If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For lt ‘VOL. LXXIX NO. 277 Lt-Cmdr. $6. Tomlinson’ of Halifax and Calgary. hands over command of the submarine Ojibwa John Rodocanachi Cmdr. & HANDS OVER COMMAND OF SUB Halifax. and” Victoria Lt.-. Cmdr. Tomlinson, who dow is on staff of the ist Canadian Submarine squadron in. Hali- fax. was Ojibwa's first com- LEFT 1965. Lt.- (CP Wirephote from of Defence) to oe ghivs wee ¥avilie givxas ® 9u1ay3u- * “Covers Prineo manding officer following her |. commissioning in September,” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1966. Edward Island Like The Dew” — mardi shine, fans arriving like At-; tila’s. vanguard, _ stereophonic | seagulls and a city-wide cama- raderie combined to give Fri-' VANCOUVER (CP) The Grey Cup parade. staged- at s _MOST MASSIVE DRIVE After ¢ Mauling By US. Force night for the first time, got a big break from the weatherman Friday. After almost a week ~ of=off- and-on rain, the clouds gave way at mid-morning Friday to clear skies. With the «downtown area al- pers, the good weather gave an | 67 added impetus, to the parade. A. fireworks display from a barge.in False Creek was to sig- nal the start and a larger fire works display. from English Bay | First Parade At Night Gets Break From Weather Feady teeming With Grey Cup” celebrants and late-night shop- Grey Cup's Nutty Flavor. Settles Over Vancouver VANCOUVER “CP) — Sun-jday the gentle flavor of nuttiz| breeze off the Pacific dispelling | Ress expected of the day before the clouds which hung over the’ Grey Cup.: : | city for days. The day was warm. with tem-| The weatherman predicted a | peratures in the 50s and a stiff dry Grey Cup game, with clouds, but no rain, and the tempefature between 45 and: 50. Early in the day, a trainload of Saskatchewan fans arrived at | the Canadian National Railways | station, replete with a band and jseveral Regina policemen. Eskimo-Indian t with _Es-|There was chaos for about 40 kimo girl Annrose\ Niptanataik | minutes as the arrivals mingled and Indian girl Georgina Blon-‘| with B.C. Lions: majorettes and din throwing plastic snowballs jothers: who'd come to greet = iat ae katchewan f med to j skatchewan fans see a 3-member Se eeton” seanter | outnumber visitors from other | cities, and one downtown. hotel eet veer: coer i | bined cheerleaders to give Sa- : ae skatchewan cheers in the lobby. . A five-car Canadian centen- The manager explained t ikes aes float representing Expo ity. -s POLICE DOGS READY Preparations for Friday nighi’s Grey Cup parade, thé first ever after si. .down, .were completed, up to and including r ~ This year's parade was planned for night in a bid to forestalt, vandalism of three years ago, when carousing mobs on. Grey Cup eve ram- aioe: (AP) — Viet Cong ery + guerrillas were reported in, flight Friday night after an-| other heavy fight in South Viet | lery pounded the, enemy post- | ' tions: “The Viet Cong fled,” a U.S. | respondents there is “consider= able encouragement on the mij- litary side’’ of the war. n| “We ‘are able to defeat and was to cap the evening hours | paged through the downtown later. Between was an entry of | area damaging cars, stores and 33 floats and 36 bands—all car-|civic porperty. a hefty compliment . of police and police dogs, to keep the. hi- oe pe a Nam’s War Zone C. where they have been hunted and mauled | in the most massive American | drive of the conflict, Operation | Attleboro. oats Vietnamese special forces eompanies, comprising 240 irregulars and their US. ad- Visers, battled for hours in Tay Ninh province jungles about 4 miles northwest of Saigon. American air strikes and artil- | ‘The relief éembany was among American units totalling 000 men committed since 15 to sweeping the Viet 'Cong's 9th Division from the }zone, which adjoins the Cam- bodian frontier. There was no immediate ac- ‘counting of casualties. |PICTURE [MPROVES In Saigon, U.S. Senator Milton R. Young (Rep. N.D.), told cor- Martin SS And Rusk Ex lege gE ey WASHINGTON (CP)-Exter- | nal Affairs Minisfer Martin said Friday after a luncheon meet- ing with State Secretary Dean Rusk that he had had “a frank exchange” on a variety of mat- ters including his recent trip to Russia and Poland. He said the question of a United Nations seat for Commu- nist China was not the mains ~item. Martin spoke to reporters “after the lunch, which had =lasted two hours and 15 minutes “and was scheduled at Rusk’s re- “quest, « Martin flew to “Windsor, Ont., “and said he would be in Ottawa Sunday before returning to the “UN Monday. He also agnounced “that the question of Canada’s =12-mile fishing limit, still unre- solved insofar as American Terma estrone eer teceereerse a ol change Views agreement is concerned, wil be the subject of another Canada- U.S. meeting in a few days. The U.S. and Canada have been exchanging ‘formulas in an effort to reach a compromise on where the Canadian fishing limit will apply. NO TALK OF CHINA cussion with Rusk of Pri Minister Pearson's statement about China in the Commons | Thursday. Pearson had indi- cated Canada will consider of- fering China diplomatic recog- nition unless there is a in the UN about granting king a seat. Pearson also emph- asized, however, the uncer- tainty about whether Peking is interested in Canadian recogni- | 3. Troopers of the US. Ist Air Cavalry Division continued a sweep in the Bong Son coastal area, 300 miles northeast of Sai- gon, in which they killed 30 Viet |Cong and captured 11 Thurs- day. Two U.S. observation hell- copters were knocked out in the action. One crew member was killed ‘and another wounded. Commons = Passes Martin said there was no dis- | sen ea pe MAB IS* Neheesonns a! By PIERRE VENIOT FRED: leecrost (cP) — A ‘» no-holds- campaign ends *te2 y for the leadershio of the > Progressive Conservatives in + New Brunswick. + After more than a month of *rouch campaigning by the three | ¢andidates, a successor will be zchosen to C. B. Sherwood. Mr. Sherwood, 51, resigned ‘in } September and requested the “eadership. convention on a time- for-a-new-man basis, but will re- tain his seat as member for — He became — in 962 tion N.B. Conservatives: ject Leader Today - ‘|possibility of a byelection in the | immediate future. Mr. Van Horne, & - year-old former member of Parliament for Restigouche - Madawaska, jhas been taking the lion’s share of publicity, He has scoffed at the candl- dacy of Mr. Pichette — ‘“No- body takes Roger seriously, in- cluding“ Roger™ himself”“=—and* described Mr. Hatfield as a con- tender with a ‘‘monopoly on po- tato chips,”” a reference to the | family business. Mr. Pichette, 45 - year - old |former minister-of industry and | ‘development, who since the So far, he has not ieee | {start of the campaign has been his support for any of the can-' st odds with _Mr. Van Horne. Estimates OTTAWA mons met a 30-day debate limit Friday on government spending estimates by approving $1,542,- ering the current fiscal year. Members sat 21 minutes over- MPs \forced eight standing votes. The Liberal minority government won all handily. . On one vote, L. R. Sherman cel Lambért (PC — Edmontoa West) broke ranks to vote with the government. ‘<< The Sherman-Lambert switch occurred on a $1,333,000 appro- \Priation for salaries and other expenses of the national energy board, “which earlier approved construction of a gas pipeline ‘through the U.S. Informants said they Voled in favor of .the estimate to show, their approval of the board de~ cision, hotly contested by the New Democrats. iCP) — The Com-! 982,673.96 im appropriations cov- time to pass, the estimates of 20 | © departments. (PC—Winnipeg South) and Mar-.|. south of the Great Lakse ‘Continued on page 2, col. 3) | HAS MANY HIGHLIGHTS Some of the highlights of the 90-minute parade: -.+ The Florists of Canada float with 45.000 live blooms; rying their own. special light- | curbed with police dogs and They were |jinks down to a non - violent level. o™ there were more than 300 ar- Only one arrest was made rests, | Thursday night in connecti on Friday night, a special police force was stationed at the Court House in the heart of the 1963 trouble area at a cost to the. i. The Northwest Territories’ | city of $1,000 in overtime pay. Alert On NEW YORK (AP) — Emer- Friday as -a - smog of dirty, ‘potentially lethal air clouded autumn skies for a third day: - A forecast of rising winds and rain held out hope that the smog would be dispersed be- fore it claimed any lives. New York City, Connecticut and New Jersey were placed on anti-pollution alerts in an effort to reduce a vast gush of im- purities into stagnant air above the area. A voluntary ban on the use of autos was urged. Manhattan's skyscraper peaks were wreathed in a dirty haze. Airliners, dropping out of bright sunlight; made their way by instruments through the smog blanket enshrouding the ground. ; LUNG TROUBLES RISE The air above Manhattan fluc- tuated above and below the danger mark in pollution checks and health authorities said it rarely if ever had been dirtier. Hospitals reported a ‘‘definite didates: Richard: Hatfield, Ro- toiq ger Pichette and J. C. Van! “My ‘su cave, at: i Reine. ; - gotten Pre to destroy our Mr. Watfield _is._the member ; party andnow | ., for. Carleton. But a victory sttee as an absence five years either of the others—both from |is returning as a saviour.” Campbellton, N.B. ould mean the winner would have to ‘ATTACKING LOYALTY’ sit in-the public gallery as op- ition leader. Neither. is a member of the legislature. BYELECTION POSSIBLE Despite a vacancy in their home constituency of Resti- gouche, ,Liberal Premier Louis Robichaud has not hinted at the I . Mr. Hatfield, 35, has casti- gated Mr..Van Horne for “‘at- _| tacking the loyalty’’ of party members. They all have one thing in common, though: a stiff oppdsi- INSIDE TODAY” tion to Premier Robichaud and his municipal reform program effective Jan. 1. i “ Georg Kiesinger, hristi Deatnee tia anti-pollution asures ks Given In New. Ya increase” is complaints, attributed to the _ Searing filth —faumes: ni a downtown hotel lobby. | Ottawa © ane One Of WEATHER Intermittent rain, showers by evening; . winds southerly, becoming west 15. Low- high 42- and 47. Sunday: cloudy _ 16, PAGES: Railway Dispute Talks Continue Despite Snag 4 Groups Returns Home MONTREAL ‘CP) — Media- tion in a railway labor dispute that caused a_ late-summer | strike is continuing for three | union groups despite a ‘ati- MAJ.-GEN. MACKLIN Gen. Macklin Dies At 67 “TORONTO +EP}—-Ma}.-Gen.-| .| Wilfred H. S. Macklin, 67, for- mer adjutant-general of the Ca- nadian Army, ‘died in Sunny- brook Hospital here Friday. dian defence policies after his retirement in 1954, Gen. “Mack- lin was one of the first senior military officers to press for unification of the armed forces. He took over the post of vice- agg vest at headquart- in Ottawa in 1946 and be- a adjutant - general three yers ‘later. He married Margaret Rodg- ers in Barrie, Ont., in 1936. They had a son and daughter. At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS spending estimates - topping $1,500,000,000 was pushed ~ through the s at the _tlose_of: the allétted 30 days nouncement by a fourth that its negotiators had “returned to their homes.” W. J. Smith, president of the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- way Transport and General Workers, announced Friday the return home of the CBRT nego- tiators. He said it does not appear an agreement can be reached with railway *management ‘which will meet the expectations and the needs of the membership.” His announcement was fol- lowed by statements from Carl Goldenberg, federally - ap- pointed mediator,. and from the other three labor groups con- were continuing. “My mandate does not e: ire before hhext Wednesday n t,”” . negotiations will result in a seitlement remains to be seen.” said Mr. Goldenberg. ‘Whether |- A consistept critic of Cana-| . all signified intentions to con- | tinue the talks, which have bees in progress. in Montreal for seve eral weeks. | Represented at the sessions, in addition to the CBRT, have been representatives of shop- | craft employees, trainmen and “residual non-ops.’’ All the em -ployees except the trainmen are non - operating workers — em- ployees not actually involved in operation of the trains. The employees earned $2.22 an hour before the strike and walked out to back up demands for a 30-per-cent boost over twe years, The Sept. 1 act provided as 18 - per --cent interim increase over two years. “} : Increasing OTTAWA (CP)—The price of commodities and services used by farmers, including farm liv- ing costs, rose to 308.3 in Au- CBRT represents 24,000 of ti2 118,000 workers covered by the bargaining. The mediator was appointed after Sept. 1 passage through Parliament of an act ending a nationwide strike by the ti8.- 000 employees against the coun- try’s seven major railways, in- cluding the.CNR and the CPR. The bill provided for compul- sory arbitration if the mediation efforts failed. Mr. Goldenberg said: Based on 1935-39 prices euqak ling 100, the August index this year stood 13.6 index points, or 4.6 per cent higher than it was in August last year: The price index of farm ily living was mainly ble for the gain. Exclusive living costs, the index of modities and services used a ; “I am amazed that Mr.| farmers — principally equip. a genie steeid preter 0. polation | mest, materials. — eased.‘ compulsory to| down to 2 in August from pa a eitastind ie rae 346.8 in April. Between April through mediation.” and August last year, the same The three other union groups| index rose to 329.2 from $243 ‘Release Without Bail Bond ‘Suggested For Poor People — The crisis was the worst in | three years. oo ae smog in November. 1963, . was | blamed for 170 to 260 “deaths— many of them not traced to the | after the smog lifted. 3 * New York’s Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller ordered a first alert against pollution for the New York City area. He acted on advice from the state health commissioner, Holjis IIngraham. By use of the emergency measure, Rockefeller sought. a voluntary limitation on the use of carbon monoxide-emitting automobiles, minimum con- sumption of oil and coal for heating buildings, curtailment of all incinerators and the eli- mination of all open fires. Similar voluntary first alerts were placed in effect for New Jersey and Connecticut. A sec- ond alert also is voluntary, but a third alert is mandatory and would shut down industries and befouled air until some time | ‘Israel Claims Defence Right — By ALEXANDER FARRELL UNITED NATIONS (CP)—Is- i rael, censured Friday by the Se- curity Council for an attack on Jordan and told not to do it again, replied with a vigorous statement of its right to Wéfend itself. The 15-member council voteo 14 to © to censure Israel for its “large - scale military action” Nov. 13, in which 15 Jordanian soldiers and three civilians were killed when the Israeli Army struck three frontier vil- lages south of Jerusalem. New Zealand abstained on the cens- ure motion, introduced by Ni- geria. . Israeli ; | Ambassador Michael Comay said after the vote that the fundamental cause of Arab- Israeli tension in the Middle East “lies in Arab belligerence ban cars and buses from the streets. and military threats against Is- Trae fae f lon- anti-- government demon- REPORTS ON COALITION TALKS | Frhard in Bonn. Friday om said his party and the Social Progress of coalition Democrats could reach agree- for. debate. The Beard of Broadcast Governors announced it. will accept applications next year * OTTAWA (CP)—A bill aimed at allowing poor people await- ing trial to be agg wee without bond is to be introduced in the ducted from sentences. Ina press release Friday, Mr. Mather noted that Presi. dent Johnson last year signed a “| for new private television sta- tions in .Toronto and Mont- real. The BBG also supported a second station sometime in the future at Sherbrooke, Que. Revenue Minister Benson announced registration of all , Charitable organizations will start next month. This is the first step in re- quiring officially - approved receipts to qualify a taxpayer for a deduction. MONDAY, Nov. 28 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to consider medical care insurarice. The Senate meets at 8 p.m. By. BOY ESSOYAN bey JERUSALEM (AP) Jor- | dan’s Arab Legion opened fire strators here Friday as disor- ders arising from a recent Is- raeli army raid on Jordan spread for the first time to the Holy City. ; Eight persons were wounded feriousiy. But demonstrators said more than 40 more were hit by bullets and taken to hos- pitals. Most were released after treatment. Ten miles to the forth, the levionnaires —~ veteran “desert” fighters—fired over the heads of crowds marching through Ramallah, demanding arms to fight Israel. These developments came as | the . United Nations Security | Council..in New York censured Israet for the Nov. 13 army raid on three Jordanian. vil- Tages south of Jerusalem. The-| council warned that punitive | action might be taken if there | “Twere further raids.” All the demonstrations the | last three days have had an| anti - government flavor. They have assailed the government for failmg to arm Palestine | Arabs gad to hit back at Israel. | FIRED INTO AIR gan at the Damascus Gate as with West Germanys other ment in principle today on a political parties Kieinger sew government. old walled eity. The Arab. > re "|Mather Commons Monday by Barry. (NDP — New v West- minster). Mr. Mather said the private member's bill would ‘eliminate the arbitrary cruelty im the present bail system.” It is aimed at ensuring. that no one, regardless of financial status, -is needlessly detained before. trial. ‘Judges who felt the defend- ant trustwofthy could release him without bail except in cases where the offence is pun- ishable by death or life impris- onment. Mr. Mather’s bill also would ensure that time spent behind bars before trial would be de- UNDERLINED are Jordan cities hit in recent days by Palestine Arab demonstra- tions. Jordan ) Legion shot in the_air_in Jerusalem and Ra- | mallakh Friday fo quiet de- monstrators. Nablus and He- bron were cut off by Jordan troops blocking roads. Israeli raid Nov. 13 on Samua, arrow, touched off unrest. (AP Wirephote map) | gionnaifes: posted . high on the The trouble in’ Jerusalem be-| walls fired into the air at first. | told correspondents, ‘ When this failed to get re- the crowds surged throuvh - | Sults, the troops ‘fired into the | short-term advantage le- | milling crowds. Winesses in-| ing out details.” bill that applies a similar law in U.S. federal courts. ‘WEIGHED WITH MONEY’ - The NDP member said stud- ies have shown that ‘Canadian scales of justice are sometimes weighed not with ae but with money” through the pres- ent bail system. Many persons were unable te raise bail. Those-- who did. ination fessional bondsmen or sea lenders sometimes committed further offences while awaiting trial to repay the debt. " The present system favored the professional criminal “whe is more likely to be, known and trusted by’ the bondsmen.” ~*% Anger Over Israeli Raid Sparks Riots In Jordan _ sisted the legion. fired machin. guns as well as rifles. The crowds dispersed, oat later some demonstrators ram back into the streets. They lita bonfire inside the towering Da mascus Gate and threw. stones at the soldiers on the walls above. But there was no shooting and calm fi turned. Just before sunset; columns of demonstrators formed and started a. march through the - streets, but they were dispersed by troops using a loudspeaker 7 | system. The . seriously wounded i= eluded a little girl. Brown Returns From Moscow | LONDON (AP)—British For- pmo nearer = Viet Nam Sovit oan mean to help end the war. Brown refused to disclose what, if any, conclusions etnerged. talks at the highest level a ey eee 2 —_ be silly of me to try to snatch @ aonteemsamnangeenitii