REASON Mr. Cooper. a farmer who has I long been connected with water conservation in his provirme. i v said he couldn’t sup ort tile '3' treaty of 1961 and thepprotocoli we “’9” Md “‘3' the hi!" of last January as long as there ‘hher “'95' “'9 mine "he more was specific exclusion of divei- apathy onuthe Sub-led “'9 Wm!” sion from the Columbia basin . encounter'. . S a ' d. mmm‘ss'm or production of power. [member he” Morrison Casting votes with 57 Liber- “But this has Jllst not been als were 45 Conservatives, on . the case. We are pleasantly sur- Social Credit and five Creditiste ‘ prised and encouraged a_ he ps‘ turnout and the show of inter- Canada - United States nego~ QSt' tiati‘ons on taming the Colum- Those, W‘l‘0 allelide were d5“ der the name Commercial Trav- bin. , snowmen Lyel- rising in vided into 10 groups and ad- ellers Association of Canada. southeastern British Columbm Journed to various rooms for The. new association will have and flowing into the Pacific in! Private discuss'ons and t“ 9" assets close to $12,000,000 andl the us, began in 1944 and led change Ideas. . _ ‘ membership of 23.000. Thei finally in 1961 to the signing of Earlier, commissmn Co-Chair- basic aims of the associations ‘ the main treaty fashioned under man Andre Laurendeau OI Mont- are to btiy travel accommoda-l the former Conservative gov-I real told them the commission tion and insurance at biiik rates ' ernment. :73: Ml fringed égngzingemEflg and I“ a” as a Clearing muse The Liberals added a rotocol '5 ‘ 9‘9 a 'n ‘ for information for salesmen It and on Oct. 1 the U.S_ vein pay 1 Speak Franc“ 01‘ 10- “WC. and other commercial traVLt no a lump.sum advance ofIFrench - speaking Canadians to lers. 974300.000 for a 30-year slice speak English. Six Jaunty ALQ Members Plead Guil’ry To Charges VICTORIA (CPI—More, than 200 persons turned up to express It'heir views at the royal com- imfssion on bilingualism and bi. culturalism inquiry meeting Fri- a over the sale of Woodsworth House. former headquarters of the cooperative Common- wealth Federalion in Toronto. ICP Wirephotni Salesman Unite 2 Associations I I t TORONTO (CPl—The Com-t mercial Travellers Association of Canada in Toronto and the Dominion Commercial Travel- lers Association in Montreal an- nounced they are merging un- I ST. JOHN S. NfId. (CPI — A I in“) effect . early Monday claimed its sixthi commissmn Sp°kesman Lorraine Lacey. 9. died in hospital a few hours after he." Monday' e der new regulations that went has criticized co-operative fed- ‘eralism and announced Tuesday negoti- said yesterday the clubs' appli- . ations witli the federal govern» . cations will be "looked at again i ment on the question of Eski- charges Friday. including the” ‘ .of arms from ihe was breaking off ‘mos in northern Quebec.) .— c brother Kevin. . ; ly’ The fire. which swept througnl ? the home of Ronald Lacey, 34,; I also claimed the life of his Wife. I - Mary. 33; identical two-year-; . old twin boys. Robert and Ricn-- t i ard: and Joan, 7. All suifereil severe burns. 3 Mr. Lacey and Patricia. 13.. eacaped uninjured. Another son. Ronald. .lr.. 14, was visitingl relatives at the time. 9 The mother and three of the 1 children were buried Friday. r o buried there June 7. 1944. Forty-five Canadians making the two - week - long tour spon- . sored by the Royal Canadian Lo | gion reached Dieppe Friday. They took a slow bus ride past Canadian memorials commem- orating the 1942 commando raid here. Damien Lapierre of Pike River. Que. said: “1 was with the Fusiliers Mont Royal e' Montreal in the raid. I landed right in front of Dieppe Casino. CAPTURE!) BY GERMANS “We advanced for about 15 feet but then we had to retreat under heavy fire. I was carp- tured by the Germans during the operation and spent the rest of the war in a prisoner-of-war camp." Another visitor. Ernest A. Aker of Antigonish. N.S.. now 39 and a postal clerk. was a pvt vate in the North Shore Regi- ment. 3rd Canadian Division. "I landed with the first. wave of the Normandy assault." said. "I was ashore within the first five minutes of the inva- sion. I was slightly injured when od and Auriat were! 3' government introduced a bill in' t Friday to impose a tax on to- pack of 20 cigarettes and an equivalent amount on other rms of tobacco. | Cigarettes now sell for Illl‘ cents for a pack of 20. The' it would discourage cigarette ernment revenue. Tobacco Tax ST. JOHN'S. NfId. (CPI—Thai i NfId. Imposes I Newfoundland legislature bacco equal to five cents on a move was forecast in the bud- get speech and Finance Minis- ter Spencer said it was hoped smoking. which . a recogu nized health hazard even though this would mean a loss in gov-; Attorney-General L. R. Cur-i tis. who introduced the bill, said i the tax would be collected from the wholesalers and importers. rather than the retailers. The.~ wholesalers would in turn col-l lect from the retailers. The bill will come up for sec-l ond reading Monday, 1 getting off an assault craft but went on d was severeiy wounded two hours later." He planned to visit today the place where he landed. Saint- ubln-sur-Mer. on .luno Beach. After the Normandy battle- fields the Royal Canadian Le- gion mem rs will continue their pilgrimage in Belgium and Netherlands where they in liberation fighting in the last INSIDE TODAY Births, deaths . . . . .. 8. 13 Classified . . . , . . . . .. . 13 Finance, markets . 14 Comics .... . . . . . 1i rt .. . .. s . Editorials . . . . . . . . . 4 TM Follow! and Dawn In" mm' c“, " ' Greenhalgh. who Dilly 5" Summerslds . . 8 pm.“ Co, _, . I , . H 3 John A. Macdonald and Lady Women’s 0 Macdnnaid in the Halifax stages of the Second World War. I I Neptune Theatre play "Sir sr- . ... I”? i PLAY SIR JOHN A. AND LADY MACDONALD John A. Beats The. Devil" which opens tit the Confedera- lion Memorial Theatre Mon- day night point towards the play advertisement during the reception held last night at of the cast. life. they carry on their mar- ried life on the. stage as their ‘ roles in the Canadian Histor- Their pleas came several days after two of the eight men charged with terrorist activities turned Crown witnesses and linked the six youths with :1 series of robberies. Despite their guilty pleas. the lslx maintained a jaunty all. Most smiled as they entered ‘ their pleas and they whispered ’among thmselves in apparent unconcern. They will be sentenced later in the month. Pre - sentence arguments from the defence‘ and prosecution will be heardt June 12. i Their pleas followed the pat-i tern of the Front de Liberation ' Quebecois. smashed a year ago and held responsible for a series ‘ of bombings which killed ouel man and maimed another. The FLQ members also pleaded g u i l t y to charges l against them in the midst of ‘ legal procedures and were sen fenced in jail terms rangmg 3 from a few months to 12 years. MONTREAL (Cpl—Six mem- bers of the terrorist Armee de; Liberation du Quebec pleaded guilty to a string of some .30: two armorics. saw \ ’ _ comm om L'IFE I The ALQ members could face I life imprisonment on the. charges. including arms theft: from armories in Montreal and Shawinigan. two hank robberies in regions north of Montreal. holdin of a caisse popuialro credit union) in east - end Montreal and theft of a trans- mitter mm a Granby radio station. Their pleas of guilty came after eight days of a prelimina ary hearing during which two men-"at juvenile and Maurwe Lediic. 20 — testified that the other accused took part. in van lous operations of the ALQ. Pleading guilty were Robert Hudon. 20. Andre Wattier. 23. . .lean Gagnon. 23. Jean La Selle. 22. Pierre Nadon. 19. and Claude Perron. 20 Police of three forces works-d day and night to uncover the gang, which hit the public eye with a daring daylight. robbeiy t Les Fusiliers de Mont-Royal Armory in Montreal. The gang tied tip watchmen and calmiy loaded a truck with arms while children played in a nearby park. That was hit. 20. and (Continued on page 3. col. 4‘ Madean 0 CAPITAL BUREAU I i OF THE GUARDIAN. OTTAWA —« Former fisheries' , minister Angus MacLean said ,- .here Friday that he is in agree- ment with changes announced by Fisheries Minister H. ‘ Robichaud in the fishing vessel' assistance arrangements. “This does not represent any ‘ :major change in policy but the ' technical changes proposed will 1: lallow the regulations to be ap- lplied more evenly and it will ' 2e|iminate some of the anomal— ’ Ies in the former act." Mr. Mac- l.ean said. I He said the subsidy for fish- Ing vessels had been increased In 1961 or 1962 by the, former Conservative government from $165 0 9. a gross ton. Under the plan announced by" Mr. Robichaud to pay 30 or 35 | the Theatre for the members Married in real IC is kays Move ‘In lrawler Subsidies A per cent of the cost depending on the size of the vessel. Mr Macl.ean said it would mean I slightly lower subsidy for smaller vessels and a slightly larger one for vessels of large He said the lowering of the minimum size. of vessels from 45 to 35 feet was probably done at the request of provincial loan boards which want to build some smaller vessels on an experimental basis. But he said the 30 per cent subsidy on the smaller vessels will still be somewhat less than the former $250 a ton basis. "I am generally in favor of the changes as I think they Wm encourage fishermen to 1) larger and safer boats of his for construction." the Gun MP commented. '_ f D