if Ws Good For The Island “The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 144 a PR oe se mhe & “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ardia WEATHER ' Sunny becoming cloudy by winds becoming southwesterly 25. Low- high 50 and 78. . 5 agment of postage te cash. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1965. NOT MORE SEVEN CENTS evening} : ‘ 14 PAGES ROTARY PRESIDENT — Charles W. Petiengill of national president af Rotary, accompanied by his wife, Madeline, were greeted on ar- rival at the airport last night by Andy Likely, president of the Charlottetown Rotary Club, and Gordon Elman. dis- trict governor, from Sydney, N.S. C.W_ Pettengill. as inter- national president eal | comprising a membership of 572,000 people in 12,000 com- munities and 128 countries, is visiting district 782. which includes P.E.1.. N.S. and Nfld. Mr. Algerian Coup Newly-Named Worries Mission QUEBEC (CP) — Chief Jus- | tice Frederic Dorion of the Quebec Superior Couft said to- not be difficult source ported leak of some details of his yet unpublished report into | allegations of influence-peddling | federal ministerial aides. The chief justice referred in- tement he gave reporters | an Ottawa dispatch Friday | Southam News Services. The dispatch quoted “‘a source who claims to be informed” as say- | ing the report questions Justice wisdom in| 18 an z e | RCMP investigation into the al legations. Chief Justice Dorion said he | was “excessively surprised’ learn Southam News Services “took the liberty of publishing what it claims to be parts of | my report.’ His statement con- | tinued: “According to what was pub- lished by: newspapers. the news service (Southam) based _ its story on information it said“ was” obtained from a source claimed |be very difficult, to usually be well informed in similar matters. “If this is true, it should ‘not it seems | me, to learn this source. “The federal government cer- | tainly possesses_the means. to make the necessary inquiries so ‘that the remedies imperative in BLOODLESS COUP REPORTED Algerian March Supports Ousted Ahmed Ben Bell ALGIERS (AP) — Hundreds prison camp, was the first indi- secret session with his policy of Algerians poured through the ‘cation of popular dissent with ruling revolutionary counc il. streets Sunday night, chanting slogans in favor of deposed President Ahmed Ben Bella. Police. broke up the demonstra- tions. The march through downtown Algiers in support of Ben Bella, Row reported to be in. an army the swift, bloodless coup engi- neerei by Col. Houari, Boume- dienne, -Algeria’s new strong- man. In the afternoon the capital appeared outwardly calm and the beaches and cafes were | crowded: as Boumedienne held a Dief Demands Withdrawal Of Newspaper Legislation VANCOUVER (CP) — sition Leader Diskseboles “ake said Saaturday that only the complete withdrawal of the Liberal gov- ernment’s proposed séwspaper legislation would be acceptable to the Progressive Conserva- tives. Mr. Diefenbaker told a press conference on his arrival here that he noted the Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers As- sociation had also sought with- drawal of the legislation. This ‘was a request similar to that voiced by the Opposition in the Commons following the an- founcement by Finante Minis- ter Gordon of legislation de- signed to ensure that no Cana- dian daily newspaper will fall under foreign ownership The government proposes to | disallow as a deductible expense for income tax purposes expen- ditures made by any firm for advertising in a non-Canadian newspaper. When asked whether he re- gards Manitoba Premier Duff Roblin as a potential threat to his post, Mr. Diefenbaker said he doesn’t consider threats and doesn't believe everything he hears or reads on the question of leadership. He said the Manitoba pre- Mier was an outstanding man, and so was Davie Fulton, B.C. Conservative leader, who has announced he will returp,te fed- eral politics. As -idng ps the Conservatives had such out- standing men the future of the party was assured, said Mr. Diefenbaker. China, meanwhile, sent a mes- ‘sage of support to the new re- gime. MAY TRY BEN BELLA One of the topics probably discussed by the council is Ben Bella’s fate. Although the coup leaders had denounced him as a “diabolical dictator,” = }sion counsel Andre Desjardins viet for | translation and printing. Three flagship, such a case can be applied.” a COPIES Chief Justice Dorion said he “timishet editing the report when he left Ottawa last Tues- and that he asked commis- to take charge of the preparation of the text copies of the report had been Chief Justite Dorion ls Annoyed By Leak of a re-| to Montreal lawyer Pierre La- 7 der the control of Mr. H. Mayer whom I had met before leav- | jing Ottawa and in whom I have | full and entire confidence.’ The chief justice declined to, jelaborate on his statement. The Southam story said Mr. Favreau's integrity emerges junshaken in the report but that his methods of dealing with the | |RCMP investigation are ques- | | tioned. The. dispatch says the report | criticizes the activiities of Lib- | leral MP Guy Rouleau, then | }parliamentary secretary to. Prime Minister Pearson, and lthe RCMP. The report is expected to be ;handed to Mr. Pearson June 2. | The allegations were made by montagne, acting for the U.S. government in extradition hear- ings against suspected narcot- lies conspirator Lucien Rivard: Mr. Lamontagne said he was) offered a $20,000 bribe by Ray- mond Denis, then executive as- sistant to the immigration min- -ister,and- subjected-to- political pressure by Mr. Rouleau and two of Mr. Favreau’s aides to agree to bail for Rivard. Riv- ‘ard escaped from jail in Mont- | real March 2. N. Viet Nam Targets Hit SAIGON fAP)—U.S. 7th Fleet warplanes Sunday bombed @} ‘ petroléim storage area,’ supply- depot, army barracks and other military installations in North. Nam, a U.S. spokesman: said. Heavy gums from the fleet's the guided missile light cruiser Oklahoma City, made. One had been kept by battered a Viet Cong concentra- Mr. 'two had been sent in ments to the translators instal- “un- Desjardins and the other tion 120 miles southwest of Da Nang, in South Viet Nam, it ee was announced. DAD CALLED ‘THE GREATEST | diplo- | matic sources doubted that he | They ‘had been summarily executed. | thought the new govern- | ment might stage a spectacular | “treason” trial. At first the millions who cheered Ben Bella only a few days ago went about their busi- ness in the sunny Mediterranean | city. apparently unconcerned about his fate or the coup. Then* Sunday night members of the Algerian Students Federation challenged the new government with a march downtown. hya Ben Bell,” they shouted. (long live Ben Bella.) Civilian riot police appeared quickly on the scene and scat- tered the 200 or so without viiolence. A few were arresied. TRIGGER CROWDS But the police reaction appar- ently triggered the crowds and they ran through shouting support of Ben Bella, _| (Continued | on page 5 Col. >» Atlantic Area Accidents Take 9 LivesOn Weekend, Ry The Canadian Press Nine persons died violently in the Atlantic Provinces during the weekend. five of them by drowning. Highway. mishaps claimed three lives in Nova Scotia and a died after a fall at Hubbards, about 25 miles from Halifax Sherry Marie Mehan. Knowlanville. N.B., drowned Sunday in the Miramichi River near Chatham. She had been playing a the water's edge with | other children. The bodies of Robert Clyde Simpson, 12, and Ronald Clay-' ton Douthwright, 9, were recov- ered Saturday from the Pollet! River near their Peticodiac, N. | B., homes. They had gone fish-| ing Friday. : "Lon Alexander Paly, 16. of| Coverdale, N.B., drowned Satur- day when a canoe upset in an | artificial lake at the naval base ; from Digby. near his home. Four other’ ton. Navy divers Sunday recovered the body of Patrick Michael 14-year-old girl | Robinson, 12, who drowned when he fell into tide waters under a ' railway bridge near his Joggins 2. of Bridge. N.S. home, several miles INSIDE TODAY Births, deaths ... . 12, B -3 2 a ia RCAF at Beausejour, Man., | “Va- | HONOLULU (AP) — For Father's Day, third-grader Rodney Cavaco, 9, wrote this tribute: “My father is the world's greatest guy. He goes to work every day. We go to church every Sunday with him. He doesn’t smoke and doesn’t drink liquor. “He sees that we get to school on time. He helps my sister and brother and me ** with our homework. When we are sick, he worries. ‘He takes us to the beach and other places when we ask him. He plays baseball with us in different parks. “I would never change him for another father be- cause he also takes the place of our mother.” te air strikes, launched from | the carriers Midway and Oris- | Pea were carried out by jet fighter-bombers and the propel- | jler-driven Skyraiders. } Cost Of Fines Not Deductible OTTAWA (CP)—The tax ap- peal board ruled Saturday that money paid in highway traffie fines is not deductible from tax- | able income. It made the ruling in reject ing an appeal by Tank Truck ' Transportation Limited against its. income tax assessments for .1959, 1960 and 1961. | The company, which trans- \ports chemicals, acids and jgases between Port Arthur and ‘Halifax, claimed deductions jamounting. to $2,552 for the three years. It said the mony was paid in traffic fines and was an outlay by the taxpayer jfor the purpos of doing busi- students | __ He had teen play-, ing under the railway bridge) youths in the canoe swam to! with other children. | safety. Coverdale is near Mone- Lorraine Grace Smith, 14. died in a Halifax hospital Saturday | night after she fell and struck | her head on pavement near her Hubbards, N.S., home RCAF Set. Norman Kerry | Ralph. 30, was killed at Sydney, N.S. Saturday night when a car in which he was driving struck parked truck. Stationed with | he was taking a_ six-weeks course at the Sydney base. Two) other RCAF personnel in the car’ . | Teceived minor injuries. A head-on collision between two cars Friday night at Bac- caro, N.S., killed Victor Crowell } j of Upper Port Latour, N.S., and Joseph Angus Lelievre, 22, stat- joned with the RCAF at Bar- rington, N.S_.Crowell died Sun. day in a Shelburne hospital. OE SS RTT the streets |F PILOT ESCAPES WITH MINOR INJURIES A Halifax man, Samuel Ross, escaped with only minor injuries Saturday when a at the Mt. Pleasant airport. He was taking part in spot- landing comipetitions when he i! jceemererets 8 cant 9 struck hightension wire: Hit NEW YORK /(AP)—Poign- ant pictures of two war-or- phaned Vietnamese young- sters—one a wounded, weep- ing girl and the other a defi- ant, suspicious boy, both about 5 — have touched the hearts of many people. The photos were taken by Horst Faas, a Pulitzer Prize- winning Associated Press photographer, in the after- math of fierce battles be- tween South Vietnamese sol- diers and Viet Cong guerril- las. The little girl, barefoot and clad only in dark pantaloons, her left arm and_ hand swathed in bandages, is shown limping through the rubble of Dong Xoai. Her par- ents were killed in the battle that raged through the town. “We want this little girl to love and take care of with eur four children.” wrote a couple from Ontario. Calif., to The Associated Press. . WOUNDED, WEEPING GIRL POIGNANT WAR PICTURES TOUCH HEARTS OF MANY A * Proctor, Vt., man also wanted to be put in touch with Faas “‘to find out if it is possible to adopt her if she has no other place,” and a man in Issaquah, Wash., wrote to the Seattle Times: “Our family talked about it - . . we would like to see about adopting her.” The little boy, who was the only survivor found by South Vietnamese soldiers when they entered the destroyed rubber plantation town of Thuan Loi, touched a farm woman in Newark, Ohio. “I will not rest. until I can somehow find out about this little one (and) the possibility of getting him and giving him a loving home.’ The possibilities of finding either .of the two youngsters again are slim. In the confu- sion that followed the fight- ing, neither was identified. But Faas and The Associated Press promised to try. “~e four-passenger Mooney motin-~ ster fly-in and air show spon plane, seen here. was consid- ered too — damaged to be repaired. Mr..Ross was taking sored by the Mt. Pleasant Flv ing Club and Services. Thirty-four aircraft part im the second annual lob took part Island Flying story on page 3) Swings In LONDON (CP)—After a pain- ful birth, the Commonwealth ipeace mission took its first steps during the weekend with a plea to “all parties” in the | Vietnamese fighting to show re- |straint as an initial move to ward negotiation. The mission of four prime ministers led by Britain's Har- old Wilson also announced Sun- iday it hopes to see U Thant, Secretary-General of the United Nations, in the opening phase of its peace offensive. The main significance was that the mission came to life at, all—and with considerable |vigor—since its formation - had |been threatened by dissension in the 21-nation Commonwealth prime ministers’ conference where it was first proposed by Wilson Thursday. The moves came during a | working - social weekend in iwhich the visiting government heads from around the world were entertained at Chequers and Dorney Wood, two govern- +ment country houses in Buck- | inghamshire. CAUSE WORRY They -were accompanied by considerable «worry and agita- tion amiong the prime ministers and presidents as news came in lof an Algerian coup in which ienne, his former defence chief. Thirteen of the Commonwealth leaders. were scheduled to at- tend an Afro - Asian summit meeting im Algiers beginning |June 29 and the coup not. only left the meeting in doubt but also could have implications for }the peace mission. | Algeria is considered one of |the key countries in the diplo- jmatic struggle between the two Communist giants, the Soviet Union and China, and observers |say Boumedienne leans more to |Peking than to Moscow. Ben Bella was regarded as, compar- atively, a Moscow man. The Algiers summit was seen |President Ben Bella was. over-| thrown by Col. Houari Boumed-' "4 « | a Four-Member Group to Action as a sort of diplomatic battle ground between China and Rus- sia and, the Commonwealth peace mission, inspired by Wil- son, was appointed with an eye to its impact on the Afro-Asia® statesmen: meeting there. Wilson, meanwhile, was praised Sunday in most British newspapers for his success in’ sparking into action the mission on which the other serving gov- ernment heads are President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria and Dr. Erie Williams of Trinidad-Tobago. The mission hoped to see Thant on a forthcoming visit to Europe, possibly in Geneva, be- fore heading on its planned visits to Peking, Hanoi, Saigon, Moscow and Washington. SUPPORT IDEA The mission came under at tack Friday — principally from Tanzania and Kenya, the East Aftican neighbor states—but # became clear during the week- end that the main body of prime ministerial opinion supports the initiative despite reservations. Prime Minister Pearson, who was among several prime min- isters at . Chequers, Wilson's country residence, Friday night, told reporters Sunday he now felt more optimistic about the mission's prospects than he had earlier. Humphrey Talks. With De Gaulle PARIS ‘(AP)—U.S. Vice-Pres. ident Hubert H. Humphrey had a lengthy meeting with Presi- dent de Gaulle Sunday and afterward told reporters that friendship betwen the United States and France “has beer enduring and will continue te Humphrey said he brought from President Johnson a “warm greeting and expression of friendship” to de Gaull. Criticism Of United States Is Rippling Across Japan TOKYO (AP) — A wave of comment that tends to dis- credit the Americans in Viet Nam and tarnish the U.S. image in Asia ripples across Japan to- day. The movement, # it can be called such, is carried on through newspapers, magazines, screen and television.. It_ is spurred on -by mass media which pride themselves on be- ing non-Communist and on not being influenced or controlled by the Communists. A steady flow of often biased or slanted reports has appeared in Japan. The Japanese don't necessar- ily see eye-to-eye with Ameri- ~ cans. That's to be expected. But , there have heen- instances , where Japanese editors pre- ferred Chinese Communist oe North Vietnamese versions over reports by correspondents of the Western world. Some editors contend that Americans don’t understand Asians and the As- ians should be allowed te iron out their own differences. Thus, American bombings of North Viet Nam are repeatedly condemned. So were last spring's use of noxious gas and the U.S. military build-up in the south. CRITICISM ONE-SIDED There is seldom any condem nation of Viet Cong attacks, of North Viet Nam refusing to re- spond to U.S. offers proposing Negotiations for peace talks, and of the possibility. of the Communists rather than the US. oe the war LACONIA, N.H. (AP) — More |than 40 members of a mob esti- mated by police at up to 5,008 |persons that rioted at Weirs Beach Saturday night face pos- lsible charges under a tough |New Hampshire law passed in anticipation of the outburst. They were among those ar- Tested by state police and Lac- onia’s police force. reinforced especially for four days of mo- torceycle racing at nearby Lou- don Police Chief Harold Knowlton of Laconia. said Sunday night processing of those arrested was continuing and an accurate count of those charged was nof available immediately The crowd, mostly motor: cycle enthusiasts on hand for a four-day racing event in nearby Loudon, broke windows. set fire ‘to buildings, overturned auto mobiles, and waged a guerrilla- like skirmish with police and | national guardsmen throughout the night F iain i The main street of the Lake | AO Arrested In Town |As 5,000 Stage Riot Winnipesaukee summer resert was left a mass of rubble. lit tered with beer cans and bot- tles, overturned, garbage cans. and the smouldering ruin of a burned automohile The riot was broken up bv local and special police. by state troopers firing pellets of rock salt. and by national cuards men. A national guard helicopter hovered Over the scene at the riot's peak, dropping tear gas pellets. More than 7) persons were injured, at least 19 seriously. Thousands of dollars damage was done. Governor John W King. whe was at the scene most of the night, said Sunday he would urge that the new law's full weight be brought te bear against the offenders The statute. enacted only twe jdays before the riot. provides for fines of up to $1,000 and jail terms of up to three for conviction. ,