2 II It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVII. N0. 314 I \s .o‘ A} T ARTIST’S C A Boeing Co. artist drew this picture of a Boeing heavy logistics type aircraft to speed the movement of men and ma- terials to world trouble spots. NCEPTION ‘ who @nardia WEATHER Occasional light snow: light winds. Lowr high 15 and 25. Thursday: snowflurries. “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Authorised n lee-Id Class Mall by the lost out I W News. and to: payment of postage In an President Johnson approved plans Tuesday to develop the aircraft. The shown here is representative of the type studied over the past so— COST NEARS BILLION AND HALF Huge Weapons Program 3 Announced By HeIIyer By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA tCPl—Detalls of a 1965-70 procurement program for 51.455.000.000 worth of con- ventional defence equipment. much of l‘t foreign-designed or built. were announced Tuesday by Defence Minister Heilyer. He said at a press conference there is no intention of using any of the new weapons as nu- - clear delivery systems though some of them are capable of. carrying nuclear warheads. e also said, however. he doesn't foresee the end of the RCAF‘s nuclear bombing role in Europe with 200 CF-104 low- level jet bombers by 1970 at the earliest. Opp0sition Leader Diefen- baker told reporters Mr. Hell- yer‘s statements represented a retreat on the question of nu- clear weapons and on promises in the 1962 and 1963 election campaigns to reduce defence expenditures substantially. Sav- ings in doing away with reserve units and the like were mean- ingless in the face of "vastly increased” costs now to be un- dertaken. The major made-in‘~(1anada weapons programs are six war- ships—four helicopter - carry- ing destroyers and two fleet support ships — costing about $170,000,000 and 15 de Havilland Buffalo transport planes whose estimated cost Mr. Hellyer. said he couldn't supply at this time. construction of the ships will begin about mid-1966. TO BUY ‘COPTERS Twelve more American anti- submarlne Sea King helicopters Will be purchased. total_to 36. and thenewdesgtroy- erswdl equip with a for- eign anu-aircraf missile sys- tem "when available." The seven Restigouche class destroyers will ican ASROC lanti - submarine d rocketl An American tactical t fighter for the RCA! wIl 1e se in a "few HON. MR. HELLYER as be announces program nell Phantom jet. fighter-bomber the plane the Canadian aircraft industry wanted to build. The price for 108 Phantoms would have been about Four more American Hercules transports CALGARY (CP) —- Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker must be rep national Con- ntive leader if unity is to be restored within the party. Douglas Hal-kness said Tues- ay. Mr. Harkness was expanding on remarks he made in an in- servative leader Leon Balcer to break away from the party en- tirely on Mr. Didenbaker. Mr. Earthen. former defence minister in Diefenbaker ammnentu id than is gen- eral unrest among Conserva- , titles but said know all to remove Mr. Diefenbaker tbe'plrty adership. “Then .‘ls no question that Mr. Dielenbsker's leadership is the basic reason Leon Balch Ill other Quote MP3 are so dissatisfied they are talking of leaving ‘ the [a y.‘ he added - r. Herkness said Door Is Always Open, Diefonboker Declares onst (CPS—"me m open." ppos on r sold Tues OF BIGGEST AIRCRAFT replace the ancient the West Coast will be acqu red . ing by February. He said the ‘firm may open a branch in New k- . , heed will} Evangeline ware. had employed be purchased. bringing the total about 65 persons at its Simonds order to 24 for some parish plant. Dielenbaker Must Go. -HarknessSaysOnUnity no sit in the House of Commons as I veral years. It will carry the designation C-SA. It will ban- dle the largest equipment of any division and land on un- paved support type alrfields. ' peered hardest hit. Walls were wavelets in swimming CHARLO’I‘TETOWN, CAN/"M WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1964. "3:3" SEVEN CENTS 20 PAGES U.S. Threatens To End South Viet Nam Aid California Hit By Strong Quake SAN DIEGO (APl—A strongiso badly the building was. earthq us he rumbled throughtclosed. Twenty-six cracks were sou t he r n California and thelreported in the wall of the state Mexican state of Baja Califor~ building cafeteria. nia. at 12:55 p.m. Tuesday leav. At the desert resort of Palm inlg widespread minor damage. Springs. to the north residents This coastal city of 670,000 ap- reported the s h oc caus pools. cracked. Christmas tree orna- The area east of here. the ments and. pictures shaken rugged Laguna Mountains and down. and a chimney toppled, the broad. fertile Imperial Vai- ln the Mexican resort town of ley. is no stranger to earth- Ensenada. 60 miles south. two quakes. and most are felt here plate-glass store windows were lBut old-timers said this was one shattered. lot the strongest San Diego Dr. Charles F. Richter of the ‘shocks in memo”- California Institute of Techno; The quake area extends logy at Pasadena said the quake across the border into Mexico. was centred on the Baja Cali-,down into and includinvfil the Ensenada—a remote area with only tiny villages. He gave its - - Five Killed Q G shocks at In COIIISIO‘n Residents were just returning lng buildings severely. killed Tuesday in a car-truck Scrlpps Hospital reporlcdicrash at the beginning of a were dISIOdged and 3" Eight'lson went OLI‘i. of control and fornia peninsula. inland from‘ GU” 0f Calilm‘nla- magnitude as 5.7 on a scale that rates the largest recorded 8.8. from nch downtown San MONTREAL (CPI—Five per-l Diego when the shock hit. rock- sons on the way to work were beds rolled on casters. At. po- snowstorm. lice headquarters. two beams The car carrying thp five per. . s IMh‘W‘d"; CFBCk.3PPeaT°d I“ oneacollided with a brewery truck. wall. A fire station wall cracked! Victims were Giovanni Ca. LT. COL. D. A. A conventional submarine to Gri-Ise on; 1 . about 1970. It, will probably be British as are «the three rines now on order for some 000. - lNational A s s e m bl y Tuesday pants of the. truek. ni subma- Orders have already been‘i placed for 1.000 American M-lls. armored troop carriers for the: my. ’ Pottery Firm Moves To Que. SAINT JOHN. NB. Canuck tery L it 1 (CP) — P t im e . s troyed by fire at neighboring Simonds parish in October. will re-establish at Label e. Que. abou l ‘ orth of Mon- treal. it was announced here; Tuesday night. ll President Percy Foley sai l the company had acquired al building in the Laurentian com-y munity and hoped to be produc- lBrunswick later. The pottery. known for its he hopes the Quebec group will remain with the Conservatives. A split weakens the party and “as a national party we need support in Quebec." he said TORONTO (CPI — Premier Roberts said Tuesday a rift ex- lsts in the Conservative party nationally and it could have serious effects on Canada. The Conservative premier fol. a press conference that the split between Opposition Leader Diet- enbaker and Leon Ballcer was a matter of great concern to him He expressed disappointment at statements by Mr. Balcer that he might leave the party and an independent. Questioned about w h e t h e r there should be a Conservative leadership convention. Mr. barts said this was not a matter for him to comment on but was one for decision by the party’s‘ national executive. have been expressing differing viewpoints on what they might do There were pretty firm indi- cations Tuesday night the mid~ January caucus of the l0 Que- bec Conservative members of the will not result in a mass walkout from the party. While Paul Mertineau (Pon- ‘l‘emiscaminguet said Jose P eon said he wouldn't ——I l‘Assomption- clove. [nu Montcalm) (Jo l I e t t e leave the d de.-l .ruso. 30; his two sisters. Marie. 95. and Elisa. 22; Giovanni Italians Continue ivlaten. fit). and Pasquale Gio- e ' l .I . l . President Hunt 1‘3"" “g” ‘ injured wore Paul Lacombe. ‘3, Rog rcmblay. 33, and ROME 'Renlcrsl-«The Italian Jacques Barittcau, 2|. occu- ght failed in its 12th attempt Police said a car. driven by to elect a new president or me Mateo. went out of control. The republic. truck. driven by Lacombe. also The two Houses OI Parliament went out of conlml in twins to ‘which have been in joint sessmn 3Y0!“ “"3 fm' fi'n’xl'Wl‘e“ 0 V9- for seven days trying to elect a ' hlcles collided the. truck fell -0ll successor to the ailing Antonio j the 03“ Segni. will make a 13th attemptl It took two hours to remove today. ' Snags Seen In lords 0n Hanging Abolition LONDON I'Rcuierst 'i‘hc‘ However. the House of Lords House of Commons is ex is expected to approve abolition to speed along a hill to abolish ‘ of the death penalty, although the death penalty in Britain but thy a much closer margin than its supporters fear it may hit lthe 335 to 170 votes which the snags in the House of Lords. Commons gave. The House of Commons voted The House Of commons' 530 355 l" 170 Mon‘lal’ flight l0 film" i legislators were free to vote, on ish certain exceptions to the g the. bill according to their cons- HOmlClde ACI Of \VhIChlciencps' rather than on party ended the death penalty forlorders. murder over five-‘sixths of the. ThP bi” was not a goverm “eld‘ . . _ lmen measure but sponsored No trouble. ls antIClpated fortprivatdy by a long-time oppon. the bill when it goes before the i am or capital punishment. Syd. House of Commons on its third 1m“, Silverman' 69' a labor and final reading but a sterner 1 member of parliament since test faces it in the House of11935, ' Lords. Th House of Lords rejected: 22°11'39" of the death per"'sentence lasts an _average of If it rej cts the bill after three‘"""" “"‘e "em mm mm 0“ . m_ . Ifor good behavior. readings. the House of . mom has One year to pas; i” Members of the ruling Labor again. and if it does. the bllllParty and the. small Liberal becomes law. lParty' were solidly ln'favor of After the Home of Lords l.e_ abolition, although strict party lected the bill in 1957. a com— lines were not drawn. promise bill was passed whichj Many Conservatives were be- retained hanging only for cer- jlieved to have supported the} bill. Army Blamed For Meddling WASHINGTON (AP) — The United State 5 served notice Tuesday night that South Viet ‘ lNam must have a government .free of improper interference by the military if U.S. aid is to continue. land colonialism in any form. Press Officer ROM” J- MC" The broadcast was regarded a new? COD“??- here as an implied criticism of encet to read the followmg state-é the United State; m?" t . I It was apparent U.S. officials mm!“ TSVEOI‘Iz‘g :SQJfifidzzza: i did not. expect Khanh to remain ing out of allegations critical ofilong as armed fm‘ces comma” our ambassador in Saigon as! ' well as of the U.S. government.‘ BI” the“? “'35 support ‘1‘?” .lAmbassador Taylor has been “ for the government. of Premier acting throughout with the t'ulllelI Va" .Huong m in“: 1° support of the U.S. government. i wqr.‘ out d'fierences With you"? “As we have repeatedly made 4 military offlcers wholpurged the clear, a duly-constituted gov-i”.lgh Natlonal Cmmc‘l 53mm“ ernment exercising full powerln'gm' on the basis of national unity‘ MCCIOSkell would [10' 8331 H!!- v' and without improper inlerfer-'Cler What conditions U-Sl 5‘19 ence from any group is the es- port to south Viet Nam would sential condition for the success- he Wllhdl'awn- ful prosecution of the effort to "That would be looking ahead defeat the Viet Cong and is the and speculating and I would not basis' for U.S. support for that Ido that." he said. or “This is the position Ambas— SOME CHANGES LIKELY sador Taylor has been expres- There was speculation 0 sing to Vietnamese leaders." lnewly-constituted High National McCloskey said the statementhouncil woul be formed in ‘speaks for itself and he wouldeaigon with some changes In . not characterize it as an ulti- lpersonnel as a result of resigna- Khanh stated the military has the right to step in to settle dis- putes affecting the civilian gov- ernment of Viet Nam and called on the army to face its com- ‘ mon ' communism Q o m a.- to < (a 91 5' a. MACKIN NON matum itions in the original 17 . man In Hospi . One of the all time sporting greats of the Island died ' hospital last night with passing of Daniel A. MacKin- the beloved Colonel Dan arness racing fame. and the only Islander ever to be named to the Sports Hall of Fame. Soldier, druggist. fox breed- er. newspaper owner. horse- man. champion mile runner. proud possessor of two world‘s non. of h the l However. the U.S. officials I body. I said the statement was in re-l The government. and the coun- ‘sponse to an order of the. day cil have also been under attack : b r o a d c 3 st by Gen. Nguyen ; by Buddhist groups. tal Here sold it to Ross Drug (tnmpanyq Early in life he became i - herested in physical cultur lBJ Approves Plans For largest Aircraft I’Khanh in Saigon Tuesday night‘ Just what part they would that. referred indirectly to the a play in any new council was not United States. iclear. {sical condition which was con- sidered remarkable in a manl jof his advanced years I ;on CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM I lie was a member of thel champion Ah cit footballl records in widely separated _ pgw . fields and “pen shot w-th . team of 189-24900 an in 1897; JOHNSON CITY. Tex. IAP) —: McNamara told a press we either army Fine 0,- the heavy W0" the "1an Champlonsmp President Johnson Tuesday ap-‘ference in Austin that military artillery. his career crisscross- 3 ed international lines as easily as sports lines. ORPHAN AT 10 Born in Highfield. P.E.I.. lNovembcr 12. 1876. he was the Eson of the late Donald MacKin- ‘ (Curtisst left lnon and emlma lMacKlnnon but. , . a Iorphan at the early age of 10.. ended for l iFormal schooling ‘him then as he was on his own. jhut within a few years he was ldeeply engrossed in the study inf pharmacy and with little to laid him succeeded in qua‘ ling through the National In- ’stitute of Pharmacy. Chicago. ‘and at the age of 20 success- ,fully wrote the examinations of :the Nova Scotia Pharmaceuti- Ical Society. He thus became :the first registered pharmacist ‘in this province. I Just five years later. in 1901. Two men are under sentence ‘he and the late George Mac- Smnd . of death in Britain, where a life-Donald founded the drug firm helghlenlnfl PFOSPeClS 'which was later widely known fas "The Two Macs“. However. this first connection with the ldrug business came when he h was employed by the late Hon. George E. Hughes at Apothe- . caries Hall. ; In 1910 Colonel Dan founded 1the MacKinnon Drug Company Iwhlch he continued to operate EL" 1932 at which time he tain types of murder. tor a motion for its rejection was defeated Monday night in the British House of Commons by 355 votes to 170. a majority for the hill of 185. ms 18 SYDNEY Silver- man. Labor MP for Nelson and Colne. principal sponsor of The Murder lAbolition of Riva rd’s Wife Exploited On Bribery Claim fly RONALD LEBEI. OTTAWA lCPl ~— Raymond Daoust. counsel for Lucien Ri- vard. testified Tuesday Rivard's wife was exploited last summer by two mysterious men who claimed to have fixed the nar- cotics suspect‘s future rclease from J I. Mr. Daoust. 4i~year-old Mont- real criminal lawyer. told the Dorion judicial inquiry a cer- tain Masson and an unidentified man probably extracted money from Mrs. Rivard after telling her they had bribed Pierre La- montagne, counsel for the United States case. ' Mr. Daoust said he knew hisl friend Lsmontagne would neverl accept a bribe and advised Mrs. Rivard the story of the twoI men was a hoax and that she‘ should stop dealing with them. He called Lamontagne in Chl- eoutimi July so to warn him as a favor about the bribe story and to confirm to his heart's content Lamontagne not Death Penaltyl Bill. which was glven a second reading at- (AP Wirepboh) d taken any payoff to help obtainl lulu lor' Rivard. I llfy— ; i. one mile here. Later that year he won the Maritime title lat that distance and repeated in 1898 and 1899. In the mean- proved plans to develop the j spending in the next fiscal year world's largest plane to spee ‘ "will be closer to 549.000.000.000 the movement of men and mini than $50.000.000.000." V . I terials to world trouble spots. McNamara also announced :‘nggghfm‘lfgzt navy "that. Defence Secretary Robert S.“ that Johnson has picked Gen. . cm; from a . . , , McNamara said after a confer-John Paul McConnell to succeed quarter “1”” I'll I" 5‘ m'Ie-r gence with Johnson Tuesday thatI Gen. Curtis E. LcMay as chief MacKmnon organlzed'funds to begin development of of staff of the Air Force. Mc- and captained the Charlotte- the gigantic plane will be in-.Connell, 46, now is vice chief of town Salvage Corps team which ‘ cluded in the budget for the next? start. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) lfiscal year. I LeMay's term ends Jan. 3]. Snow, Cloud, Zero Cold lCovers Much Of Canada I I By THE CANADIAN PRESS . Estimates of cattle lost in. Snow. cloud and zero cold central and southern Alberta as “covered most of Canada on the a result of a blizzard last week causing weathermen to revise ay of winter Tuesday. and a cold spell climbed to fiftolestimales that mild weather for fit- head as reports reached Cal-lwould remove the snow by .V polar weather on Christ-lgary Tuesday. Heaviest lossiChristmas. The city has spent {was reported from the Hannav$200,000 clearing snow so far. i area, 100 miles northeast of Cal-. Air and highway traffic was mild weat er and some l gary. disrupted by snow and slides in snow during the day. New-I Extremely cold weather of scattered parts of British Co- foundland was. battered by afthe past week was moderatingllumhia. Hardest hit was the snowstorm and parts of thellslighI-ly in Alberta. but no reallLower Mainland area. where Maritimes had record cold tem- break in the cold spell was fore- the usually mild Fraser Valley peratures for the date. The‘cast. A series of Pacific and Vancouver areas “pm Prairies cold spell continued weather disturbances were. to y. , {and snow. thaws and mvudslides bring more snow to the Prai- mm? mad‘ Impass'ble mu" sent transportation timetables ries. wack had ‘2 “Nb” of "w" 1‘ askew in British Columbia. ' Vancouver. buried In a week- 24 hours. A ow - moving storm that socked ‘ renal: 32112263 Will Oregon, Calif. Counties Newfoundland Tuesday as the . Declared Disaster Areas windy weather pattern moved ASSOCIATED PRESS flood waters swept bridge and end snowstorm. got more. snow overnight Monday and Tuesday. tingl mas. Southern Ontario and Quebec d ' h . l into the Atlantic. emperatllrcs rose in the im- tmediate wake of the storm but . . ' By THE lfhls was followe hv cold-l - i ‘ . Oregon and four sparsely- 03" "’33- , .Jh'. of Isome Atlantic centres Camp~ ca‘ifnrnia' “Shell by. heavy Em?" (“ed 0' exmwmg.‘ ' Igemdn V B record“ 'a 10“, M I snow and rain. high wmds and 108ml! INS way In 8 high def"! ‘ m hflO’w‘ . floods. were declared disaster l “WW-‘le “’th Cheekmfi “ “1'; Following the cold wave wins I “93“ T'wsr‘ay' . ornanPh-Temyl MW" 21:35:14; cloud and intermittent snow I Govern” Mal“ "a “I'Id Reno P l S“ he'mP-r' d' y" . hich left two to four inches ol "5km 0mm," mm!“ '0 trawl shortly in” Shem“; 9p" m w ' ‘ lonly for emergency purposes in {mm ' snow in the Montreal area Tues~ l K v . safe-*3 affect“ by floods and Governor Edmund Br0wn 0' 121;.‘A“.:"$h§.¥:fedthfh J Show and mud slide ' I‘California designated Humboldt. lmoré‘ . ‘ imkrmiupnt Hatfield‘s office Halfl H MOD-.Mendocino_ S‘skyyom any! Del Isnow m contra] Canada mm", ""18 d01‘1"”- JWPl‘ R- Dickson Norte counties as disaster latter a day in which the telri- "' Chl'W‘I‘ W“ 0 ," idle areas. while flooding streams lpefim" had "MW, {mzinz In over the John Day River when forced thousands of persons the Rm,“ most southern sections. ‘frzr‘nh their homes. ' l - n Butler. 50. vanlshed lo the Klamath River near or- lea-ns in Humboldt county when a road collapsed beneath his INSIDE TODAY TEMPE' ATURE TO DROP Ottawa had an in and al ha" of snow Tuesday morninz Ilfllu. deaths .... .. s. n and the temperature was to Classified Is. is P- . . drop to 10 above zero overnight. cm“... I 7 In southern Californlnsnd ad- Manitoba and Saskatchewan s I . . . ” lace!" parts of Mexico all bad light snow and tempera- Wm,” earthquake described as W!" ful shook a wide region around .— ° tures were crating—Alb 1 I above zero in Winnipeg and up} amigzu'” ____ _' , San Diego. Damage was re- to zero from 16 below In the sum . r . I H , pitted widespread but not me- Regina area. More scatsered “$23.2... (my _ alls and a cold snap were i run}... m“. I. m _ Hub! m and expected to follow as Christ-' “mambo. bkxkethmlllm re (Continueduoanldl d I