Bg ° ~ ? * e s me . ~ : cs SK : 4 n° & E ; “es a If t's Good For The Island. 3 WEATHERS oii Mw Clearing this morning, winds northwest a The. Guardian Is For It .20, gusts to 40, becoming 15 by evening; us : Low- “high 35 and 52. Sunday. cloudy, cool, fe : ~ % : { ; . vs - ey ‘ i ‘ 0 “oo ce 0 “Covers. Prince Eduat Island oe ¢ Dew” 2G VOL. ae 113 Authorized 2s Second Class Mail by-the Post Office Department, ~ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY; MAY 14, nor Mote SEVEN CENTS t 18 PAGES Ottawa, and. for a of postage in cash baat Se Excessive Provincialism Said Fostered By Ottawa, HAMILTON. (CP)—The. party ‘strong central government fn evolve a strong philosophy | now in power in Ottawa is ac- Canada. the fact that.we are ‘“‘cheek by celerating excessive ‘provincial-| He said that what ‘he. termed jow! with the greatest Seine. | » ism if Canada, Heath Macquar- ithe unwillingness of the present | | military and economic entit e Raids. On Han nted In Fields — = ited In U.s ae wervative SMneiaier ah tne Mr. Macquarrie said the Con-| Mr. Macquarrie said that ‘all o He. conference of the Ontario Young servatice party. also hada Parties when in office had acted ' O} ric. MP for Queens, charged government to use the small the world.’ |: c Friday federal machinery it possesses, ‘It just doesnit permit a me t Mr. Macquarrie outlined Con- WS the #reatest danger on the range 4 reaction to_ world ae contemporary political scene. servative philosophy at the r bhNalike. Progr vative. Asso- Strong respect for “worthy and: VARS aus a ee ee ge m _iworkable. traditions." There: is-a~ built-in necessity, ———for—compromisein-Canada,’*~he = Tlie three- iy pon feradol will VALUES MONARCHY. suggested.— feature talks by. former federal , the monarchy be-; He warned that’ there was a “We val cabinet. ministers Alvin Hamil- cause it i esvenun to-our_sys« ‘danger of creating artificial dif- | ton, Davie Fulton and George tem and cause it has proved | ferences hetweer left and right : : anda aa address by workable.° and valuable," he in Canada. = 2 een ee ~ Premier John Robarts. said “At the moment the” prize a : ‘Ir. Macquarrie. argued: that Mr. Macquarrie suggested sition for a politician is to ¥e sate om Alas pilots rr af ary and, eats a th> Conseryative party had beén. that all parties in Canada were "just a little left of centre,” he the consistent advocate of hampered in their efforts to. said, > ' cells. ADMITTED ATTACKS Police said nine adrititted at \Nam_ in. perbaps record num- bers Friday. From Washington Electric Plant Superintendent Test By Dies Here After Brief Illness ~ Warren W. Henderson, 30; Maple ‘Avenue, Sherwood, died last night-in the Prince Edward Tsland Hospital. Mr. Henderson, 51. was the superintendent of Red China Not H-Bomb__ WASHINGTON . (AP) |. Unofficial )U.S. Navy and -Air Force strikes lin North Viet Nam would equal jhad. come a hint that they may | bomb Hanoi's airfields if Com- munist MiGs down any: Ameri- can-planes in future-dogfights. reports indicated | or exceed Thtrsday's 135 mis- sions, which involved more than 2M individual .combat flights or sorties. The war's high for a } \single day is 260. Hacks--on the nationa®: police headquarters Aug. 16 last and ‘the bombing of two American military. billets—the. Metropole Hotel Dec. 4 and the Victoria Hotel April 1. | The fresh air action north of the border dividing the two Viet Nams followed a rebuttal here lof Peking’s. story that US. ifighters intruded into China and lU.S.~ Atomic Energy “ oe :sion said Friday the third Chi- jnese atomic blast Monday was | mot that of _a-hydrogén weapon. « After——a—preliminary analysis f of the radioactive debris spewed || ‘into the atmosphere by the blast i Strikes by: U.S. Marines, shot down a Chinese plane that ‘South Vietnamese troops and Was on’a training mission over | American—a-r-med—helicopters Yunnan province. Thursday. ~~ ielaimed. the lives" of 267 Viet{~ American sources~ ‘told~ of -a {Cong guerrillas in monsson sea- ;dogfight in. which a missile-fir- son ground operations in South |ing F-4C Phantom downed a 'MiG-17, not in the Makwan area Maritime Electric’s steam plant in the city. His death camé rather unexpectedly after:a- tue week illness. ¢- s we} ' Mr.. Henderson was horn in Charlottetown and. educated at Prince Street School and the ; 4 in remote Sinkiang province, | Viet Nam. erwin Cree eae. cae lthe AEC said: I |_The marines announced they | pinpointed x the Chinese but Co. Ltd. —and- since 1943 with “The test was probably an ex- | killed 175 from-a band of about |more than 50 ‘miles away,. over oP Maritime— Electric. He became perimental device, either at- 200 that jumped a 14-man pa- |North Viet Nam's Red ‘River ° trol. Thursday in a rice paddy, Valley. A heat - seeking Sidewinder. missle fired by the ‘commander of a U.S. Air.Force F-4C_Phan- ‘ DAWSON HAS WORST FLOOD IN 40 YEARS | 117 miles southwest of Da Nang.-} The Viet Cong killed 12 of the patrol and wounded _ _the “other | tempting to increase the ‘yield of the- previous low-yield fission device or looking toward an eventual thermonuclear (hydro- superintendent -ofthe-city steam plant in 1958. He was a member of the Oddfellow's Lodge and for two years secretary of Park | Strike i talks The worst flood in 40 years> water in some nina. Waler There has been no estimate of Royal United Church. gen) capability. n has inundated low-lying -re- and ice fram the Klondike and ee si city iat miles ‘two. ee ee Wilbur R. Dudley, 34, - “His remains are resting at the) “ ‘Break Dow “gions of Dawson City, Y..T., Yukon rivers ripped through northwe Edmonton near of Orange, Tex., and Alamo- MacLean Funeral Home. Fur ee ae ae = leaving up to.five feet of sandbag dikes Wednesda oe ee PLAYED DEAD. ‘gordo, N.M., destroyed the MiG neral MONTREAL, (CP) — At- Sday. (CP Wirephoto) | The-.two wounded marines |and broke up-a— clash between arrangements have not been completed. Surviving him a Mrs. Fred Hender: same fissionable material that was used in the previous Chi-| tempts nese tests. It did not contain strike of 4,250 longshoremen at lany plutonium: Montreal; -Trois—- Rivieres-and ‘Quebec City broke down Fri- FUNCTION NOT ‘LEAR day when the Shipping Federa- “The thermonuclear material, |tion of Canada withdrew from | {Lithium 6, was present, .al- talks with afederally-appointed iinoush its specific function in ‘conciliation board. e device is not yet clear. It!’ A federation spokesman said:. Sei font te some time before more “‘we- will not—return—to—con= definitive information is availa- ciliation until the menreturn to survived by playing dead as |four of the cannon-firing enemy Viet Cong roved their :position. |and four American planes. -Over - all marine scasualti The ‘site of the three-minute were described” as flight. — ae ~ the supersonie 1 Sanctions Drive | to settle a week-long | his. mother, on of Char- C, a Salvation. Army captain in Kent- ville, N.S., and his wife, the former Marion McIntyre of Char- Tottetown and five daughters: Betty (Mrs. “Karl Savident) and W.-W. HENDERSON Wanda (Mrs, Lorne Doiron, city; ese government eadee sup- are from 115 to 105 miles ported by U.S. armed helicop- |northwest of the North Vietnam- ters. battled a force of about jese capital of Hanoi—an area 300 Viet Cong, 54 miles south- from 20 to 25 miles south of the west of Saigon, A spokesman |Chinese frontier. said 92 Viet Cong were killed | The downed MiG was the 12th and 26 were captured. Gove of the Soviet-build jet fighters te Gail (Mrs. Garth Scott), Bun-| bury, Lorna “(Mrs, Carl Scott), Cornwall and Debborah at home. He also has nine grand-children; | In Rhodesia ble.”’ work.” t : ‘ “Th a ia th t A+ spokesmam: for the Interna- | By HAROLD MORRISON ‘against Nhadesis aud the f tions t i . ment “losses were light. fallin oe with American Social: Cr edit Leader. wy rnnaunsement Mon, oa Longshorengeit's Associa- LONDON. (CP) — Britain in-iforce, would..be. 2, mivenhe tna. oocapiote, Kale te e-tappty: of CoP, URE tice ae: Mows lerat ETC Oe aeey that ¢ vice contained tion said the ke probably Term ed “the CommonWealth \view of Britain's current Fep- /oil. 4. \ afield’ was a major move Sone bel ef it was North Vi- tee that the | uiaterial.”” No |would continue at least:’ until sanctions committee Friday it resentations to Portugal and The infant said tha caeeaast Viet »Cong agents in jetnamese, ‘tho id they Saigon, South Viet Nam's capl- never saw its markings. al.—Government-—security—fo! | MiGs—have—downed—two—U.8.—- t announced the arrest of 38 Viet {planes in such action over North Cong See: and. the seiz-'Viet Nam. : jcould not support an African South Africa, the results of among those Commonwealth Z ; mtaale moa Se shal oe a which are not yet. known. ~ representatives who spoke aga odesia nor could it It is understood these repre- the sanctions committee, there Vaniers ‘Honcsed distlose details at this stage sentations are intended to per- was more support to Britain’s | -jabout.. secret- Anglo-Rhodesia suade the two countries to give position than there were: objec: -|claim was made by the Chinese |Monday. . that. they. had actually_attained | | any fullfledged thermonuclear | {= hydrogen blast. high. - flying -radioactive | Critical Of Inquiry ~ WINNIPEG. — (CP) — Social A an Lender’ Weber! ‘chempsen he Bade Ms. -duitice “Wishart| cinud fon the tae explosion | With Degrees ; Geet ae a diplomatic full effect to the British’ sane- tions to it. U. S. Auth ors Politicians said Friday the Munsinger in- properly. e Inow is passing west. to east HALIFAX (C Pi. "Go ernor: | The source said Canada gave r over North America, U.S. gov- oor aneeryt estimated Fri- Aiea General and Mme." Vanier were |full support to Britain's posi- awarded honorary degrees dur-|tion, arguing that further man- —jng—a—convocation_at_ -Mar ‘y's datory sanctions_ or, the use of > I The path was said te he University here Friday. It* was {force would not be the best way of the people involved. \mainly over the, United States, the first time the ae of settling the crisis oyer Rho- Is Upheld f. ‘This is not his job at all. /with only small areas of Can- honorary degtees on same desia, whose white minority. TORONTO (CP)--A St. Cath- He is supposed to be holding an |2da underneath the cloud. |platform the same day. igovernment seized independ- arines magistrate’s order of five | oe and o Tee report, | : | The Governor-General told the ence from Britain las year. strokes of the lash for two /not a judgmen end to agree | graduating students they should; Canadian High Commissioner brothers: from Florence, N.S., With Mr.—Diefenbaker -that the” Parliament resolve: to use their. talents ‘‘to | ‘Lions! Chevrier presided at the He said, in an interview, Mr- __|Justice Spence is conducting the “inquiry like a judge -seeking lestablish the guilt or innocence | oe Blasted On Safety Campaign LONDON, Ont. (CP) ——_The driver. Only two. pet cent were grandson of the founder of the ee a Poggi ne one e senators or Firestone tire company Friday | authors critical ‘of tire safety accused U.S. senators and auth: \«have ever come to our factor- ors of using tire and automobile jjes to find out what we do to ‘safety as ‘‘a political vehicle to |make' safe tires.’’ ladvance their own careers and | In ia Murder Case SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. Caldbick Thursday called |get their names in front of the | president, Morgan Reid, Toronto, vice- planning ahd devel- Simpsons-Sears Ltd., was. upheld Thursday by the | rer ac resemble an oe their maximum advantage in hour - long committee meeting Ontario Court. of Appeal. Diefénba iefenba- the service of God — your |where, it was reported, Britain's Ganiailien Leader (CP).— Abrasions and bruises friends of Mrs. Barber to tes- voting publie.”” | opment, Mr. Justice F. G.~ Mackay yeasty | fellows.”” |'Commonwealth Secretary Ar- said the appeal court felt the | i\ker has also criticized the com- ‘thar Bottomley rejected a Ken- found on the body of ‘53-year- -old tify, They said she had been a} aeons Firestone, “35-year-old | told the conference the onticak sentences given the men| mission. Marjorie Barber during a sec- normal, cheerful, stable woman ga y for retailing in — looks vice-president, Firestone Tire and * |fo Rubber — Co. yan plea that Britain support a jail ‘proposed resolution for tougher By THE CANADIAN PRESS | were too lenient. a | Mr. Thompson said both the © . |Munsinger and Spencer gixen to occasional moodiness. n earlier -testimony,’ Mrs. | cnd autopsy were. inflicted. be- fore her Dec. 3, 1965, death a “very favorable.” ‘of Canada Ltd., | Greater productivity is being | Royal-Couplé The. court incredsed the sen- quir- ; . ‘ ; tence for Cecil B. Capstick, 19, Poe f ae rere Loe ah rn Wink i Ager Retour Feature pathologist said Friday. Irene Chapman, 43, of Toronto, eee ee aniseed achieved by means of better from five years to seven and | ewe irae rte shave nipeg South~Centre)—said’ De- Council in New York Tuesday.| He was testifying at the capi- described a 14-month relation- | oirorence at the University of long-term planning, improved inventory and cost control with Returns Home jharmed a lot of people yet the cee hip duri hich she had bee confirmed the five-year sen- |; fence Minister Hellyer was Bottomley..-did not want “to ta] murder-trial here of her hus- Sh!p during which she ha n been oO) tence for Thomas Capstick, 20. jr oe ecurity. “our ministers | misleading the Commons “aati prejudice the current Anglo- band, Dalton, 55, staff assistant | intimate with Barber. She had | eee the aid of-electronic data ’pro- he security. Four ministers LONDON (Reuters) — Queen | gone on trips with him several. ‘Drivers vote and it~ would \cessing equipment and more in- ‘Rhodesian talks and-drive Por- to_ the vice-president of opera- tugal and South Africa closer |tions at Algoma Steel Corp. to Rhodesia’s side. | Dr. Hans Sepp performed. the Rhodesia's Ian Smith regime |second autopsy at the attorney- |declared unilateral independ- general's. laboratory Feb. 25. An ence from Britain after the ‘autopsy at the time of Mrs. ‘British refused to grant the Barber's death gave the cause ‘colony freedom without gudran- as carbon monoxide poisoning. itees for eventual rule by the |The body was exhumed Feb, 23. Negro majority. ie .| Douglas Lucas of the attorney- | DARTMOUTH, N.S. — (CP) TWO OTHER TARGETS general's department testified | Brian David Mailman, 18, ef South. Africa and Portugal that the level of carbon mon- Dartmouth was killed Friday |aiso have been targets of the oxide in the bedroom where when the car in which -he was |Negro-ruled African countries, Mrs.. Barber's body was found |riding left the- highway and. South Africa for its policy of was not high enough to be le- istruck a boulder at nearby Up- apartheid (race separation) and thal. : per Lawrencetown. |Portugal as a colonial power on Mr. Barber was found uncon- “through ignorance” of armed | forces. strength. Mr. Hellyer, whose figures on enlistments and releases were at odds with totals pre- | sented earlier, said he'd take another look and report Mon- day. Stuart Keate ‘announced -he had completed his review of the CBC producers’ dispute and would report to the PM within 10 days. Opposition. Leader Diefen-~ haker intimated he might hold a press conference next week on the Munsinger affair. ‘The mew were convicted last es sheik 6~o0f indecent assault Spobbery. with. violence and theft, , ell against a_ St. area farmer. Death Sentence Reduced To Life -EDMONTON (CP)—The death of justice have known ‘about ns training * |Munsinger affair.’’ -He said the handling of ane Catharmes inquiries was the best argument ‘for not holding them. times between April, 1964, and not be politically expedient to tensive personnel August, 1965, but had not seen criticize the driver and pass _j|methods. him “again until a week after laws that might be unpopular Mr. Reid said Simpsons-Sears Mrs. Barber’s death. concerning driver. - training, li- plans for a minimum of seven She said she had stayed atthe censing and - vehicle —mainten- new enlarged. or relocated Barber home from mid-Decem- ance, evem though such laws stores over the next five years. ‘ber until Barber's arrest, stay- eee be good for the country.’’ He did not elaborate. fing in-a locked bedroom when- Firestone said a study About 250 senior management ever, anyone en the house. wands by his company shows personnel from leading Cana- The trial, in its Wth day Fri: that 70 per cent of the accidents ‘dian companies are attending day, is continuing. studied were the fault ¢ of the the conference. Wilson Plea Is Rejected; ) Elizabeth and Prince Philip re- turned here by air from Ostend iFriday night after their five- day state visit to Belgium. ‘Dartmouth Youth Killed In Crash sce ae of nemnorinn, toe : Canada’s national hockey | Another occupant of the car, |the. African continent. scious across the ‘foot of —his ee ° the Oct: 19, 1964; killing of his e ean Wee ener as Site. Craig M. Demone, 18 also of| The; informant said Bottomley. wife's hed by a, doctor he had wife. was commuted by the thumping ‘elote HK” ar Dartmouth, was taken to Victoria. also argiied that endorsement of called early: in the morning of rl iS al ors O i I e federal cabinet Friday to life be before Ju wi General Hospital® in Halifax in the -30-country résolution, which Dec 3. - : : en imprisonment. i a See at Minister sola calls. for mandatory sanctions _ Special Crown Attorney 8. A.) ronpon (Reuters) -— Brit- sure. ‘vital. supplies’ will reach outa full inquiry into seamen’s éLyding is- in Fort Saskatche: ; § bana won a pes wie of re m ainis 62,500 merchant sailors the ports. @ working conditions. wan, Alta., jail, where the death | chahoes is a Northwest. by 4. fe j have ignored 8” plea ae salad | A unio’ spokesman, said ships ; bhi esitehigegg oe rg eingelorgpaton i ae Wate aay. | Territories Art. zi ve = petite Nie et for tid: at sek. woul ee ain of his own, but mere dine ne sieht | The. government moved ad- ee “wet wi ee night -Sunday ‘night will go’ on. until they reach a ete pag repeated a plan by Gunter al- wi the first Canadian schied- | journment ‘of, debate on an be p< SOWET Whi ate es Wilkam Hogarth, -general sec- News & the en in "s ready rejected by the union. uled” to “he hanged since ‘the | amendment. to. the Yukon Act ss i retary. of ‘the National Union” of son’ s - intervention i a ait whe-seatiien t-their work= House of Commons voted 143 to and approved forestry depart- |Seamen, sdid nothing could stop brief Sipe) ae: ae une ing week cut 40. from. 56 ‘the strikes since the executive ion executive ee hours. This, the employers say, . 112 April & to retain capital pun- ishment. He was charged with capital murder after his estranged 21- year-old wife Margaret and an- other: man were: fatally shot- at a West Edmonton apartment block Mrs. elung-to her infant and pounded for help on caretaker’s apartment door. ’ TRIED BY JUDGE ta Lvyvding was convicted once byt a jury, ‘then won anew trial on the basis of new evidence. He elected trial by judge alone for his second hearing. Tt was believed the first capl- tal murder \trial before a judge alone in Alberta’s history. Mur- der trials generally are con- *ductéd before judge and-jucy. The frial judge recommended mercy... when. he passed _ the death sentence. Lyding has de- nied his guilt ever since he was charged. the » Lyding was shot as she : daughter = * LLOYD LYDING The original execution date! 1965, but it was! set_ hack a number of times be | cause of a new trial and unsue- | April 2n, was cessful. appeals that were car- | ried to the Supreme Court of Canada. The second- last date set was April 5, the day before the Com- | m ote on ‘capital _punish-—- memphis date was changed to next Wednesday, because—of—the- Commons debate. Another 14 men are under sen; tence of death in Canada. | ment estimates. ‘MONDAY, May 16 * The Commons meets at 2:30 | p.m, ED? to open # two-day | supply debate. The Senate _stands—adjourned until 8 p:m- | EDT May 24. ‘Temperature HALIFAX (CP) —-Cool day |time temperatures were report- jed throughout the Maritimes again Friday, with record- br'eak- corded at two. spots. A reading of te co -at—Greenwood, NoS?, eight” grees below the \previous high vot the date set in 195% Sumner” had a 45-degree ; reading. one degree. lower a side, -P.E.I., \the record set in 1940, Records Set’ ~ aia . - aan ROFOSPHERE GFnels 1 has. vf tS. “Pathe BRS ak £ (Gi A Ae Ati’ PATH OF FALLOUT FROM CHINESE BLAST ing low maximums -being re-| Shaded marker which starts _from—blast—sy-mohl—indicates approximate path -of radio- active—eloud—from-— Monday's nuclear blast in Red- China. Government experts in) Wash- ington estimated Friday that Fedinnetivity from the blast is nhw-passing “over the United States, although. ho radioactive debris has vel? been detected on°U.S. soil. The .path touched the, southern frings of British Columbiaj and a bit of Ontario ¢ in the Lake- Erie area and to- twiches has dispersed and could not be recalled before Monday. Wilson made his appeal Fri day. dwwing a beer-and-sand- lunch at 10” Downing, Street, his official residence. With him was Labor Minister Ray Gunter, who has been un- ~suecessiul in trying to avert the strike in negotiations during the last few days. Wilson: met: the’ seamen _after cancelling ,a planned meeting with champion Cassius Clay an Henry Cooper, who meet here May for the world heavy- % 21 weight boxing .championship. WOULD HIT TRADE |. The strike would immediately hit dav is whediled to pass over and: exports, the nation’s vital imports reduce food and the ‘extreme southern tip of * fuel supplies and hamper trans: Nova Scotia. Canadian authori- ties have,ordered a check of passenger over Canada | (AP Wirepvhoto) radioactivity ' made - emekgency » plans” to and English Channel shipping. The government Atlantic has en- already. my } “ 7 nimously agreed. after an hour- Jong session to carry. on .with the strike ‘nomy—of_the ee ok URGED INTERIM PLAN The union said Wilson had urged them to accept an interim three - per - cent pay incréase while -the government carried INSIDE TODAY Classified ooo. cee ees 14-15-16 Births .....- 605 80d HOKE 15 Deaths ...cesseeeeteeeye 3 Comics ...cecsiccccanas's. 13 Sport — ....ceceeses aes (Oe Women's ; 7 Finance, markets ...... 12 Editorials . ......s00. vice 8 Summerside tA Se Kings, Queens, City oe Prince County : i 4 aN i “despite a full real-. ization:-of-the effects on the eco- | would amount to 'a_ 17-per-cent pay, increase Costing £36,000,- 000 ($108,000,000) a year. The employers-—who... stepped up the basic par rate only fast” year as compensation for long hours .Worked at sea—-have of- fered toy, stagger the increase so it comes. into full effect in 1968, The. government was expected < to. announce its emergency. plan Sunday. —2 Brezhnev Ends Romanian Visit MOSCOW (Reuters)—The So viet Communist chief, Leonid Brezhnev, returned Friday from three days of talks with the Romanian Communisi leader, “Nicolae=Cearsesew * ~ Moscow radio said Brezhnev had heen invited to go to Ro “tmana by-Ceausescu.- ‘ -