sap 1} as 2. Driver, Rohert: Landsbor-— ough, 2, lost ait of an ear when he stopped his small car on Toronto's. Don Valley Park- ¢ ' a ee i The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., May 4 1388, 3 poeta ei | ; iNewMovesTaken “In Slander Suit | By ARCH MacKENZIF The CLA normally is the in- | WASHINGTON (cP Law- ternational American_spy— ap- -+yers for Eerik Heine of Te onto’ paratus while the FBI deals) said Tuesday two new moves with domestic security. | have’ been taken. in the natural- . Hein’s lawyers failed Jast) - ized Canadian’s $110.00) slander Thursday in Baltimore federas | suit. against a fellow-Estonian/ district court to draw much in- | emigree who -admits having called Heine a Soviet agent President Johnson has been asked under: an official) tegtila- tion to examine whetite’ Jur Raus, the slander-suit defend- ant, can legally claim immunity as a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency employee. Heine's lawyers als have jtaken out a Srpoeha for a8 | Washington private detective, Thomas W. LaVenia ‘Ernest. Raskauskas, one ot Heine’s lawyers: said it is be- lieved that LaVenia was amoag thrée men who sought to ques- formation from Rawus on just how qualified a OIA agent he. is, He was shielded by five govern- | : ment lawye’s and what infor- | mation did come to light mostly | concerned Raus's job as a fed- eral highway engineer in quar- ters adjacent to the CIA head- quarters in Virginia. Judge Roszel Thomsen has set May 13 for final legal argument on the government motion to) dismiss the slander case. Despite the against | Heine, he has been al- lowed to continue entering the U.S. and he says the RCMP has = accusations | - EARLOSTSSEWNON tis tion Heine's wife at their iome | never questioned him on that | in Canada some weeks ago on subject. He became a Canadian j instructions from Raus's !aw- citizen without — difficulty, he yers: : says, in 1964. Heine; 46; and- Raus;-39;-have os NEW NHL GOVERNORS Times’ Front Page Style Changed After 1 80, Years jcolumn headline. A three-col- ajumn photo shows James Cal- By JOSEPH MacSWEEN LONDON (CP) — Like Summerside and Edgar M. Bab- ineau, Cape Bald, Savage Harbor, permitting | lturning; John Douglas Anderson | Cove, failing to display registra- each fined $15 and costs for an unlicenced person to drive; ‘Southport, driving without a am plates; Robert id Ames ‘speeding. ployee and Heine’s lawvers. say | |Pherson, throwing rubbish on | way Tuesday to fix a wind. struck hy # second auto which_ 7 er , Te Fh Tr “aoe te: inthe --Ritz; Sicaae olls -—-8t:—-Paul;- : ; i ae ti- e e six new “governors” Of “stock their new teams in Pp Ea shield wiper. His car was | rammed both vehicles into a pel i. | Traffic Cases the National Hockey League League's expansion program. “Jack Kent Cooke, Los Ange» “| hydro: pole, Edward Payne, |istonian circles and Raus’s al- met in Montreal Tuesday with —Five-of-the—six,shown—above;——les,-Sidney=Salomon—IIT, St, | She ater driver, was’ unhurt. leged slander was committed at, Heard In City League president Clarence. are (from left to right) Bill Louis and Jack McGovern, Police found the piece of ear ta Nov. 9, 1968- meeting in New | Campbell to discuss how to Putman, Philadelphia, Gordon Pittsburgh. which was sewn back on with | york. | In Traffie Court yesterday ee a _ } : apparent success, ORDERED BY CIA — | morning fined $10 and costs or |Gotsen Thomas Dollar, Newl|cence; John Ralph Fitzpatrick, Cherry Valley, ‘ollowing . anoth- __._ SCP Wirephoto) | ‘The CIA says it told Raus tn} pring hissed es the Peace | Wiltshire; speeding William |Summerside, speeding; ‘Leith eae. ee rett Ci ‘ - - : : $ ne vere amero BARNYARD ta Bicones. (tr hm De id as their em-| Albert Dinnis were: Hugh Mac-|watiace Clow, Grand Tracadie, (Ernest Anderson, Halifax,|cn- s: n, | Domestic / fowl jlargest segment of the world’s 100,000,000,000 bird population. make up the|they seek to show this was done the highway; Leslie Bruce Pick- |filing to signal 100 feet before /speeding; Gerrit Visser, Orwell to discredit Heine among Esiv ett, nian emigree circles N. B., were. respectable dowager venturing {laghan, fourth in new-style short skirts, |chequer, today |preparation for today’s budget the venerable Times chancellor of the ex- consulting aides in came out with news on the front |speech in Parliament, page, Teplacing the traditional |. classified advertising. The single ad in the right- hand lower corner is a sort of For 180 years the front page [eer to the old agony’ column _..of the newspaper, a British in- atitution if ever there was one, was reserved for the dignified | —often intriguing—ads, with the} news on centre pages. Only on rare occasions, such as on the death of Sir Winston Churchill, was the rule broken —and on those occasions The Times’ decision became news & in itself. notin An alr of 44 ¥ __+___hefare_-_ the— cpm CT tl ea) is -urbaneexcitement. prevailed in The Times work- room as the first editions came off the presses Monday— night eyes from both sides of the iron eurtain. A correspondent from: Moscow's ‘Isvestia claimed he bought the first paper to ap- pear. — “T think it looks fine,’’ mur- mured editor. Sir. William Haley, 65, who appeared both deeply moved and happy as he in- apected his copy with Gavin Astor, chief proprietor of the newspaper; and Mfs. Astor. QUEEN READS TIMES The newspaper's 256,130 sub- ecribers—the Queen and Prime Minister Wilson readers — will likely find the change drastie but not sensa- tional at their breakfast tables today. The main story, predicting NATO headquarters will be moved te London from Paris, is on the _ left : side _ under _a two Management-Labor Mastiig Is Postponed Indefinitely “At a late hour Monday night, Bit Ghields, one of the original committee members and a party THOUSANDS (Continued from page ene) was different. Nevertheless, he fs with ue today . . » praying with us.” : on speeches were less gen- Archbishop Antonin Baraniak of reporters | are among) . |Schurman that the meeting sch- ~iely. which now has been shifted to “Page” “two” from” Page one:~-In this column, the English are | wont. to offer thanks to the saints for favors done and titled laa ask for companions for European ips. The ad goes: Dear thattkers, ever grateful te St. Jude, Dear titled lady, find a new location, now must brood. The famed old crest in the masthead has been dropped and Ithe front page looks, as one old - timer remarked, like a “cross between the weekly Ob- server and The Guardian.” SEEKS BOOST | Sources said it is hoped to boost The Times, whose eircula- tion once stood. at 261/000, by 25,000 in six months and even- tually to increase the total cir- culation to 350,000, / The Times carried news. on ithe front page on only three oc-. ‘casions in normal times in the ilast 181 years, one. exeeutive said. The first was Nov. 7, 1805, for the Battle of Trafalgar, the second—in—1806-to-report-a—long- forgotten murder, and the third | Jan. 25, 1965, to report Sir | Winston's death. During the; First World War special editons were published Sundays earry- ing front-page news, as also happened during a general strike. to the labor agreement which en- abled the employees to return to work, informed Mr. Michael eduled for last evening, at which time the P.E.I. Builders Exchange was to be informed of the grievances of the work- ers, is to be postponed indefinit- | Page. one_.om__graver_. Jasues | “tt the labor eommittee does not. reconsider ft would appear | that everything that has been accomplished to date may be lost. _ “The - P.E.I. change are most willing to talk to their employees, and, in view of the recent meetings, it ap- /pears obvious that the employe- ef Poznan said Pope Paul was es want to meet and make their deprived of the joy of being in |grievances known to their em- Poland and ‘‘the happiness of 'ployers, but, unfortunately it ts being close to him has been ‘evident that out of province di- taken away from us and the jection is dictating to the local glory of our fatherland has been [people that no progress be al- dimmed.”’ lowed at this time. j Turning to the \ctivintis: Arch- | “The P. E.I. Builders Ex- bishop Baraniak declared: ichange ask all their employees “T- speak on behalf of all the to get together immediately and “people and declare that we are jurge their original committee, all with you and we have wn- which had such success, to meet limited confidence in you. The \again with the Builders Ex- more insults are heaped upon \change at the earliest possible you, the more’ closely we are {moment where we can discuss united with you . despite | what some people stubbornly re Poland were father.” WAS IN PRISON Archbishop -Baraniak, as was Cardinal Wyszynski, Communist arrest. from 1953-56. Rev. Jerszy Tomzinski, _ fa- ther-general of the Pauline or- der. addressed the Polish pri- mate saving: ‘Today vou are closed to the holy | “persecuted. this’ persecition yous rom auffer for the Virgin Mary.’ “" Referring to the time of the oardinal’s arrest, he added: “Ten_years ago your primgte’s |, chair was emnty and onlv a garland of roses and thorns lav on it. Today you sit here in your awn glory and in the narhe: of | Pope Paul VI. We all have faith {mn vou and love you.’ Thunderous cheers and plause. “interrupted “the arch- hishop and the father-general until they asked the crowd not tm interrupt Their remarks answered Communist statements that the Polish bishops had harmed Po lish state interests and that only a minority of the Catholic popu- lation and clergy supported Car- dinalg Wyszynsks. _ peat. . “Tt {sa pity that the gates of | was under regard to the legal But on check- | and solve our mutual problems. \ “The P.E.J. Builders Fx- change have signed an agree- ment which states: (1) The lunits involved may submit ap- plication for certification to La- beiit Relations Board, it being understood that good faith shall be exercised by both sides with aspects of the application. ing with the chairman of the P.E.I. Labor Relations Board tt was found that no application has been filed to date.” | ‘DOCTORS’ POLICY WINS EDMONTON (CP)—Doctors' house calls in Alberta decreased 28 per cent between 1960 and 1964, says Dr. WG. McPhail. of “Medical #Services' Inc. He at tributes the decline to doctors’ '“educating’’ patients not to re. quest a house call. except in emergency p- FISH KEEPS IT WOUND VICTORIA (CP Rill Botvkos has a fish story which will “stand the test of time. Fishing in the Alouette River near Haney, 30 miles east of Vancouver 1° caught two steelhead trout. The seven pounder, when opened ~had-a watch inside It wag still ticking, Botykos*‘oe'=t« Builders Ex- | a \ CHARLOTTETOWN ne The One Gift That Will Say Happy Mother's Day For Five Full Years! proven performance. names . Canada. A PLEDGE OF SIGNIFICANT VALUE ‘The guarantee om any product és neces Every Philips Chatel ‘ tional acaessory ie good enough to be guaranteed. for five full < years. A truly unsurpassed pledge of quality. 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