If It's Good For The Island The Guard ian Is For It Who “Covers Prince Edward’ Island _____:____...._.__...—~ VOL. LXXVI. N0. 314 President Johnson t a k e 5 time during it ceremony Wed- nesday honoring Secret Service Ann.l two-year-old daughter of Youngblood. The 39-year-old «“$"c' PRESIDENTIAL HANDSH AKE FOR TWO-YEAR-OLD Secret, Service agent received an Exceptional Service Award in protecting Johnson at the time of the assassinaitiioii of President Kennedy in Dallas. From left in from are: Young- I2-Mile limit Talks Progress CI-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 imrdimit Like The Dew” WEATHER Cloudy with occasional west winds 20 becoming light by evening. Low-high 24 and 30 snowflurrl-cg N03,,-;<;,n= SEVEN CENTS By HAROLD MORRISON WASHINGTON lCP)——Canada» and the U.S. Wednesday made, what External Affairs Minister Paul Martin described as ‘‘con- 0 O siderable progress" in their; talks on the proposed Ca an I nadi 12-mile coastal fishcrics bound-; ary and agreed to hold another round of talks at Ottawa nexll WASHINGTON .(AP.’ month :5.000.000 increase in Jobs was Martin said the Ottawa meet liitsdtg, 5:951:32] gihagnadxeig: ing—third on t , probably be the final one and; A his .3 jnnl ...;_ii th I th t t ' . "ll;P I’ . rezaach ae ":I,)(l)lSel(IS)ll.llS1"“e()sn llhei issue. i Fisheries Minister ii. .1. Robi-‘A A chaud. who accompanied him... t agreed that “good progress"‘ had been made and that “we; 53' THE CANADIAN PRESS 63 blood, his wife and daughter and the President In rear center is James Roivley, head of the Secret Service. The ceremony was held in the White House Flower Garden. (AP Wirephotol. MR. SHAW SHAKEN UP Premier's Wife, Sister are coming to some agreement} wEDNE5DAY- 999- 4- 19 on this." However. he later? The C°m_m°“5 "°I‘_?d I“ 3 asked at a press conference that‘ I96 '9 106 "9 I" 5“5t3"" 3 WI" e w o r d “agrecmenl" bel "I5 by SP93k€|' Alan Mac- changed to «-understanding_-- naughton, its first tie vote since 1925. N0 U.S. STATEMENT Mr. Macnaughton had ruled The U.S. issued no formal out a question of privilege statement on the conference,l by Gilles Gregoire headed on the American side by, (Creditiste—Lapointe) on a Deputy Undersecretary of Statei committee matter. Alexis Johnson. However. a. Prime Minister Pearson dis- state department official said’ counted any intention of call- the U.S. still reserves its sup- ing an early general election. port. of a Erik Nielsen (PC-—Yukon) three-mile fisheriesl oundary and expressed con-| criticized legislation covering cern about continued Canadian, airport payments by small insistence that Hudson Bay is} aircraft users. an internal Canadian waterway.l The Commons gave third The US maintains that Hudsonl Bay is part of the high seas‘ r e a din g to administrative changes in Canadian‘ Over- Are Injured In Collision As the result of I car-truck Premier about 4 p.m. when the Premier Macl(ay. that she had suffered 9 a severe cut on the forehead and yesterday. Walter R. Shaw. Mrs. Shaw and was driving north on the premier's sister. Mrs. Jean Horton. New Hampshire, were treated at the Prince Edward Island Hospital for various in- juries. i Winston , VI5IIS..HO|)8g" In Wheelchair NDON IAP)—-Sir Winston Churchill arrived at the House of Commons in a chromium- plated wheelchair Wednesday to attend his first session since he reached the age of . An, attendant wheeled the chair to ii chamber entrance named Churchill Arch. T to cheers from both members of his own Conserva- tive party and the opposition Labor MPs, he was assisted to his feet and helped to his usual seat on the front bench of the government party. A spokesman said there was no special reason for Sir Win- ston's trip t.o the Commons. Churchill. 89 last Saturday. still attends from time to time, b has announced that he will not. run again in next year‘: gen- eral election. It was wheelchair day in the House of Lords. too. ‘There Monda Lady Beaumont. 69, in hardness. attended her first session as authorized by the recently - enacted Peerage Act. Suffering from a spinal in- jury. she was wheeled in by her husband, Lord Howard of Glos- DOP- It was the first time In rec- orded parliamentary history that a husband and wife have sat in the House of lords sl- multaneously. = rt- By uahuss l\I. LONG l ivnneiin CITY (APl—Pope-l Paul VI.wlll go to the Holy Land next month on a pilgrim- age dedicated to Christian unity and peace among men. He will be the first head of the Roman Clthollc church to make such |'trlp. The Holy Land in Palestine. whose great Christian shrine: have been divided between hfoiilem Jordan and the Jewish state of Israel since the Arab- Iuneli war oP1tMo. - » ‘Israel holds Nazareth. where Christ lived and first preached. Within Jordan‘: 2.125 - narc- inlle segment west of the River Jordan are such religious cen- tres u the Church of the Na- tivity at Bethlehem and the Church of the Holy snpulchre lit the walled old city of Jerusa- lghrusalom in about l.I0o'mlIe: is will In the The accident occurred at No. highway 1: short distance south sion with a half-ton truck oper- wnll, who was travelling o- ward. the West River causeway. The Premier. Mrs. Shaw and Mrs. Horton. who plans to spend e winter at the Show home. were take it to the hospital where it was found that Prem- ier Shaw was suffering from a severe shaking up and numer- ous bruise . Following emergency merit. he was released and beg‘ took up temporary residence in‘ the Charlottetown Hotel. Mrs. Shaw was the most severely in- jured of the three. a st 1 night it was reported by Deputy trcat-. mg u Provincial Secretary Wendali a possible slight with the exception of a recog-‘ ‘ seas Telecommunication Cor- nlzed three-mile Canadian ter-1 poration. a Crown age y. rare recorded vote, ritorial boundary. , In Martin told reporters that‘ the Senate turned back 38 to when talks with the U5 are 23 a Conservative bid to scul- completed, Canada will hold tie a major section of the discussions with France on its government income tax bill. fishery treaty rights in Cana‘THURSDAY. Dec. 5 dian waters and then discuss The Commons meets at historic fishing rights claimed by Spain. Portugal. Norway, Denmark and Italy. 2:30 pm. EST to debate de- fence department estimates. The Senate meets at 3 p.m. Aim Is ionlobs islration. He also asked organ- ‘rized labor and business to sup- }port tax cuts and civil rights legislation. . is appeals vicre made dur- , ling a busy day which included 1." conferences on farm and Afri-if n affairs and a ceremony to}; ono a Secret Service manlr =,who olunteercd his life I save mine." ‘ The president met in lwith the AFL-CIO executive ‘council and members of the’ lbusiness council in the White ]House cabinet room. He made i a speech to each. I In the strongest of terms, tch president told both groups he wants and needs their help.- And from leaders of both he i'e- 1 ceived promises of support or expressions of confidence. From the cabinet room meet-‘ ing. Johnson went with the ,Al"L-CIO group to the White; IHOUSQ flower garden where he. lmade a fighting speech appeal-. ing for help on his legislative‘. program. And he made a little speech‘ to the businessmen after they‘ had moved from the cabinet‘ (CP Wirephoto) room to the fish room of the White House. ASKS BANISH FEARS ' He advised the businessmen I that they ought to banish fears l QUEBEC (CPI — A masked and doubts about his adminis- ation. . “This administration," heibandit, armed with pistol. said, “wants to help’ you. Welheld up the main branch of the GETS N.B. POST Supt. Philip Barry Cox has been appointed head of RCMP operations in New Brunswick. it was announced in Ottawa Wednesday by Commissioner George McClellan. Supt. Cox. a native of Fredericton, been with the RCMP since 1932. Recently he has been se- nior administrative officer of the force's E division at Vic- toria. B.C. I of Cornwall. and was in colli-l She also has a broken wrist. r. Maclfay said that it. is ex- in hospital for several day ‘Mrs. : n pus. Qpnrtcd ‘ have sufe a broken le wrist, which was given treat- ment. Following her release she went to the home of her niece, the premier's daughter. Mr liughie Simpson, Charlottetown Mr. Boyle is said to have suf- fered nothing more than a shak- In Both vehicles suffered exten- sive front end damage. The accident was investigated by the Charlottetown detachment RCMP. The water pollution advisory committee, representing the ct- ty of Charlottetown. the villages Parkdnle and Sherwood and the provincial government will meet today at 2 p.m. at the de- partment of health to consider pollution problems of Charlotte- town Harbor. Basis of discussion will he the O -u Pea-rson-Johnson To Meet Jan. 22 OTTAWA '(C-P)—Prime Minis- ter Pearson will ‘go to Washing- ton . to confer with President Johnson, the prime minister’: office announced Wednesday. Pope's Visit To Holy Land Will Set Number Of Firsts VII went reluctantly 1804 to crown apo And if Pope Paul goes by air -13 he is expected to do—'it will be the,-fiiiot papal plane trip- Pojte Paul made the an- nouncement ol the trip Wednes- day at the close of the secord session of the Vatican ecumen- ical council. He‘ did not set an exact date or Itinerary. but nidfhe wanted to visit the holy place: "where Christ was born. lived. died and ascended to heaven.“ His disclosure stirred specu- lltlon that he eventually may make even longer trips to the American or the Far East. speaking before 3,300 council mgr; .. cu , archbish- s—-I st. Peter's Basilica. Pope Paul said: "After careful and -much prayer. to. Paris in ‘ icon. 8'.‘ deliberation we v decided to become ii pilgrim ourselves in the land of Jesus 0 ur . "In l'act,‘if God assists us. we wish to go to Palestine In Janu- IIOIIOI personally, In the _, Nlllllli P0 ui..fWIIl. B . ’I|II I03 . ‘.- Plan > ¥‘_.-:3’ City Harbor Water Pollution . lSet For Consideration Today If! holy plec -where Christ was born. died and ucendod report of a survey on water pol- lution carried out by the Ottawa firm of consulting engineers, J. L. Richards and Associates. The a d vi s o r y committee. chairman, Dr. Burton Howatt. assistant deputy minister of health, said yesterday that com- mittee members have had cop- ies of the Richards report for over week and at today's meeting will determine whether or not further information on pollution is needed and whether iited by Gordon Boyle of Corn- peeled that she will be retained:De H I t s. . r p ,py ftl On ‘RCAF Mercyfllghls Capital Bureau, The Guardian ‘make use of the air line but OTTAWA —— The contentious.continued to refer all cases to question of mercy fliights from ‘the RCAF. Since October of this Poince Edward Island came up year; when Maritime Air Coim- 'here again Wednesday when the mand licadquiairters came department of national defence aware of the airlinie's capability. provided a written reply to a provincial authorities have been question placed on the Com- requested to investigate use of mons' order paper by Heath the a.irlinc’s aircraft prior to Macquarric. MP for Queens. grcquesting RCAF airlifts. The depaitment told Mr. Mac-j, The Queens‘ MP was also quarrie that the RCAF has not told that the 3-Ill‘III‘ll€ in question discontinued such mercy flights. is based at Monction and‘ that As in the past such flights have this location is closer to P.E.I. been authorized in accordance than in Greenwood. whene the with norrmal policy vuhicli is that RCAF a1'i‘crat‘t used on mercy flights necessary to save life are flights, are based. carried out when no suitable al- John Mullally. M'P for Kriings. ternartc means of tiansiportaition ;has been active here in recent is readily available. lweeks in tirying to secure in- The department did not ap-iformation about the policy and preach a private air line com- l to reach some solution as to this pany to take over the flights. $330 an hour cost for the com- Atlantic Central Airliims has one ‘mcrcial air line service. He re- aircraft suitable for suclipported last. week that it. is not flights and this company so in- possible to have such ambulat- formed the provinces in March lory charges paid for through 1963. iv: Provincial-Federal Hospital The provinces. although aware lservices Commission. did not that a strong vibrant economy 3 was more than six feet tall and is as essential .ship in the free world as ouril-hfeatefled Lmnitary hardware. lbrains if they resisted him. "I challenge this assembly oft Manager M I‘i0 Lambert. the finest business" brains in all ‘his 05509 ‘Wit the world arm, know there had been a holdup against stagnation and delay. I UPI“ the Shake" emltlvyefii I010 challenge this group of business "Tb ' leaders to assault the persis-l They said the bandit stood tent problems of ‘our gcncra- l "93? the <'I0°1‘W?y f0T Several and arouse yourselves iolmmutes. surveying e bank. an end to them_ I alked up to teller Carole "1 join you in taking up this .‘Lessard and said: “Open th challenge." icash. ' ’ k." Both to the labor and businessl BPIOFG getting aW3.V 0" (003 representatives. Johnson calledfifl the II-"1I‘I‘0W Streets 0‘ the for an attack on unemployment 3 area. he made nine employees and held out the tax bill as the ‘.118 on the floor- major weapon to use. i To each group he put in a strong sppeal for support for civil rights legislation. Both measures are m a kin g slow headway on Capitol Hill. in , tion; 3 put lcrosh Site Probe §WiII Require Kennedy Road "Another 2 Weeks Named In Quebec. QUEBEC «CPI — Premier Le- sage said Wednesday the cabinet has decreed that No. 23 High- way. between nearby Levis and the United States border, will henceforth bear the name Pres- ident Kennedy I-ligliway. The highway. about 90 miles‘ long. has been known as the Levis - Jackman Highway. It is the most direct route between Quebec City and the late presi- .dent's home state of Massachu- . se s. STE. THERESE DE BLAIN- VILLE. Que. tCP>—lnvestigat.- ors at the site of Friday's DC-BF jetliner crash estimate it will take at least two weeks to get out the wreckage and iden- tify the victims of the disaster in which 118 persons died. Dr. Jean-Louis Taillon. trict. coroner. said 50 had been identified by dis- late 1 e a st disaster “for at the victims and or not the report contains a ny deficiencies. If the committee is satisfied with the report and its recom- mendations. the report will be submitted to the four governing bodies concerned. to heaven after _His reserrection the first mysteries of our faith: The incarnation and the re- demption. NONE RETURNED “We shall see that blessed land whence (the martyred apostle! Peter set forth and where not one of his successor! (the pontiffs) has returned. “ ost humbly and rapidly we shall return to ese‘ as an expressionwct prayer. penance and renovation to offer t.o Christ His church: to summon to this one holy church our separated brethren (Orthodox and non - Catholic Christians); to implore divine behalf of peace among men, that peace which shows in these days how weak and tottering it is: to beseech Christ our Lord for the salva- tion of the entire human race. . Paul‘: predecessor. dent Oct. 3. 1962. when he travelled 350 miles in a whistle- stop train trip across Italy to the shrines of Loreto and Ar‘ Iisi. Po p e John XXIII. broke a long preco John Diefenbakcr. leaderof during ii stop there ‘Wednes- lbe opposition. jokes with high day of a two-f‘I8.V VI-‘lb I" W93‘ I school students at Dresden tern Ontario. with him are. I I DIEF BEGINS TWO‘-DAY ONTARIO TRIP announc a e memorial services for the crash ‘and Toronto today. I in Montreal. the e at 2 p.m. ES I b services T in in Mary Queen of the World Ba- ‘ ica. In Toronto, ibe at 2 pm ‘of Toronto's -Convocation Hall. I zoo PROBE MOUND I At. the crasli . VICIIIYIS jl-n Plane Fire ‘ I l MIAM Fla. IAP . l. Fire Chief Milton Bullock I _ says fire it flew from acrid smoke as The plane has ‘ .are not pro-labor. or pro-busi-[Royal Bank of Canada here -ness, or pro-any-special-sector.iwednesday and got away with we are pro-wthat-is-best-tor;an estimated $10.000. [America I happen to believe‘: EmI>I0y8f’S Said the bkndlli to our leader-iwfflglled BIJOUI. 200 pounds. He to blow out their a clielit, did.n'l: e . VIt'IlmSl per Wednesday. He did not expect McCutcheon to reopen the inquest into the‘that foreign companies would ‘to accept foreign investment." ‘ two victims will be held in Montreal the service will; the University‘ J9 liner and the remains of many: to ' i l ;A.;...—A;;;..T._" that filled a DC-8 jetliner with 1 New York to Miami Tuesday; appears to be a case of arson. 3 ‘ l a n d ed safely. Sparks By KEN KELLY . OTTAWA (CPI -— For the ' .fourth time since Confedera- tion, the Speaker of the House ~_, lof Commons was called upon to feast a deciding vote Wednes- lday I In doing so, Speaker Alan «Macnaughton upheld his own‘ ruling that Gilles Gregoire (Creditiste -— Lapointei had no right to involve the Commons in a dispute that occurred ear- lier in the day in the Commons .mines committee. I‘ When Speaker Macnaughton's jruling was challenged. the MP5 ‘were polled individually on lwhether they supported ispeaker. The Progressive Con- yservative, N-DP, Social Credit :and Creditiste members com- lbined against the governing lLiberals. l The outcome, announced from the clerk's table after a recal- .culation of the division list of !MPs, was 106 to 106. Speaker Macnaughton then declared his ruling sustained. l0NLY THREE TIMES arliamentary author- ities said the effect of Speaker Macnaughtou's declaration was to cast the deciding vote. This had occurred only three times ibefore—in 1870, 1889 and 1925 _ . Gre- goire's attempt to win Com- mons support for a motion in- structing the mines committee to discuss the boundaries be- tween the Northwest Territories and the provinces at its cur- rent hearings. His motion was a follow—up to a committee hearing earlier in the day at which Mr. Gregoire attempted to move a motion 5- to l Gorclon Ta I OTTAWA tCPi——The Senate.-,: in one of its rare recorded votes I turned aside Wednesday an op—: position attempt to scuttle one! of inance Minister Gordon's. «major tax proposals. Then iti passed the last of the June 13: budget legislation. . The vote was 39 Liberals to! 23 Conservatives on a motion by Senator M. Wallace McCutcheon (PC — Ontario). former tradel minister, to kill a proposal, which he said would discourage . the flow of American invest-. merit capital into Canada. : Liberal senators who spoke against. the same tax proposal in committee Tuesday rallied to ; the government's support after‘ the long and sometimes heated? debate in the Senate. The proposal gives a tax break to companies offering 25 cent of their stock for ‘Canadian ownership. said this 1 Senator meant By JAMES NELSON I 20 PAGES Speaker Breaks Tie Vote For 4th Time Since I867 Creclitiste MP D o 0 0 ‘that the resources ministers of Ontario and Quebec be sum- moned before the committee to discuss the boundary question, particularly provincial claims to offshore northern islands.’ GREGOIRE'S STAND ‘ Mr. Gregoire based his mo- .tion in the committee — and later in the Commons—on state- ‘ments by State Secretary Pick- e1‘S,Eill. government leader in ;the Commons, and Northern Af- [fairs Minister Laing that ways would be found to get the lboundary question before the lmines committee which is ‘studying government plans to ‘divide the Territories into two iunits —- Mackenzie and Nana!- lsiaq. . I In the Commons, Mr. Gre- .goire said on a question of priv- ilege that committee chairman Osias .l. Godin (L—Nickel Belt) ruled out of order his attempts to have the boundary matter discussed. violating the prom- ise by Mr. Pickersgill and Mr. Laing. However, Speaker Macnaugh- ton ruled that Mr. Gregoire was really raising a grievance and not a question of privilege. Mr. Pickersgill. using a simi- lar argument, also offered to appear before the mines com- mittee and be questioned about his statements that the bound- ary matter could be discussed. I Later. Mr. Gregoire asked lMr. Godin whether he will in- lvite Mr. Pickersgill to appear lbefoi-e the committee. Mr. Go- ldin replied that an invitation !"would appear obvious" in the Ilight of Mr. Pickersgilfs offer.- l'l‘he committee's next meeting :is Friday. Senate Vote Upholds x Proposal be penalized for their Canadian operations and that some Cana- dian firms, with big operations, .abroad. might be damaged ‘BAD LEGISLATION’ “This is bad legislation and should not be approved by this chamber." Senator Mccutcbeon said. "This is an opportunity for this chamber to existence as the sober second thought. We can~ not afford to take the risk of the repercussions which might llow " justify its chamber of Senator . A. Crerar (L.-~ Manitobal said he agreed it ie bad legislation. But it had a redeeming feature ‘ that would not become effective until .Ian. l. 1965. By then. he said. another budget should be intro- dncod and the proposal may be changed. Senator G. S. Thorvaldson «PC-Manilobai said the dnn tax proposal “tells the world that Canada is reluctant w S... Relatives have identified 15 of-' l ' I the remains: were released by the coroner: ‘ for private funerals. » 4 TCA h d that QUEBEC (CPI—A jail guard testified Wednesday he was attacked and bitten in the thigh early one morning by Leopold .Dion in his cell here. . Emmanuel Frcgeau, 26, was l testifying at the seventh day of Sm. go mnnsi Dion's trial on a capital murder , 3 north of Montreal, an cstimalcd ¢I‘3I‘E‘''''I‘“‘ “'9 5'3.‘/""3 ‘Fl 3 l’‘‘.'‘’ E 300 searchers. working day and; ‘A5 “I9 ‘I"l°""‘f Pena" ‘I5 C359‘ mam‘ The Crown finished with the n are probing a _ , mmmd 350 feet in diam(,m.. ' last of its witnesses earlier I This is the area believed to; w‘'d'‘e5da-V' ’ contain the fuselage of the 't-‘ D "C0 la“-yer Guy B“-1' rand. 23. said he would attempt - that Dion. 43-year-old cabinet maker. is mentally ill ‘and that because of his illncss “he acted IlI\'(‘ a wild animal." Mr. Bertrand said he woud attempt to introduce Dion's past record and that it includes ‘convictions on sexual offenses. , “The horror and monstrosity ‘of those crimes has a direct INSIDE TODAY Announce ments. notices I7 Murder Case Defence will Christ‘ ‘ Church Callie-dral and at 5 p.m._ link with the gravity of his illness." Mr. Bertrand said. TWICE ON PAROLE The defence lawyer said Dion was twice freed on parole. had spent aboiit 20 years in jail and should have had medical treat- ment. He should never have been freed and he should never avc been sent to prison. the Ia\’l’_\'(‘I‘ said. Dion is being tried for the sex slayiiig of Pierre Marquis. 13. one of four boys slain during I five-wr-ck period last spring. . I-‘rcucaii. ' pounds. said the 200-poiind Dion was lying on his cell col when he suddenly jumped up and bit him. l"rcs.'cau suffered a bruise on the thigh. The attack took place June 22 soon after Dion‘l detention. BUTTED HEAD AT WALL Anotlirr guard. Armand Des- rosiors. testified that just before Dion was due to appear in court. lfor preliminary hearing Aug. it lnmn butt.cd his head against the lcell wall. }None of the passengers, who. Desrosiers said the incident used wet towels and napkins to‘ ""'"“ ygiok place \\'ltItIlOllI \l\'aI;:ll1gb1l8 ‘cover their faces to prevent‘ _ 10" “'35 PU 1"! 0“ S U9 lsmoke inhalation. was hurt. .om:r-z ii-IPIIPI IN‘ his 0011" flDP98I'l“¢9~ ‘mi indication, are that it‘ Editorials Mr. Justice Gerard ‘La ‘was a set fire.“ Bullock said. ‘ Finance. markets . . . . .. I4 adjourned the trial until today The FBI questioned several sport. .. . I.‘ in stiidy a rcqucst by parole‘ persons but no arrests were ll Kings Queens. City . . . . .. 5 loffidcefr Marcel Caron. called ll made. The blaze. discovered Prince County . . . . . . . . . ..3 58. Pence _WI I185 Pfl‘|IIl' left to nimt. J-nines Cook. lby n stewardess in a wash-l Summcrside , , , _ _ _. 3 stop to withhold what be (It- Arlcno Gnwne. Lynda Hawk- mom. was controlled with I Women’: . . , . . . . . . . . . .. R ,scri as confidential Ilfotmh his and Lorne Poole. ‘ L 3 11- * . lurid extinguisher. I i