If It's Good For The Island "motion WEATHER Sunny and warmer, with a few cloudy in- Tbe Guardian Is For It fifiiensorthwest winds 15. Low-high ' “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” rm - mud cm- ” w m M one-r CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1964. NM Mans SEVEN CENTS 13 pAGEs VOL. LXXVII. N0. 138 _..—— Dopartmcnt. Ottawa. and for payment at postage to out NO DECISION EXPECTED FOR SOME TIME BY FARMER TISSINGTON Capital Bureau. The Guardian OTTAWA — Tentative discus sions have been held between oration and an Radi Broadcasting Co. about the pos- sible sale of Y radio and television, Charlottetown. to the CBC spokesman for the mac said here Thursday that no decision is expected to be made for quite some time and no iirm offers have. been made by the government-owned cor- poration. The CBC explained that possible acquisition of a P outlet is in line with the cor- porations desire to get a full timc CBC service into every province and every important community In Canada. At pres- ent, the Charlottetown outlets arc only affilitated with the CBC and are privately owned. Thr Island presents a special the .E.T. ‘l nlaiion and no immediate deci- sion Ls contemplated because the priority is not high. the CBC spokesman said_ .\ representative of the Board neither side is currently press- in: the matter. The board would only become officially involved if approval of a change in own- ership was sought. The EEG spokesman pointed out that the CBC had asked the lo Federal "Naked political power" will be used to split up economic re- sources as long as federal and provmcial governments figure out on their own the amounts they spend-ion theif'own pro- grams. Jacques Parizeau of Montreal said in Charlottetown Thursday. If the provinces continue win- ning. the limit could be reached "when Ottawa would no more be in a position to carry on as a federal government." the Uni versin of Montreal political science. professor said. Prof. Parizeau was speaidn at a joint meeting of the Cana- dian Association of Law Teach- ers and the Canadian Political Science Association. discussing economic policy in a federation. The federal government. re- acting to pressure. may have to allow provinces to “opt out" of joint federal-provincial pro grams. which for some prov- inccs can only be a hindrance to provincial planning. he said. Quebec particularly was in this position. And for Quebec. opting out under' the proper conditions. could drive the first economic foundation to two as- sociated nations he said. ' OPTING OUT INVOLVED Prof. P a r i z e a u suggested these conditions involved opting out of nearly every joint pro- gram with no strict agreements with respect to the use of funds. E In the past. shared costs or. Labor Retains liver Seat LIVERPOOL, England (Reu- tersi — The Opposition Labor Party retained the Liverpool Parliamentary seat y- election Thursday. 2 Sentenced For Robb. HALIFAX (CF) -- o Mont- real men were ‘each sentenced Thursday to eight years In penitentiary while police con- mu the search for a third suspect in the armed robbery earlier this month of a' Bank of Montreal branch here. 'Allan Rutter and James Hor- hck. both as. had pleaded guilty to armed robbery charges when they appeared at Police- court a week ago. i . l I I board some time ago to resorve Channel 13 for possible later ;CBC television use. {board had declined to take that but th e' [Tentative Discussions Held On Sale Of CFCY To The CBC make another application for use of the channel and if it was granted it ould CFCY television would have tol move to another channel. the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- i action. The corporation could .o _ ; By THE CANADIAN PRESS i Floodwaters cut highways and railways in northern British l Columbia Thursday and turned the farmlands of the lower Fra- ser River Valley into a huge lake. ‘ Meanwhile a full-scale clean- rase because of its small pop-i up operation was launched Ia lthe Waterton Lakes National : Park resort area of southwest lAlberta followmg devastating ,i floods earlier this week which caused an estimated $1000.00" of Broadcast N 58 d damage. the board has that the- . . . commation has hulking m In B r t t i s h Columbia the the licensee 0f ".5 mud on“ Nechako and Fraser Rivers at lets but they under-stand t; north - central Prince George I, were reported rising at a slower pace. but Cottonwood Island at the concourse of the snow- swollen rivers was all but In- l undated. l High tides were blamed .m l flooding east of coastal Prince Growing lhreat Noted Authority rangements belped- provinces carry out projects they could not afford. "In‘thc " . , mtg.th may serve . gse' N it»- find the funds required for Ild~ tional policies." Prof. Parlzeau said. The federal government must insist that the fiscal resources given to provinces be used for the same purpose and accord- ing to the same standards tnat were defined In the joint pro- gram. he said. “Otherwise the impact of central policies on the economy are bound to shrink further." Prof. Parizeau said that can; through a process of continuous negotiations between govern. ments is there any hope to “clear up the present mess and to arrive at working arrange- ments that will have a certain degree of stability." He warned against attempt- ing. in present circumstances. a full revision or redrafting oi the constitution. Any "rational solutionto urgent programs of economic policies might have. to be postponed for'a long time" if this were attempted. lower Fraser Valley mean that . GOV’T SPOI LS GlR'l’S CHANCE OTTAWA (CPi——Advice.lto young ladies: Don't marry a man because he is close to the grave and you have your eye on widow's bene- fits under title Canada Pen- sion Plan, overnment has thought about that possibil- ity. Pension-plan details an- nounced Wednesday by Prime Minister Pearson in- cluded this notation: "Benefit reduced if more riage of less than three years‘ duration and admin- istrative authority not satis- fied that anticipation of im- pending death was not consideration affecting agreement to marry." Rupert in lhe north and at thel mouth of the Fraser River all Vancouver. Drift logs and other debris swept toward the mouth bythei Fraser were stalled by the; tides and backed up against oi causeway. almost closing out: RAILWAY SUBMERGED The raging Skeena River. bui- stored by high tides, overflowel. its banks and submerged the Canadian National Railway; line to Prince Rupert undu- three feet of water. Becomes Huge lake es To Jail ST. AUGUSTINE. Fla. (AP) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. pushing a massive racial de- segregation drive here. landed in jail Thursday for trying to. eat In a motel restaurant re- served for whites. Although a federal court or- der Tuesday limits bond to $100 a charge. none of the demon- strators was expected to post bond. King had announced be- forehand he was willing to go to jail and had no plans to bail himself out. in keeping with his practice of remaining behind bars to dramatize his cause. CNR officials In Vancouver 2 said crews were working to get ' the line open and hoped service would continue Thursday night. The same river cut the north- ern Trans - Provincial Highway in several places, most set iously east and west of TeI- race. mid-way between Prince George and Prince Rupert. Further south in the Caribou region the government - own Pacific Great Eastern Railway. only rail link to the north. was washed out by a boiling moun- tain stream. Extent of washout was not immediater W 5 O F. :7 (- Parliament AtA algae . fl . ._ ‘ "a... _ By run CANADIAN PRES THURSDAY. June 11. 196'! Opening of diplomatic rela- tions and a three-year trade agreement with Hungary was announced in the Commons. P rime Minister Pearson said the government's pro- posed. flag will be test flown Friday on Parliament Hill. Immigration Minister Trem- blay was barraged with ques- tions about the hiring of a $7.500-a-year assistant in his riding. The government‘s farm credit legislation w a 5 de- scribed by Jack Hornet tPC-—-- Acadia) as a millionaire‘s ap- proach to agriculture. Charges and er- charges of political patronage in giving farm loans flew across The Senate gave reading to a bill amending the Corporations and Labor Unions Returns Act. Gottfngsn lllector Street branch was rob- bed of about $10,000. Police said they recove a I rc-st. but the not disclosed Mrs. Baird had pleaded not Why to armed robbery char-g. 08. She was acquitted in court Thursday. m police custody after the crown “I'M to produce evidence link- lnil her with the robbery. iAsslstant crown. prosecutor e Ham- said a a. .3. N no howlle of the crime hHmQI dun“ u ‘ "mum s pouva exact amount was i i Dr. Marcel Trudel. of Lav- al University (control. with Queens County Member of Parliament Heath quarrle (left). and Pro. brace W. Hodglns. of the Uni- vorslty of Western torlo. at a Montgomery Hall reception prior to the annual dinner of the Canadian Historical Asso- ti‘ HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION nouns DINNER elation last evening. Dr. Tru- nor on the linguistic problems exist.- in log the 10th century be- tween the Pro and— not ngtt thisttme—tho the nonalitisa bad mannered. Prince MP iMayGet New Post CAPITAL BUREAU ON THE GUARDIAN ; 'W‘Miillionaire's Approach' e OTTAWA -— There is increas- ed speculation here that Solici- tor-General J}. Watson N! A ” ‘ he. the ne‘w‘g’o'vernmen't ou s . leader. This week the Hon. Guy Favreau. present house leader. indicated on a television pro- gram thai he would ask Prime Minister Pearson to relieve him mem. mmigra’rion Head Under Barrage Of THAN Silent nsulis Registration for the mem- bers of the Maritime Grand Council of the. order of Unit- ed Commercial Travellers of America meeting in Char- lottetown Friday and Saturday took place last night at. the OTTAWA (CPl—The govern. 5 proposed changes in the 0f the d‘mes' He said that “9 Farm Credit Corporation’s lend- finds the job of minister of jus- tice and federal leader for Que- bec too onerous when combin- ed with house leadership. n the Commons this cek under direct Opposition ques- tioning, Mr. Pearson admitted having discussed the question wit Mr. Favreau' but expres- sed the hope he would continue in the position. However, obser- vers here. believe that a change will be made soon. although if it is not made right away, it may be delayed until after thr. flag debate is conclu e Mr. MacNaught has been the deputy leader since .the Liber- als took over the government more than a car ago. He act- ed originally as deputy under former house leader J. W. Pick- (Continued on Page 3 Col. 5) and noted that communication had to be largely in the. Hur- on language: that the first at- tempts at bilingualism had been a failure. Dr. Trudel then went on to point out that. with the teaching aids available today. the man who is not bilingual is intellectual- ly poor. 1 l ing facilities were described by: a Conservative b a c k bencher E Thursday as the millionairc's , l POT/97055 ’t COMMERCIAI. TRAVELLERS REGISTER HERE Charlottetown Hotel. S e e is here receiving a box it veneirs in a P.E.l. table po- tato box is second from right. C. L. Chase. Watertown. South Dakota. supreme council rep- resentative. From left. to right are: Byron H. Thomas. Saint u. approach to the problems of agriculture. The amendments. doubling the amount of loans available, to farmers, are not what‘sl really needed, .lack Hornet (PC; l l OTTAWA (CPl ——'I‘he former and the present ministers of fisheries disagreed Thursday on where the base points for Can- ada's proposed lZ-mile fishing zone can be established -— on land or at sea. J. Angus MacLean. former Conservative fisheries minister. said the wording of the govern- ment's measure establishing a 12-mile territorial zone off the coastline is not precise in loca- ting the base points. He suggested a future. goveia- ment could set the base poinis out to sea—thus extending the 12-mile limit even farther. But Fisheries Minister Roblv chaud. appearing before the Commons committee on marine and fisheries. said the geo- graphical co-ordinates would be based on a point of land. To 00 otherwise would violate inter- national practice. he said. No government would have the authority or right to estao Iish base points that went l l Sngainst international practice... l he said. Mr. MacLean suggested Ihc' Maclean, Roblchaud Disagree Over Zone elude a clause to indicate that Canada has no intention of establishing base points for the 12 - mile territorial sea that would fly in the face of Inter- national practice. The marine-fisheries commit- tee is studying the government measure that would extend the present three-mile fishing zone to 12 miles. The legislation eni- powers the cabinet to set the base points from which the 12- mile limit would be extended. Frank Howard (NDP Skeenal said the l2-mile limit by itself will not help Canadian efforts to conserve fisheries supplies. Mr. Roblchaud said it would have to be. supplemcnted by inle rnational conventions to safeguard species that migrate into international waters. l Mr. Roblchaud also told thel committee that Canada intenoal to establish the. lZ-mile, limit. regardless of the outcome of negotiations with c n u n t r i e i‘ claiming h I s for Ic or treaty rights to fish in Canadian; 1' government measure should inv l coastal waters. , Presbyterians Will Fight ‘ Forces Splitting Canada TORONTO (CPI ~ Presbyter- Thursday pledged them- selves to find ways "through business of assembly. The re.- ; the spirit of Christian love" mt ignation of Rev. J. Alan Mutiro i fight the forces splitting French I was submitted Wednesday. and English Canada The church‘s gest of overcoming it through “the Christian ministry! til Aug. 31, 1965. of reconciliation. 90m genera. ' board chairman. Rev. 1). I“. assembly asked its board of : Evans of Thornhill. Ont. Thurs- evangclism and social action to ; day described Dr. Munro as a study the problem and to sup. great missionary statesman. Rev. .1, K. L. McGowan 01‘ Milton. Onl.. introduced the hi" ‘ b olution. He stressed the urgency I of strengthening unity between 3 proposed by "w adminis'mnw council. It turned down appears from the overseas mission partment and the audio-visual committee for increases. will the til presbytcries across Coir Toronto. June 1, 1 the two groups. crisis may be lessened by next year "because of what we have done." _ A call for nominations tron. i He said the (‘onfcdcratlonl ads for the office of home mis~ sions secretary was the final resolution read by the mission He will continue in office nil-- After lengthy debate over the past two days on the details of the budget for 1905. the assem- l approved authorized esti- ms... totalling s2.oaa.2sn as de— 91st meet General Assembly In .Calvin Church. John. Maritime grand counsel- ‘ lor; Ivan Kerry. senior coun- sellor of the Charlottetown group who made the presen- tation to Mr. Chase: Mr. Chase and Robert G. Legere. . incumbent grand Junior coun- 1 sellor. of Moncton. N.B. i “ed To Farm Problem . l —Acadlal told the Commons} More important was the ques- ; tion of extending easier credit: to the small farmer. now notl always able to qualify. ' Fifty - five per cent of the, applications received by the] corporation have been turned! own. he said. and the amend-‘ ments now being proposed by the government would not help should be done to help the many farmers. Something} small Operator who wanted to; improve his farm. la a y e a r. Saskatchewan . farmers received more than ' 2,000 loans while only 60 Nova! Scotia farmers received moueyl from the corporation. The average income for Que- bec farmers was $1,200. “Howl can farmers in these areas payl back loans of $40,000" -—- the" new ceiling for individual farm- Mr. Horner asked. Present loan ceilings are $20.- 000 and $27.500—the latter for a supervised loan—and under the' bill they will be doubled to] $40,000 and $55,000. The corporw “tion's lending capacny is he' i stance would then bind the ra- ldioactivity - containing stron- glum which is the" excreted. was transferred into the Royal urn the (.xperiments can. Flying Corps. Later. when too lducted at McGill the sodium RCAF was formed. he becam- a l g in a I e was administered 0"? 0f “5 “PSI DIIOI-S- ‘orally and It resulted in the se- MY. Willlln was all electrical engineer with the Canadian sorpiion of the radioactive stron- W e s t, inghouse Corporation In tium." .Hamilton during peacetime. ing increased to $600,000,000 from $400,000,. l . Agriculture Minister Hays ‘ it is important to make more. money available for loan: because last year Canadian frmers ‘ m E. a. est rates above 10 per cent 'vid-ual who is in a possible fall- borrowed 3235.00.000l1ective suppression of thc ab- outside. the corporation at inter 1 Assistant Naming ‘Queried . OTTAWA (CPL-Immigration ‘ Minister Tremblay sat silent Ln 1 the. Commons Thursday while Opposition questions and insults ' rained down on him i W b y. the Opposition de« l manded, had Mr. Tremblay ap- l pointed Andre Cote to work as 1 his special assistant at $7.500 a i year at Bale Des Sables, Que? What were Mr. Cote's duties? lWhat was the purpose of the ; appointment? l Mr. Tremblay declined to say ; anything and Prime Minister ‘ Pearson and the rest. of the Liberal front bench looked more and more flustered as the Oppo- sition barrage went on. Privy Council President Mc- Ilraith said a person may be appointed to serve a minister in any area. not. only Ottawa. __ _> He said this practice had Wm gone on for great many F yea s. as Opposuion Leader Diefenbaker knew. Mr. Diefenbaker was on his feet in a flash. PAID OWN EXPENSES “i paid for my own office in Prince Albert out of my own 1 pocket." be snapped. HALIFAX fCPl .— A method, Mr. McIlraith said he. had not whereby food contaminated by: intendEd any reflection on Mt. atomic fallout and radioactivity Diefenbaker. But colleagues of eaten without harmful the former prime minister had described Thursdayl assistants in their ridings over Food Aid effect was at a eeting of the Canadian| the objections of Mr. Dieten- Fed eration of Biological 1 baker. (Sciences. ‘ Mr. Diefenbaker said this ro« l pt Deirdre Edward. research. mark was without justification. at the Montreal‘ The OPPOSItlon leader then lUniversny_ and r. T. M_' went to work with a will on Paul. both of whom are‘ Mr- Tremblay. working actively on we pro.‘ What work did Mr. Cole doi ject, reported to the conference What were MP- COWS duties? ‘how experiments at the labora- "Tell US the fads." he said tory demonstrated how the ab- directly to Mr. Tremblal- sorption of radio-active stron- tium in contaminated food can SHOULD EXPLAIN be selectively repressed In the Surely" M" D'Efenbaker “"19 V. a minister who spent 57.500 of ' the taxpayers' money should tell how it was spent. Dr. Edward said: The material which acts as a‘ It 1001“ like a patronage suppressant of the dangerousl . ‘ ' strontium is sodium alginate, a ‘contmued on page 3 0°" 2‘ compound derived from kelp—w brown seaweed which is inl ' abundant supply on the N'ova veteran Scotia coast and in other parts ’ , o. M... W... Buried In Ont. A brief resume of the experi- ments issued to the press said:l CAMPBELLFORD. Ont. (CP) "The discovery that radio-l figletggderf active strontium can be boun l .H 't ' ‘1: e 1"! 3y cefrtain seaweed colloids andl :1": 58 :ofigzeloxfi of”: 51:32:, ere ore its passage t-hro . . . the intestinal wall into the "59d “Ll” lightlng airport run- bloodstream prevented. mav ways troughOUt North Amer' have a far - reaching aignifi- “‘3' “I” Purim! here ThurSday' cance’ It would enable an indi- He d'od m hosp'tal. sundny m Peterborough, 25 miles west of out area to take the solution here' containing the seaweed colloid “9w” hm“ {ind *dllcaled "1 together with food. This sub-‘Ham'lt‘m- Dun“ the ‘lm World War he. served overseas with the Canadian Army. then Government Again Bars Rates In OTTAWA (CPinhe federal cabinet has again barred the major railways from boosting freight rates on bulk grain ship- ments from Great Lakes eleva-‘ tors to East Coast and St. Law- I rence River ports. The latest suspension will c01- tinue. until Dec. .11. 1964. The. railways were authorized by the Board of Transport Coin ‘ missioners to raise rates~-known In the the “at and cast" April I. 1961. But successive cabinets~-flr..t the Conservatives and now the the gram trade as rates—mi Liberals—have. stepped in and5 stopped the Increase from gotng into effect. The railways originally sougni a sit-cent rate on 100 pounds oil wheat hauled from Great Lakes elevators—«nostly on Georgian Bay—to St. Lawrence River and East Coast ports. The. carriers argued that the existing rate of 251/. cents. in- cluding some switching and etc- vation charges. was so low they crease On Grain actually were losing money on i to get Parliamentary approval l the traffic. or its long-promised railway ' The federal board of transport‘. legislation based on the Mac- commissioncrs agreed the ralel Pherson royal commission re. was non - compensatory and; port on transportation problems. granted an increase to 33 cents‘ Tho”, have hm," report, that per 100 pounds in 195‘ l the legislation will Include a Both the Wcsl and Ill? Mdli'l subsidy to keep the "at and times fought the MUM.“ 0" “19 east" grain rates at their pres- . increase. The Prairies said the. on, level. ‘ farmers would hear the hurdeni Meanwhth another "em": rate. deadline comes up at the end of this month. The railways have voluntarily lkept freight rates frozen on a month-to-month basis for more I two years. The latest freeze expires .lune. {lo-mule" the railways again agree to keep rates at the present level. l of paying the higher cost uililc th Atlantic porls fcarcd thatl 1 traffic would be diverted to US ports I l The latcsl dclay EIN‘S “19 . government an extra six months h“ ‘ INSIDE TODA :ImIIleglmh'LI...“ 1:: The "rm goes back to ma Comics , . is when the Board of rransport fiinmé’hhnrko“ h ‘2 Commissmners authorized the SW" ' >_ H . m. n railways to boost their rates by . Rural churches ti ‘7 p" "I"; “‘0 EOVH‘flment tn- Editorlals , l I”""""‘- 'ml'mSNI I f -I Kings. Queens. Cit . I . and pm “I‘ “ “0.000.000 annual :' Summersido ............ .. s ; subsidy that rolled back the 11. , Prince Co. . a v Percent "Imam I010»: mt. -; ‘. , lThlswaslatercntm'toeighs » w'"“""' ' per cent. i ii