By MORRIS W. ROSENBERG | , GUATEMALA (AP)—High in} ismatéd, jungle-covered moun: tains ,of Guatemala, Venezuela and “Colombia a silent. savage war is being. fought. . . 3ands of guerrillas engage in: © \losses in recent months. disputes— ‘do the a deadly game of hide-and-seek with army patrols of the three nations i Except, in,, Guatemala, the guerrillas have taken some hard Sharp — ideological NOTICE y Guerrilla Warfare Waged In 3 Latin America Areas based ‘gereralily on conflicting’ policies versus hard line or Peking posi- tions—have deeply divided the | atin American Communists. In none of the three countries to ft line or’ ,Moscow guerrillas. appear DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Province of Prince Edward Island BUILDING NEAR HIGHWAY | “Section 41 of the Roads Act, 1965, reads as follows: No person’ shall, without ‘a written permit from the Minister, erect any building at.a distance of less than 50. feet from the boundary | of any highway or road, nor. shall any such building be erected at a distance of less than fifty feet from those of the next adjoining *~ owner. v No person-shall; without. a written permit from the Minister, eréct any building, structdre, sign or billboard, at a distance of less than two hundred feet from the point of intersection of any intersecting roads or highways or at a point less than two hundred feet from the. point of intersection of a road or highway witha railroad. For the purpose of this section, the’ point of intersection of such roads or highways-shall be the point at which the centre lines of such roads or highways intersect, and in the case of a road or highway intersect- ing with a railroad the point of intersection shall be the point at which the centreline of-sueh road-intersects: with-the-centre:line of such railroad. (3) No person shall; without a written permit from the Minister erect ~at or near a-curve or bend-in a road or_highway any building; struc- ture, sign or billboard which may obstruet-or-interfere in any man- ner with a clear yiew of traffic on the said road or highway or which . would result in a reduction of theactual sight of traffic on. the said road or highway to less than one thousand feet. (4) The Minister upon -receiving application for such permit, may grant. or refuse such permit and his decision to grant or refuse the permit shall be final and conclusive. pte Act apply. - September 21, 1966 ~ This section shall. apply to any incorporated citv, town, incorporated village or to any area in which the Regulations of the Town Planning ~ GEORGE J. FERGUSON, Minister of Highways ~’ ‘NO PAPER TIGER yo i jnave any hope they can soon ob- ‘tain their goals of overthrowing existing governments Some . guerrillas, ,by recent setbacks, have aban- ‘doned the struggle. Others, though their numbers’ are not large. remain in the trackless, rugged mountains. dedicated to combat, waiting and hoping. for- the political tide to flow their way. |HIT AND RUN They keep on the move. seek- jing thé aid of peasants, fearful lof. betrayal, avoiding army pa- itrols—unless they spot a chance for a suecessful atmbush and then they strike hard. From Cuba. Communist leader Fidel Castro—the idol of the guerrillas — continually be- seeches the rebels-to. try harder. -1Castro berated them —in-a-speech July 26: * “In the immense. majority of Latin American countries, there are superior conditions for revo- lution tham those which existed in Cuba, and if these revolutions are not made in these countries it is because of a lack of ‘con- viction in many who call them- selves revolutionaries." - f But to some Latin American revolutionaries it is Castro who is somewhat out of touch with the situation. A Colombian Communist com- mented after Castro's speech: ‘It's: all very well.for him to tellus to lead a revolution, but the Colombian army is not a pa- ‘per tiger.’’ One of the best organized guerrilla ‘groups in Latin Amer- ica, today appears to be the rebel armed forces (F.A.R.— Fuerzas Armadas Rebeldes) in Guatemala. Many in Guatémala wonder wonder why the 12,000 - man armed forces, which successfully -idestroyed—some~ rebel units” in 1962, have not been able to elim- inate the F.A.R. Some observers THE ROYAL ‘CANADIAN. MOUNTED POLICE has vacancies for single men between 18 and 36 ‘yearsef. age who are at least S$’ 8” In height, successfully completed Grade Eleven er have ‘}range up, to 150 a iy 4 jbelieve army take the guerrillas seriously Col. Rafael Arriaga Bosque, discouraged Guatemala’s new defence min- jister, said in an interview last month that the guerrillas ‘do not represent any danger to; the {government because they do not have any base. They have no jsupport from the population.”’ ELECTIONS HELPED | With former law school dean | Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro | now installed as a freely-elected |president; many feel the guerrillas will lose some of the sympathy they formly had . among — students, tuals and workers In Venezuela, .the . guerrilla national liberation (‘FALN — 'Fuerzas Armadas de Liberacion 'Nacional)—-has been \torn. by |ideological arguments and personality clashes. FALN action has dwindled considerably from a peak about three years ago when it carried junits, conducted kidnappings and holdups. in Caracas and blew up oil. pipelines. hb A-—governument— official—ealéu- lates FALN effective forces now at between 150,to 200, But a Communist party leader in Caracas claims the total’ force throughout the country. is close to 1,000. TWO GROUPS.. In neighboring Colombia, \rilla groups. One is a hard line, pro-Chinese . group called the |Army of.‘ National . Liberation (ELN) made up of Cuban - trained university students, some teachers and other leftist extremists from the capital city. The other is the Revolution- ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) mdde up of various which had been driven out of “independent republics’ they had set up previously in rural areas. — Estimates ‘of ELN _ strength hile the active strength of FARC. is estimated by observers and officials at from 150 to 500. : Although the guerrilla move- ments in Latin America have been split by. ideological fights, ithey.. still: have much in com- }mon: : y | —Many of the guerrillas | have been’ trained in Cuba | and they hope to achieve a better and are physically. fit. Contact the nearest Reye! : ie Canadien Mounted Police ef- fies or write te the Com- missioner, Royal Canadien Mounted Police, Ottewa 7, Ontario. BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY | Goods and Service . . . Where to find them in Charlottetown and District REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE SERVICES BUYING - SELLING WANTED . ALE BOTTLES Michael Bros ‘Ltd 240 Dorchester St. We per dozen PHONE __ 4.8595 Seer Bottle Exchange BUYING SELLING RENTING ; “PHONE 43268 J. W. MacKENZIE. Real Estate Consultant d Appraiser and Broker. 269 Queen Street Charlottetown Member of C.A.R.EB.- Drop your beer bottles at MAURICE BLOCK Co. Lid. Kent Street. 20c Per Dosen ‘ Quick Service BOTTLE: EXCHANGE - ~~ O'BRIEN Iron and 1 Metal Co. Ltd. wower Prince St.—Charlottetown Phone 4-4497 SERVICES WOOD'S .FUELS Texaco Stove *and Furnace Oi Free Oil. Burner Service. , 45 Woodlawn Ave. Ch'town Dial 892-2336 1 : & J. Js FOLEY TRANSFER : £ 65 Richmond St. Phone 4-9914 “Tops in Efficient, Courteous Service.” MONUMENTS Of Distinction Granite and Marble also Cemetery Lettering WILSON Realtor -. Insurance Appraiser - Builder. Tel. Office: 894-7242 MOL Real Estate Ltd. Broker, Appraiser— Phone 2-161l After Hrs. 2-2300 “Member of C. A. R. E. B. SERVICES ROBERT McINNIS t # Interior — Exterior Painting and Papering. An A-1 job guaranteed. Free estimates. Telephone 992-2153 day 894-4896 after 5 p.m. Auto Salvage Kensington Rd. Parkdale See us for auto parts and Supplies Finley MacKinnon is 15 GEORGE PEAKE LIMITED REAL ESTATE _ ~ INSURANCE 92 QUEEN STREET ‘PHONE 2-2448 REAL ESTATE . | Charlottetown - Head Office 90 Kent Street—892-2511 _ “Branch Olfices ~~“ S'Side - 381 Beaver 2088 Island-Wide Service | SERVICES ; = ‘Eastern Painters Limited Exterior and interior . inting special coatings, | vinyl fabric, spray paint- | ing, . . CURRIE BROS, “Free Estimates” Malpeque Koad We are ready to serve Ch'town: 4-8311 . you.. ce 159 Sydney St. ae ARTHUR H. ROPE P.O. Box 1301 or 4-6651 | . “2 Elm Ave. Ch'town 4.3278" -SUNNYSIDE Minor Repairs c White Rose and Shell Products BEAUTY sen Goodyear tires and a full line | 3 eciatieinn f saieat. hile of accessories. { stylee, tinting, rinses and | perms. Open Tuesday, Thurs- | day and Friday evenings. - BAKERIES C HOME BAKERY wA9 Spring Park Road made to order Ample parking. Dial 44224. Speciatties MONUMENTS ~- LEVI-POWER- Montague _ Local Representative is J.T. DOYLE Box 816. Dial 4-3624 ISLAND BRIKCRETE 4” Field Tile 6” Cement Blocks Flagstones 149 North River Road , Dial 4-3942 _ LOTUS CAFE Air-conditioned ¥ Delicious Chinese and _ Canadian Foods Take out Service Phone 4-3910 72 Queen St. Hubert D. Joy, R.1. A. Management Consultant” general management finance 4 control hospitals 3 general and cost -accounting 192 Belvedere Avenue Charlottetown Phone 4-9961 Rethy’s TV & Radio Shop. NOW OPEN Repairs on all Electrical Appliances. Phone 4-5113 or apply 137 Upper Queen Charlottetown Reasonable Rates - Thomson Septic —_—Septie—Tank- Pumping, — “Courtesy is our motto” Phone 4-4411 — West Royalty RALPH FOY, Tryon, P.E.I. Plumbing and Heating Contractor SEPTIC TANK and - FIELD TILE INSTALLATION CUSTOM BACKHOEING Beatty Barn Equipment Phone — Crapaud 42-23 — jo = Tank: Serviée= other sectors of ~ Guatemalans inte'lee. | movement—the armed forces. of | seriously | out raids on policé and army | there are two main active guer- | Communist guerrilla _ groups and how soon governments im- leaders do not | h + | oe | | ‘ | -| Castroist revolution even though they may not accept Castro's assertion that the time is ripe for armed rebel- lion in their own countries '—They are pledged to the violent overthrow of existing governments, to the elimina- tion of U.S. interests and in- fluence, and the establish- ment of Communist, or revo- .lutionary ‘socialistic, regimes. The fate of the guerrilla movements depends not only on how well the armies can com- bat them, but also on how well ‘prove conditions of the workers ee peasants in their countries. - IMPROVE HOSPITAL 000,000 three-year expansion and! face Jifting program for the Hos- Was. pital for Sick Children. The work | 28410 Rioters run away Fi through debris that littters the street the Portuguese em- bassy at Kinshasa, Congo, Sa- turday as police arrive at the outside | ransacked building. President “By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP)—The name of always be resolved in favor of TORONTO (CP). Consirue- Herbert Norman had lain, all|the national security.’ tion work has started on a $7,- but forgotten, in a dusty secur- is part of a $30,600,000 drive |fenbaker. Started by the’ hospital in 1965.) sion will include ing offices. Mr. _ HOUSEKEEPER WANTED The Kings County Memorial Hospital Montague, P.E.I, Diefenbaker ne | conan A public ‘s ipti $13,900, been accused by . Justice | d 000" sell Se nb One ent ee ‘Wishart Spence of the Suprmee Pearson) in modersiized |Court of Canada of resolving a|Norman case. operating rooms and laborator- 1960 security case—Gerda Mun- | This is the — ies, intensive care unit, teach- singer—in favor of one of his Norman case: classrooms and executive jcabinet ministers instead of in‘EXPERT ON FAR EAST >, favor of thestate. ty, file for nine years until’ it) pushed into’ prominence) “'Thepoint—is-made-thata__-Mr. Pearson said Norman had by Opposition Leadér Die- doubt as to. loyalty must be re- » The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Sept. 26, 1966. 13 wom &. 4 2. } 3 nao alate PORTUGUESE EMBASSY SACKED IN CONGO | Joseph Mobuiu and Foreign Minister Justin Bomboko. at- tended a rally in front of the @mbassy Sunday. Banners protested ‘against Portuguese former Congo premier Moise. Norman's Name Forgotten | Until It's Revival By Dief _ | The judge said “doubt must | Mr. _Diefenbaker said in a ‘statement: : : “solved in favor of the state. i had just; ‘‘This was not followed by the |New York in the 1930s. __Fequires the services of a housekeeper who.will have super- Sea Sra Se LSE ETE YT tions and must be October 7th. _ a vision over dietary housekeeping and lau dry dep. prime minister thee Herbert ” background of the Norman was a Canadian born in Japan who attended univers- ity. in New York in the mid- 1930s. He joined the external af- fairs department in 1939 and was--an expert on Far Eastern affairs. SUS li In 1940, an RCMP” secret agent ‘in Toronto reported a source had informed him that a Professor Herbert Norman was a member of’ the Communist party of Canada. ; In October, 1950 the US. nts... Applications to be in writing stating age and qualifica-. ; received by the undersigned on or before oe FRED E. NORTON, Adminitrative Officer No: | nt ¢ ( Joint operation people apply: Ss ‘Blueprint Reading Bookkeeping Carpentry Drafting Electrical Wiring FOR RENT... FREEZER LOCKERS $18.00 per year Call 4-4121 SEPTIC TANK FIELD TILE "INSTALLATION @ BACK HOEING reasonable Rates LORNE FOY. Ph. Crapaud 42-34 Tryon | READ THE TELEPHONE 4-4712 PIANO LESSONS By “experienced teacher Mt. Allison Trained Parkdale Area Dial 4-4018 New Fall Dresses Arriving Daily THE GLORIA ‘Where Smarter Women Shop” = Sizes 5 - 24% 155. Great George St. Phoné 4-4714 -< AAYLWARD'S FURNITURE EXCHANGE LTD. 87 Prince St. and eave dollars.” Phone 4-8125 | “Walk a block from uptown— [- CLASSIFIED ADS DAILY ot. @ SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED » £ Auto Body Repair Bookkeeping Bricklaying “Carpentry (Regul Commercial Art Drafting (Archite Drafting (Mechan Welding Carpentry, Improver) (This echool financed jointly by the Federal and SUMMERSIDE TL ONIGHT CLASS. _...._ VOCATIONAL SCHOOL +. asked for any information avail- able on Norman. The RCMP dispatched its 1940 report to. the vestigation- and informed the FBI six weeks later that the or un- an uf- of mistaken identity founded rumor from identified sub-source. : In 1951, the US. Senate in- ternal - security subcommittee ‘|publicly branded Norman as a Communist. f Shortly before this, the Cana- dian government had got wind of the subcommittee investiga- tion involving Norman and called him home from Tokyo, where he was serving in the Ca- _|nadian embassy, fora — security ° of provincial and federel governments) Plumbing Shorthend Typing Welding Radio and TY Repair th Motor Vehicle Repair te pan Electrical (Improver) Electrical (Regular) Motor Vehicle Repair (Improver) Motor Vehicle Repair (Regular) ar) Plumbing (Improver) ctural) Plumbing (Regular) ical) Sewing... Typing on ' , PROVINCIAL VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE ~ EVENING CLASSES Registration for Evening Classes will be held on September 28 and 29, 1966 from 7 - 9% p.m. Classes are offered in: Fee: $10:00 per eourse to be paid at first class The following trade courses will be offered if sufficient check. The external affairs depart- ment. announced Aug. 9, 1951, that the security check had given Norman “a clean bill of health and he, therefore, re- mains a trusted and valuable Official of the department.” Mr. Pearson was then ex- ternal affairs minister and ac- cepted: responsibility for keep- ing Norman in the department. | ...March. 14,:.1957,-the..subcom- jmittee again branded ‘Norman as a Communist. Three weeks later Norman, 47, ‘committed suicide by jumping from the top of a seven-storey building in “ \Cairo, where he was Canadian An upgrading course to Grade X wilf be offered in English, Math and - Science to those individuals requiring help to enter a trade. ~~ Registration: 7-9 p.m. — September 27 and 28° » The Registrar. Provincial Governments) ambassador. HAILED Dmitri’ Shostakovie®. — in trouble in the past with So- | viet authority, was hailed on the eve of his 60th birthday | Sunday as: a. great national | genius of the Soviet Union. He (Mr. | FBI, then conducted its own in-! original 1940 report was a case) Tshombe and alleged plots that are being -fomented against ‘The Congo. » _ (AP Wirepoto by cable from Brussels) de Eight days later, Mr. Diefem lpaker challenged Mr. Pearson in the Commons to state that Norman had never been a Com- lmunist,- : Sat : . jhad certain’ Communist assoc} jat.ions as a university student ig But he declined a direct reply |to Mr. Diefenbaker's point-blank idemand to say Norman . had never been a Communist. ¢ |ABANDONED COMMUNISM | Later, after’ Parliament was dissolved in 1957, Mr. Pearson- said Norman in the 1930s had © jheld ideologies’ “close to so ‘brand of communism” but h regretted and voluntarily aban- - doned them by the time he \joined the external affairs de- |partment. > ere He said Norman had been @ jmember © of - Communist study \groups while a youth in college tbut=“‘are-we™ to “condemn “a young Canadian all his life be- of this?” cause jtime that Parliament had been deceived because it had _ not ‘been given full. information i-Friday, Mr. Diefenbaker ‘quoted Mr, -Pearson as saving in the Commons April 12, 1957: “It has--always been a_ prin- jciple, and, I think, ‘a correct ‘principle of our security investi- gation, that’ we would not deal ‘publicly in connection with a Security - inquiry with the de jtails of any allegations made, for the reason that the details ‘of a man’s private life should not be the subject of accusation jand rebuttal in public.” Mr. -Diefenbaker added: “That was the principle in 1957." Norman's suicide in 1957 was followed by official Canadian protests to Washington about the actions of Congressional committees. ‘LOSES RIGHTS FOR LOVE DUESSELDORF, West 'Get- many (AP)—Prince Michael of Prussia, youngest great-grand- son of the last kaiser, marride a German commoner Friday in defiance of family laws. The 26 year-old prince and 23-year-old Jutta--Joern,;- who met in “New York last year, were united in a_ civil ceremony at suburban Kaiserswerth. For the prince, the wedding meant disinherl- tance and loss of his succession rights under. a decree of Kaiser Wilhelm IL sani has been awarded. the. title, “Hero of Socialist Labor. high est title in the Soviet Union. He is the first composer to be so honored, AP Wirephote) ‘