as " 4808. Civilian Wedned ff It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 196 Authorized as Department 0 EDUCATION COSTS DEBATED 25 Per Cent Ta... Is Predicted For city. — Charlotttown residents can expect a 25 per cent hike in ci- vie taxes unless the provincial government supplies tion costs The tax increase estimate pre- dicted at yesterday's city council Meeting by finance ch rman W.R. MacNeill His prediction followed discus- sion. on the ‘sroposed construc- tion ofa $900,000 ta $1,000,000 hice school for the city. The burden of educating Char- regular | \ ting right now, taxes will go up 25 per cent,:’ Cgun, MacNeill said. HORRIBLE OUTLOOK Terming the tax increase “horrible outlook’, he -. added that it was each citizen's duty to “get after their reprezentatives in the provincial Jegislature to work hard for a beter financial settlement than now seems to be_available."’ = Mayor Walter Cox said Char- lottetown and Summerside to meet financial aid for the city’s rising educa-- — - Che Guardian Cloudy with showers; w@ “Covers Prince—Edward Island Like The Dew” ow. ws 3 ow? est to keep hammering at the door of the provincial government.” Summerside received a $6,000) per classroom grant from the, province when it tbuilt a new high school some years ago, and CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1965. 772 Valuable Blackened By mor MORES SEVEN CENTS .S. Woods — Two Fires it is believed Charlottetown may be accorded similar aid. Other districts in the pro- vince, however, have received from the government 60 per ‘cent of the costs of such buildings. Mayor Cox said he was look- ing for a continuing grant from the province towards education WEATHER thwest winds increasing to 25. Low-high 62 and 70, Wednesday: showers, clearing by evening. 14 PAGES Outbreaks Said ~Worst In Years: lotietown's grade 11 and 12 stu- School boards planned te pet costs. dent: has been Shifted.to ¢ivie and would seek more financial Coun. Arthur Wright ‘said he | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | said in Halifax the province has shoulders with the announce- help from the provincial govern- would feel ‘‘very reluctant” to | Driven by fierce winds and a requested Canso water bombers merit Prince of Wales College Ment settle for a $6,000 per classroom relentless sun two forest fires from Newfoundland, but that wi'! exit shortly from the high —He said he had approached the allocation. raged in some of Nova Scotia's province was coming te grips: school field ministers of education and mu- ‘‘For years we've been under) most valuable timberland Mon- with its own fires. li we get no more help from Other sources than we are get- nicipal affairs on the — situation and “it is certainly my intention an onus of a peculiar ‘setup for’ ‘Continued on page 5 Col. 3) Trapped In Blazing Silo * “SEARCY, Ark ae (AP). — U:S, Air -Force_ personnel began bringing bodies out of a Titan 1! missile silé Monday night af- ter fire broke out in it earlier in. the. day, apparently trapping 48 civilian workers inside. Four: bodies. were brought out of the silo. Capt. Douglas Wood, public information officer at the site, said another unaccounted for and presumed inside _the missile’ complex. Their--fate-was unknown... “Identities of the four dead 4 civilians were) ~-bas..no0 men were not available Earlier, heat and smoke had thwarted attempts of air force fire-fighters to get down into the silo and determine the condition of the men inside the launch tube. E 7 In Washington President John- son ordered that every effort be made to save the missing men. The Titan missile, designed to carry atomic warheads conti- nental distances, was in posi- tions but the air force said it information...a-b.o ut whether the rocket burned. | The air force said there was} ‘nd danger of a nuclear blast. | The silo, 15> miles northwest | of this central Arkansas town, was undergoing slight revision and updating at the hands of 51 civilian workmen. TWO MEN SAFE é Only. two of the workmen have been accounted for. One of them said 48 or 49 others were trapped inside the silo. Air force fire-fighters in as- bestos...suits .contained.-the fire, | which started about 3 p.m. but day. Forestry officials. said the fires were the worst in years. More than 100 men were pre- paring to make a stand against the worst fire at the Medway River, about 10 miles north of Liverpool. The other fire, near Bridgetown ih the Annapolis Valley, was also out of control and had destroyed two homes. In most sections of New Nova. Scotia's other bad fire was to the northwest of the Medway fire and located in the timber and farming district of Dalhousie West near Bridge- town, It had burned about 9 acres: BLAZE FLARED ' A small fire started there about a week ago and burned 'four acres. A fire flared up Brunswick rain fell Monday and there again Sunday and raced helped forestry men contain two within two miles of the village eerious fires that had burned a of Dalhousie West. It destroyed total of 6,000 acres. |@~-house—owned—by Mrs. Isaae In Washington County, Me., Taylor of Bridgetown, along the New Brunswick bor- The flames also levelled the der, forestry officials said. they home and barn of Mr. and Mrs. were mopping up a blaze that! Alton Taylor. They lost all their whipped across: 13,000 acres of | belongings. bog. Described as the worst fire The worst fires in New Bruns- in the state since 1947, it was wick—one at Salmon River that still considered potentially dan-|had burned “more than 4,500 gerous because it would smoul- -acres,and— at Bronson where der im -the ground for weeks. |1,300 acres were destroyed and 23 families forced to flee their ENDANGER HOMES homes temporarily—were under The a near yee NS., eontrol. Both fires are in the burned furiously ‘ou, prime ea of the vince. timber~on land ‘by Bo- central an baci waters—Mersey Ltd. About five homes. had been threatened but the occupants had not been evacuated by late Monday af- they were unable to get down! into the silo, where the missing |48 were presumed tobe. Billowing smoke and heat-pre- Mott Brothers Are Found Dead ( a é 5 : : ARTHUR MacRAF, promin- Lean, Farm Credit Corpora- P.E.I. federation of agriculture, rnoon | re W (f offin hi jvented the air force from es- ° dl | m : smarinttet (left) and Prior to last night's discussion fe : ee a ptablishing lines_of _communica- Grain-Han ers ent farmer of Sherwood, cen- tion, Charlottetown (left) a of agriculture problems caused | Lyndon Gray, district forester, wiLLINOCKET, Me. (AP)— jtion, even three hours after the tre, is flanked by David Mac- J. Lincoln Dewar, secretary by drought in this province. __|for Queens County, said his men ype Mott brothers from Roch- fire started. To End Walkout ' : gay a is st = the lester, N.Y., were found dead — a way River. | One of the workmen, Hubert; WONTREAL (CP) — Grain- ie aiver: ta” wheat 368 feet | Monday. A... Saunders, 59, a- paint fore-|pandlers and: allied workers in | The bodies of 17-year-old Rob- D iD ( As H 7 | might hold a i i i wide — there's a chance we ,. esc e a D man, said his fellow workmen the port of Montreal who have / . jbie, a mentally retarded dia- : : D y -{ ~~ trapper. in. the, silo...H@been on strike for almost eight ’ hare got 5 Eg ne sald” netic, and his three-year-old ; eles we ; said the fire started when ajweeks have voted te resume habe :Uhit tee laid sda “ae high | Prother Timmie lay in woods KEY W. ST, Fla. (AP) — The; Burywaise said he saw the: diesel engine exploded. \work today. , , a * is only a few miles from the banana boat Seven Seas. known as ‘‘a happy ship,” was a float- ing coffin Monday after a vio- ship's first mate, Aldrick Hinds, ,Shot to death in his bunk by a }crew member Saturday night as The air force declined com- ment on the cause of the fire. The overwhelming vote by the striking members of the Mon- Port Employees’ Union any water pick-ups.” The flames were burning on a {Roaring Brook campsite im Baxter State Park, from which they wandered 10 days ago. and Gary Wayne |treal 3 Saunders : lent human explosion left at the vessel was found from Mi- Lay. 18, of Clinton, were in (CNTU) came Monday in a sec- oe a cae _ Ast They had been sought -by ‘ least three of her crew dead, ami to a Tampa drydock for hospital here. Saunders suffered Tet ballot. It ended .a walkout ate of il ay, three- search . forces that had num-~<... four missing and the eighth repairs. “smoke inhalation. Lay suffered that several times erupted into quarters a mile away from bered up to 400 men. x 2 ; ‘the-Mill -Village~ satellite track- ‘ should be harvested, and that! ing he would name two of his ing station and across the river eu. ie a gitar fertilizer should.be used on pas-| department men to work on a from it. aine, me about oJ miles wes tures, or manure where it is| picked committee. that meets | -Gray said the wind had been f :the New Brunswick border. available for probable good fall *this afternoon to frame an offi- blowing towards ~ the tracking — The. _Search leader,_ Warden _ pastures, were some of the sug-| cial announcement in advice station during the day and eve- Supervisor.. David Priest, re- gestions made last night for gui-| and probable policy action. This ning, although it had died down Ported both boys apparently -dance-of Island farm people, at paper will ‘carry an__ official ‘slightly at night... had been dead for some time. — “la meeting’ “in Biren Court; “stateméat on Wednesday. It-was _ The river, extremely low -be--But. he told his.boss. fish and ~~ |Experimental Farm. . | Suggested that some federal aid cause of the ~~ record-breaking & am e— commissioner Ronald Panic Selling Of Beef Cattle Terrified, Burwaise said he ke _inhalati d first-de-|™ass marches, and spelled trou- : raced to the bridge to warn the eis "hens of the "heid, tk, ible for farmers as well as ship- The suggestion a slants |captain, Rogelio Diaz, but found arms and legs. pees: eee mais Of comet be pecking eas him also dead, lying in a pool =——— seaeerecnr anaes ee ee -work-resumption-Should. cease =-_better__prices Of hiead = jvote was a new two-year cén- are sighted im perhaps one Se : Learnt jtract proposal by the men’s em- month's time — that every avail- bea Bucpetie, 6 Mestria, said “ #¢_Youth-Held ployer, the .National_ Harbors able hay field in the province locker room and bolted himself t i : : | Boara~ emcee - inside in fear for his own life. Fo d | The board offered a total reek i : cla said. "We dont ‘xsow where |B Po ag ar a wurst r Mur er \Seay are eS we weadittiee te G Crisis. =|" Called by the federation _ of Might oe for eee in the area this year, gata ~ he couldn't estt- sae te SUTIN COTE have come tro a nea Cmte ea OR Ew ye g-- last Jan..1,-five -cents..ettective...1¢-Continued. 4____....agticulture,.the meeting discus-|on purchase Gide ee ee ; Not . inn ; ~,/men were shot. es ' . Bu ned problems that drought hae feed that—-may—-be--needed-—for-.of keeping flames-—from-=the~-Dy...... Norman... Nickerson... ae Loree captain carried Coast guardsmen, finding only. t Yarmou from the date of the contract Sed peomerss: tat ‘drough this livestock, because of poor pas- tracking station if the wind di- medical examiner, was cal | si ive: ATHENS. (AP) — King Con- yo ont + iculture_in > eS thr ies t i |signing and 15 cens effective) “*'* brought to agric his | , ‘ n But three and possibly: four vias ieoeeh thes ha HALIFAX (CP)—A youth was |from next Jan, 1. stantine’s attempt to. find & Drovince. It was not a public. tures. rection did not change. aoe ae to inspect the crew members had been shot thrown overboard. arrested in Yarmouth, N.S. The men left their jobs June|compromise premier for Greece meeting as such but was confin-| And poor pastures appear to) Chief Forester Bob man _ cowering in a locker room. “The crew was a_ cheerful crowd, like a family,"’ the wife of the 123° — foot -vessal's”" owner said as the Seven Seas came through rough seas under U.S. —Coast—Guard---tow--toward-—Key ere =, .-, Maras “There had never been a fight OR tment eee gas seen eccteneena: ° tac ia, : : i - * Snark be general in the province now, : to death, three apparently had Monday and is to be charged 16 seeking a 58-cent increase ended in defeat Monday, Con a4 to those who were invited by, Sob, ees oes 8 Se POR SANGO tay wih cis tn ea Se Mae ine MT aT ae coer 9 ies wee aco bury aeaee Building Steel Colla f j , Ms r er of $1.68. once again prosi L ee : foot skiff.and only one man was A massive search by planes, of Halifax schoolgirl Thais ie! Bs incledle ‘storage and/returning George Papandreou COMMITTEE TO MEET ition has dropped since mid-July, Ul Ing pses alive on aboard when the ship helicopters, ! patrol boats and a Marie was. found_adrift..in..the--Florida -eutter -was ‘ taunched © -for missing crew members, Haskins at Yarmouth ‘maintenance -employees-.as well to. power. -or calling.new elec- _ Agriculture Minister MacRae after having exceeded last who jas the actual grain-handlers. -tions. said near the close of the meet. year’s figures up to that time: | “proclaims itself. an independent 99 miles north of the RCAF sta- tlement,”” Rahman said:. “We The investigation followed the a pfactitioner of psychoanalysis. . | State. : tion at Cold Lake, 150 miles now separate on terms of sctstseisctseeeeesss. > suicide of a Catadian girl: in! Rolice have said that mem- : Ppa GoM. AIS KEY ISLAND northeast of Edmonton friendship.” | Finance, markets ...... 10 Paris earlier.this year. ome of |bers of several prominent Mont- “ ov L | Singapore is a key island in The_pilos, FO D. F. Scott, 21,/ He put the blame for the de- Women’s ......--.50+05+: 7 the charges date back 133 years. real families were “patients’” of , ELVIN BURYWAISE, 2, a “Seven Seas,” Mopday in sole survivor on board when (the Western defence of South-of Nipawin, Sask., parachuted velopment on Singapore’s poll-' Editorials .............:.. 4 Bundles of case. Kistories and |Lariviere. fiative of Honduras, is flank- Key West, Florida. Burywaise the ship docked Monday af- east Asia and the secession from the plane before it crashed ticians, saying they have been| Summerside ..-. vcr % other documents were taken to| Montreal policemen. and’ .pp- ed by federal-officials as he ‘i4.4 crew member killed the ternoon, after being towed in |move shocked Britain, Australia and was unhurt. opposing the federal govern. Kings, Queens, City ....:. 5 police headquarters. jlicewomen and _plainclothesmen tk: * ee Geass Ship's captain three other by a Coast Guard cutter. and New Zealand. The three A board of enquiry was set ment chi®fly on grounds of ee, ey s The officers vent through (took part in the investigation by walks pa cargo vessel, ‘crewmembers. was the . ‘AP Wirephoto) | countries have committed thou- \up. ‘race. ~; = Lariviere's residence and office, posing as patients. © ~ " “7 . “~s eee , ’ s : 3 =f : -" igen “ ‘ amg ons ~ > a sai th aac é “ 7 Se = s o = a - e . o thon sth e oa . ? : Straits Sunday between Florida and Cuba ; Pending arrival of the ship, the coast guard declined to speculate on whether it was mu- apparently fled the ship in a lifeboat powered only by oars. Hifds was a Honduran. Other crew members were Jose Abad, the July 29, RCMP announéed here Monday night. _The name of the: suspect ar- rested—by.. Yarmouth. RCMP. and town police was withheld until Secession Of Singapore One emphastic warning — it During Jackso came for the most part from Glen Cotton, provincial beef | JACKSONVILLE, Fla.. (AP) fieldman-——was.don't sacrifice *-Tons_of steel girders crashed your steers now. Feed them ‘to the ground as a section of a nville Storm The framework on the ene that fell was five storeys high Part of the. scaffolding weni i BODIES Sar eae C innate te Gites tana grain and eut your losses by new federal building under con- flying across the street and A boarding - party from the second engineer: Antonio For. the 16-year-old girl was found |getting a better price later on.”’ struction here collapsed during punched three holes in a build- coast guard cutter Cape Shoal-|nier, a Cuban: Robert Ramirez,|in a clump of bushes at Yar- ' e, °@ ° Be, Mackse oe Ss aaa oe ar gaa and high ing occupied by a blueprint water climbed onto the deserted a Cuban,, and Gerald Davison,|mouth. She had beem stabbed _‘Continued on page 3, col. | ne i. ‘steel gi fel "See k the re deck and had found three bod- a Honduran. j “113 times and died of a fractured | oc : S ri a j n US fa la Some of the steel girders fell People working __t re were tes when the surviver, Elvin The ship normally hauls ba- skull. RCMP believe she was ‘ , . Lace rate ann blocking the ghar ght en 5 un Burywaise, 25, emerged from|nanas from Caribbean ports to. struck by a rock found near : ; a dunes Ge him Macquarrie _— i ie artery. _ that the ilding eee the_locker_room in a-_forward | Florida, returning with general,’ cif | SINGAPORE ‘(CP)—Singapore sands of troops to the Hefence | Lee sai a ¢ | parked car and station street was coming down. y hold. | cargo. thear~ body. has seceded from the Malaysian of Mataysia: during-the-secret_talks in Kuala. o fi ;wagon.were crushed and three got back from the front wall. ' ; Federation and become an in- However, under-the secession Lumpur Saturday that separa- Al S Opening sr damaged, but the only’ Warren Hendrey, an archi- "® \dependent sovereign state under agreement, signed secretly Sat- tion was the only alter:ative to ; injury reported was to a by- tect, said he saw it fall from leadership of its left-wing prime joutlining a neutral course for |Singapore,- also announced his country would trade with. all countries; including Communist China. But the avowedly-anti- 5 |Communist—_Lee said, nothing 7 |about seeking diplomatic recog- Isition from Peking. His statement brought an’ an- gry blast.from Prime Minister “3 | Warning against Singapore having diplomatic relations with crush Malaysia on grounds it is a neo-colonialist plot against lit, Rahman told a press confer- jence: : = “If they (Singapore) do that, the -ebvious_intention “is to harm our interests. We can't allow that to happen. We world take action.” ~ Subandrio said Indonesia. recognize Singapore —if—it | mier “Gi will i +minister,_who_said_ Monday he Indonesia, which has sworn to / In Jakarta, first deputy pre-- urday, .Malaysia has the right the threat of -racial—strife—in to__station military forces in multi-racial Malaysia. dictions from Chinese Commu- “I told him that I thought nist: newspapers in Hong Kong. there was another way out, that that the federation faces dissélu-' we could remain in the federa- tion. ‘ : tion if iti were a little looser,” With Singapore's departure, Lee said: ‘But the Tunku said Malaysia consists of Malaya if we:-insisted he would not be (site of Kuala Lumpur) and the able to control . . ... He said Borneo states of Sarawak and there would be communal North Borneo. trouble and bloodshed if we did A bitter racial-political feud not get out. This was a mo- parently the prime factor in the the weekend pledged both: sides move. not to “enter Into any treaty Lee told_a_ press conference or agreement with a foreign Monday. that the decision for country which may be detri- his state to quit Malaysia and mental to the independence and become a sovereign unit was defence of the territory of the forced on him by Rahman other party.” ee Pee stgre et Rahman went ant $ televiston networks Trainer Crashes, ‘the breakaway move to the Ma- 7 : laysian people. He mephasized Pilot Is Unhurt that “this way is the best" to COLD LAKE, Alta (CP)—An fd the internal fight with Sing- RCAF - CF-104.. Starfighter jet Pore. ¢ z : trainer. crashed Monday about Calling on radio and to explain, it an_ ‘amicable set-| + stander—who-had--a—-cut—on—one {hand from flying debris. Gaelic Mod mod was opened here Monday would have been complete. his office in. a nearby building, It looked as if a heavy wind ‘caused the top part to fall, and- hopes - for diplomatic relations Singapore and Britain can con- | Shared by Malays, —Chinese- —_— a _ _— The—11-storey,- $7,000,000 build- and~trade with Indonesia. ~-tinue—using~ its bases -here: and.Indians,.the federation was sT.ANN’S, N.S.(CP) — The ing -was nearing the- stage it took ‘the lower framework Premier Lee Kuan Kew, in’ But the secession brought pre- formed Sept. 16, 1963. 27th annual Nova Scotia gaelic Where the steel framework with it as it went down, Hend- rey said. by Hughston McBain, chief of = Clan McBain. James MacKen- zie, world's champion highland dancer, and Seumas MacNeill, gold medalist piper from Scot- land, were guest performers at Monday's ceremonies. Lieutenant - Governor,_H-P. ’MacKeen took part in thé open: tive member of a ea for Lariviere, 47, was arraigned in Queens. The Gaelic_pllege pipe ‘criminal court Monday on 12 band: led _the“opening procession. charges of indecent assault, and Today (Tuesday) is Clan Mec- was released on $10,000 prop- Bain day, and Wednesday will erty bail for a preliminary hear- be Clan MacNaughton day with jing Aug. 12. ‘ ‘Mines Minister J. Watson Mac-! Police said Lariviere de Naught as special guest. scribed himself as a psychoan- alyst and included among. his patients a. number of women and girls. ~ 4 | The charges result from an investigation of his methods of treatment and consultation. Lar- jiviere was arrested Saturday. INSIDE TODAY > Classified *..........:. 12, 13 ‘Psychoanalyst’ Faces Charges |Tunku (Prince Abdul Rahman between largely-Chinese Singa- ment of anguish.” ing ceremonies along with John in Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian pore and federal leaders, most Rahman— noted that the sep- R. Matheson, and Heath Mac- capital. of whom are Malays, was ap- aration papers signed during | quarrie, Progressive Conserva- - MONTREAL (CP) — Andre his summer cottage near Ste. Adele, Que., a printing plant he jowns at Bethierville, Que. and ‘other facilities : Police said they have ob- tained statements in the case from a dozen patients’ and 15 persons said to have worked for him in various capacities. Lariviere was described by police as having taken univer- sity courses here courses in Paris. But police said they did not know whether he was qualified in medicine, psychology or as and. other |