2 ee, a fn the nine other provinces. “cause of theif language. Biling- Ae i oe oe RB if It’s Good For The Island The Guardian is For It ‘ HOCKEY PLAYING BROTHERS SHOW HEIFER Bobby Hull, left, Chicago ternational Live Stock Show at yearling heifer are Bobby's Biack Hawks hockey star, and Chicago from their farm at 900s, Bobby and Blake. tora his teammate-brother, Dennis Demorestville, Ontario. Riding “OR—BMiss Rocket No. 35" will Full, have an entry in the In- the polled Hereford spring mee mg Two Quebec Groups Plan =: Briefs On Unilingualism . f “Covers ici Edward Island “Like The Dew”’ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1965. Viet Nam ogivuaiet ashed By Guerrillas By THE CANADIAN: PRESS At least three persons died in traffic accidents during a storm that brought as on as a, foot of snow to northern “ew S . :s- and heavy rain in sections Nova Scotia Saturday night. Canada reported —S schedules disrupted | of conditions at Saint | . N.B., Fredericton, Mone- and Quebec City. One flight =tumber 428 eastbound from Montreal—was cancelled while others were forced to ty ass Saint John; Moncton ot Fredéric- ton or all three New Brunswick airports. ; Northern New Brunswick re- ceived the cilia = score et of snow with ee ls porting a fall of 11. ie Toc. accumulation gave ers November record of po 's ‘inches of snow. Snow in the southern half of | aie te In Nova Scotia, the MONTREAL (‘CP)—The issue! The group calls for legislation La Societe omg 1 “claim. of. unilingualism, the new battle- requiring the use of French as/ ing 900 members, was formed | ground of the quiet revolution, the working language in Que-|last June by dissidents who | was up for debate today before bec’s industries and business broke away. from -the ultra-na- the royal commission on biling- | corporations. English now was | tiovalist St. Jean Ualism and biculturalism. Two quasi-separatist’ groups | were submittinz briefs ‘eine | for a ban on official use of Eng- | tus s ‘language colonialism.” | tionalistie enough. ~— ciety, accusing the larger group bya . | being imposed. from the top and |p of beng under Roman Catholie’ St. Clair Lioyé” i keep French-Caanadians in a sta- | influence and of -not being na-|Dean's Corner neat Lunenburg, demonstration marked by mod- There were Nova Scotia, both during periods when rain was falling. Gerald Lee Rayner, 18, of | Westphal, near Dartmouth, ‘died So- when M was struck by a truck \o-ot ‘est home = Teolevin. i near iwas killed Saturday night when lish im Quebec's government, schools and business firms. An_ association of French- speaking Protestant clergymen also advo ates.a unilingual French Quebec and use of Eng- lish as the only official language Several briefs from - business and .cultural organizations of both languages flay unilingual- ism and urge bilinguatism | across Canada. The Montreal Rotary club and | Le Club Richelieu were present- img a joint submission in favor of French-language schools and breadcasting stations fer French-Canadians living outside Quebec. A federal department of cul- By HARVEY HUDSON PARIS (AP) A vigorous round of voting Dec. 19, with _campaign by handsome Jean only the two top candidates left Lecanuet has thrown shivers of on the ballot. fear into the supporters of Some sources close to de President de Gaulle with the Gaulle have hinted the haughty Fr nch presidential election | 75-year-old general would con- only a week away. sider this an affront to tural affairs is requested to sell ~ Goy, dignity. They said that rather | ene. aiel ernment ministers have ; oe | ewtural’ duality aod equal te “ated % vigorods counter-at- / tise ike part in = run-off elec- tack and their main target is tion de Gaulle would retire. Lecanuet, an admirer of the! 3 LEAD REDUCED eral and provincial civil serv. | ate Us. freee © A poll published Saturday by ants and a crash program te De Gaulle, after announcing jthe newspaper France Soir in more language teachers. that he would not take part im! showed de Gaulle with 57 per businessmen say they are |the political manoeuvring and! cent of the votes down ftom ' raising their “practical” voice Would make only one brief ad-' 61 per cent, 10 days hefore. to ‘‘counter-balance the extrem- dress before the voting, has Francois ‘Mitterrand, su p- | ist, utopian and fanatical views ‘decided tes > on television ported by Communists ‘and So- | which are too often featured in} headlines and do not reflect gen- eral thinking.” Yahguage rights. The brief also. urges a bonus for bilingual fed- ,when the campaign for the Dec. | incre ot La Societe Nationale Popu- 5 election closes. painter —| laire says French-Canadians are No one expects Lecahuet to Lecanuet, a former president | “persecuted” everywhere be- win, or even to finish in second. of the. leftist-Catholic_- Popular -- “place, but his raids on Gaullist Republican Movement, had 9.5_ territory could—if the trend per cent. up 2.5 percen 2-e continues in the fi--° +--%s— points: Jean-Louis leave de Gaulle with less “than nancour, supported by 50 per cent of the total vote. right, had five per cent, AID SOUGHT FOR ZAMBIA Britain Put In Squeeze “By JOSEPH MacSWEEN The consensts of London Regiment stationed in Britain | LONDON (CP)—Britain came newspapers is that Wilson may was on alert as the | uns ¢ blact-\"ci-r squeeze well send some sort of token “Spearhead’’ unit of Britain's. during the. weekend for tougher to Zambia, perhaps a strategic reserve. action against Rhodesia, includ- | Royal Air Force squadron that| ‘Opinion was building up that | ing a military commitment te would patrol the Rhodesian- | sanctions as now envisaged will | Zembia. Zambian border on the Zambia| not be effective i= bo Prime Minister Wilson cut side. down the white-minority Smith | short his weekend at Chequers, OPPOSED MIXED FORCE regime ahd that, in any case, | country home of British premi-| One newspaver sai* that | African leaders will not be will- | ets. to meet Sunday night at 10 |Kaunda in his talks with Mac- | ing to wait many months for the | Downing Stréet with Malcolm Donald opposed any idea of a | outcome. "MacDonald, the veteran diplo-|force composed of Common-| The situation, it was feared, psn who has become his special’ wealth troops from Canada, played into the hands of radicals | roy on the troubled southera | Australia or New Zealand. He such as Ghana's Kwame Nkru- Arica situation. |insisted they must be British. mah, demanding military action “MacDonald, who arrived here A battalion of the Royal Scots as part of his own strategy for Sunday morning from Lusaka, ' capital of Zambia, the former Northern Rhodesia, reported on pote te o° <r se Sessa Remeit Roane, tak'$ SHOPPING “E DAYS TILL valism in Quebec was leading to assimilation into the English- speaking group and “genocide for the Quebec nation. es the an in- Kaunda, as a moderate leader whose own country is directly involved in the Rhodesian af-. fair, Was challenging Britain to assume an effective role and thus avoid more-extreme inter- utday, Kaunda publicly chal- . lenzed Britain: to fpent tee “tre ioughes on a vention. hness at Wilson’s reputation for daz- statements by the 41- sling footwork was seen as both an advantage and in Premier Ian Smith dictated the ing ef- ang an a Sif hate ae " a etce from Britain Nov. and on the Tories, a ees nite i - | aa 2 Pee deel a his”) Cialists as the candidate of the | speak Friday | unified left, had 27 per cent, an | Tiier-Vig- | <4 Africa’s future: ' De Gaulle’s Supporters Shaken By Opponent's Sudden Upsurge This would force second | erease: of half a percentage |at 15,000 to: 25,000. | point. The remainder went to two other candidates. |struck by a car as he walked | on’ a a near his home. Newfoundland reported - traffic fatality but there was }eonnection with the storm. Jeames dJoseoh Cerbett. 1, |died wh when struck by a car as Hunter Wounded In N.B. Accident SUSSEX, N.B. (CP) Ber- nard A. Barnett, 20, of Saint |Jobn, NB., was in. hospital here ‘Sunday after being wounded in both legs in an unusual hunting ace den’ Saturday. ‘ROMP said a bullet fired from \&, companion’s gun apparently Split when it struck a tree or twie .erd the ‘Barnett. The injuries were de- scribed as being not serious. serticr Three Killed On Highway > During Saturday's Storm © he played near his home at Mount Pear! on the outskirts of St. John’s Saturday night. The weather was clear. |LOST BEARINGS The US. trawler America asked assistance to enter Hali- ' fax Guard cutter went to her aid when the vessel r -“rte . was in high seas and unsure of her exact position a few miles off the entrance of the harbor. In Halifax group of apartment buildings. Five cars slid into a 15 foot crevice. left by the disintegrat- ing wall. There were no injuries. New Brunswick's bus lines re- ported only minor delays in service during the storm, most of them on runs in the northern ipart of the _ Province. sae: rrah eee Sores “TELL ALL‘ REQUEST MADE harbor. A Canadian Coast a retaining wall. gave way and collapsed near a | ACTOR DIES Wild Bill Elliott, 62, western inovie and television actor, died of cancer Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. He was the star of the “Red Ryder” movie ser- ies that began in 1943. (AP Wirephote) WEATHER Moss SEVEN CENTS Attack Is 4 } 16 PAGES Described Most Savage Of War SAIGON (AP) — Government relief forces moved into posi- tions on a devastated rubber plantation 45 miles northwest of sunday after howling When finally tallied, the cas- *> ualties in the Saturday action ~ could be the highest of any sin- gle action in the war. US. Defene Secretary Robert S. McNamara, arriving from Paris, immediately went into cerference bout the at- tack with U.S. and South Viet- namese officials. U.S. Air Force and planes hammered targets navy in | North Viet Nam and dropped | 1,300,000 leaflets into the winds = Moderation And Respectability By ARCH MacKENZIF. WASH sands eration and respectability. , March leaders asked the i\United States government to “tell all’ about peace-talk pro- posals said recently to have come from North Viet Nam and to have been rejected summa- Tily by the United States. Pre-march fears of tz-uble | from extremist elements, fears |shared by the a faded | \quickly on the |summer day, Shanti et the hv | ithe crowd—estimated. | Deputy Police Chief Thomas |Rasmusen said the demonstra- Ss Rome detective squad. dis- plays two ancient manuscripts and replica of .Crown of, St. Stephen récovered a day af- ter they were stolen Thursday night from the Vatican libr- ary. The manuscripts were found in a field north of Rome and the cross was under bushes Scire olds tors were “of higher calibre < — a Seige i. VATICAN ARTICLES RECOVERED Nicola Scire, head of the a crystal box containing t he blood stained speech President Garcia Moreno of Ecuador was reading when he was as- sinated in 1875. Italian newspa- pers speculated the priceless Manuscripts might have $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 on the clandestine antiques market. Hatian police have vowed a relentiess hunt for the daring burglers. (AP Wirephoto) e re a CWashington Peace March than the people we had here be- IN. (GP) — Thou- fore.”’A- police force of more small groups. militantly_ hostile here Saturday to thas 700 made 15 afresis, pri- to any American presonen a students, whole well-dressed, class couples and groups, youths families, miadio. in beards, jeans and sweat Famous Case Is Recalled By Death shirts and representatives of of Viet Nam. F ‘OFFERS: sticipe POEL : Off -on a well-policed flank fronting the White were the counter-deit ‘ators, including the American Nazi party, a° ee of the | Ku Klux Kian, a self-styled jmember of. the walle Angels | motorcycle club: They shared a | iplatform to render a race-bait- ‘ing, anti-peace movement . mes- isage, which included a storm | trooper offering free matches and gasoline for ‘‘peace creeps” bent on self immolation. Among the carnival of march- | | by police LONDON (AP)—Capt. Henry ers were Canadians. mostly stu- blowing toward Hanoi. The leaf- lets explained South Vietnamese hes yeaa eculice around Thanh Hoa , on North Viet Nam's coast sent | a U.S. spokesman, jof spent shelils,at their feet, in dicating a fight to the end. Government officials said the enemy toll was high but the at- tackers pulled away thefr dead and wounded. One government estimate was 400 enemy dead. At one point, a US. army adviser called for air strikes on his own ovositions hecr>r-4 “that’s where the Communists are.” Jets from the newly-ar- rived U.S. aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk replied with bombs and rockets that killed government troops as well as enemy. The fight, which pitted - about 1,200 South Vietnamese azainst perhaps 1,200 to 2,000 Viet Cong, underscored the purpose of Me- Namara’s 7th visit to South Viet Nam since 1962: ‘To look jat the situation and to appraise the future.” He expresse: belief the Viet Cong monsoon offensive had ‘failed and that their drive te split South Viet Yom in two - also was _ unsuccessful. A U.S. spokesman said there jwas little doubt the enemy es U.S. navy F-8 plunging into | pjanned and- executed their at- ere. sea. bu_ the pilot ee and was rescued helicopter while covering oiaca | lasted armed North Vietna- | mese patrol boats in the area. .FLYERS HIT SILK ' A US. Air Force F4C crashed near Pleiku in South jteek onthe. plantation..with.pre- cision, co-ordination and fear. | lessness. The government relief force: - moved into the plantation a¢ ‘noon Sunday- REPORT TORTURE The South Vietnamese reg? im Viet nam’s central highlands, | mental commander was. killed japserenty the victim of Viet | near the start of the fighting. ‘members tlected' and: were ces. jared tt he had been cap. cued. ported successful small opera- | tions against the guerrillas in ,the central highlands and -the Mekong River delta, south of The enemy attack on the |French-owned Michelin rubber | plantation near Dau Tieng ap- ‘parently was to revenge a gov- ernment assault last week on a Viet Cong unit in the area, of- ‘ficials here said. In endée ek about nee George Kendall, who used the dents said to number about 100 hours, about four battalions of radio to trap a murderer for the from Ontario and 50 from Mon- Viet Cong. backed ‘*~ first time in history, died Stin- |day in a- nursing home at the jage of 91. Kendall was master of the Ca- | nadian Pacific ocean liner t” -* jrose in July, 1910, shortly after Dr. Hawley Crippen had mur- \dered his wife; buried her body ;in the basement of their London jhome and fled with his secre- tary, Ethel Leneve. On a crossing to Canada from ‘Belgium Kendall '“Mr. Robinson” travelling with “his son.”” He pinned a news- {paper photograph of Crippen to ‘a board and- covered his mous- ttache with chalk. The picture matched. ‘‘Robinson.”’ Kendall concluded correctly that the “son’’ was Miss -Leneve travel- ling in boy’s clothing. Phe captains radioed Scotland Yard: “Crimmen and “chel Le- neve aboard the Montrose.” When. the liner docked at Que- be~ (Cty. a Scotland Yard in- spector was waiting for them. He had taken a faster liner from England. Crippen and Miss Le neve were arrested. He went to the gallows but she was acquit- ted of being an accomplice. Kendall later retired after 50 years’ service with Canadian Pacific. He never tired of telling | the.story..and.often recalled his jcomment as the message to Scotland Yard crackled off his | wireless mast: ‘‘What a _wonder- ‘ful invention radio— is.” PM eee |For Holiday TORONTO (CP)—Pfime Min- ister Pearson and his wife flew out of Toronto International Air- port Sunday afternoon for a two- day official visit to Jamaica followed by a two-week vaca- tion on the Island of St. Martin lin the Leeward group. Mr. and Mrs. for St. Pearson head Martin Tuesday. They pick up their official duties again Dec. 14 with a visit to Trinidad and Tobago, returning to Ottawa Dec. 16- Prime Minister Donald Sangs- ter of Jamaica was expected to meet the Pearsons when they arrived in Jamaica Sunday jevening. To attend a dinner ‘party Sunday night. Mr. Pearson had been in Tor- jonto to watch the Grey Cup geme Saturday. observed a! treal. , Canadian ‘officials here were told in advance, in the event they had to. come to the aid of | Nerth Vietnamese regulars, knocked out the South Vietnamese 7th Regiment as an effective fight- ing unit. Survivors te'd of” facing apy jailed Canadian citizens, +a ; fierce wall of enemy fire that several of the anticipated marchers were Communist and two or three Quebec separatists. Like the rest of the demon- strators, the Canadians in small, isolated groups circled slowly (Continued on page 3 Col. .6) vower that kect them »inned down then split the regiment in two. Government casualties were reported heavy. Among the dead were U.S. army advisers, found in foxholes with hundreds ‘tured by the enemy, tortured jouse itself The South Vietnamese fe | ; and then shot. Nfld. Comoletes Pavina Of TCH DEER LAKE. Nfld. (CP) Paving work‘on the Trans-Can- ada Highway through Newfound- land was comoleted Saturday. giving the province an unbrokea 565-mile stretch of pavement from Port aux Basques to St. John's. Provincial Highways Minicter Eric S. Jones shovelled the last quantity of asphalt for heavy duty rollers. at Birchy Lake about 15 miles from Deer Lake. In one of the last acts of con- struction on the highway jobs started in 1950. A number of overpasses along the route from the province's west coast to the Avalon penis- sula remain to be built before completion of the project is real- ized. a Too Few Survivors Left To Tell Story Of Attack Associated “Press. “photo. grapher Horst Faas accom- panied South Vietnamese reinforcements to the scene of a savage Communist at- tack on a rubber plantation 45 miles from Saigon. Here is his report. ‘ By HORST FAAS DAU TIENG, Viet Nam ‘AP) South Viet Nam's . 7th Regi- ment died at 8 a.m. Saturday. It died in the big . Michelin. Rubber plantation. after trying desperately, but failing. to fight off hordes of Communist sold- ier. charging in waves through ~_ jthe rubber trees. Most of the Vietnamese troop- ers, with their American advis- ers, fought to the last bullet. The senior U.S. adviser to the slain regimental commander was found Sunday dead beside a foxhole. At 7 a.m. Saturday he had radioed a nearby Ran- ger battalion adviser: “My radio operator has just been killed and we can’t hold out much longer iunless we get air striker in immediately. Put the strikes right amongst That’s where the Communists are." A few minutes later the ad- yiser, his voice. still clam. called: “I'H have to get out of here. We're folding up.” He didn’t make it. A Vietnamese machine - gun- nér was found dead in his fox- hole, spent shells up to his knees. The Viet Cong had shot | off the barvel of his weapon and then killed him with a bullet __ {through the brain, ‘ us. | Some of the fegirnent tried to give up. A wounded U.S. adviser re- ported this to headquarters. “They (‘the Viet Cong) at- tacked with enormous firepower from the east, west and south. Then they came ‘in human waves, falling upon our troops. “As they fell, the machine- guns would open up ~gain. Loudspeakers were blaring out in Vietnamese to our troops to give themselves. up...}.saw-.one little pocket of about a dozen men, who seemed to be out of ammunition, rise to their feet and gather together to surren- der: “AS they moved away from me. and sprayec them: Within sec- onds, all were dead.” va scared and ‘eteeed ‘Wille le tex. The dead lay scattered among fallen branches and in the deep foxholes they had dug in ‘he four days they had been in this bivouaec area. The foxholes were no match for the Com- munists who threw caution to the wind in their attack. SHOT IN HEAD Most of the dead had been killed with bullets in the head and neck. There were nfo Communist dead there. Many must have been killed because the Vie'ra- mese infantry men, and the plane: and helicopters that svp- ed them, poured out tons of fire on the attackine enemy a machine-gun spoke up ui in the confusion of battle, the Viet Conc had managed to drag their. dead and wounded ~The devastated Michelin plan- away tation, 45 miles northwest of Now the Vietnamese Rangérs Saigon, bore mute witness to wére rot looking for anv enemy the. fierce battle’ Hundreds ds -of They were looking trees were shorn of their foli- comrades. for their By early afternoon age by the impact of light Com- they had gathered up 100 bod- munist artillery and American ies. bomb and rockets. The rubber trees were INSIDE TODAY 15 15. 3 COMES © Ses cccvccasecss 13 SORE cecccccovccs 1, 11: Women’s .......... yeeuns 6 Editorials ........... ene: 8 Summerside ............ 3 Kings, Queens, City 5 Prince County .......... 2 2M There were many mor The remnants of the battered regiment told of th: wounded ‘soldier who dragged back the body of the Vietnamese r-zi- ment*! commander te a clear- ing so he could be evacuated by helicopter. There were so few > survivors \that it was difficult to put to gether a coherent story on the battle. Two stragglers came in. wounded infantryman was found pretending to be dead. The Communists had shot “ \through the “elmet, rippinc off (pert of bie scalp but not killing - A