y : If It’s Good For Th ewe oe soit appa in iii wip lg tr ome 4. ~~ ‘ Fr ™ WEATHER ‘ep Pet The Guardian | a : i . southwest ‘1 Sigh 32 and 43. Frig _¢ Wows . : day: cloudy and much warmer. Se he ’ ; ' vevess |< ; : Ber. noes onl dege aes . : ‘ . ae “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” f VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 245 aathorized as Second Class Mail by the postage te cau, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1965. : wor ne™™ SEVEN CENTS 26 PAGES oe : : Panic ilings By Underworld “In Excess Of By REMY @ANJOU QUEBEC (CP) — There may be more than the earlier. esti- e. 8 sae -), He..added that information had been flowing into his de- partment since he called on per- mate of 12 victims in gangland’s {sens with knowledge of fraudu- attempt to cripple investiga: lent bankruptcies and arson to tions_of crime in Quebec. - jcome forward. That was the word Wednes| Quebec Provincial Police said day~from- provincial -J-u-s-ti.c.ejeurrent..search.. for _.the...two Minister Claude Wagner as po- bodies is. proving difficult be lice kept probing and digging cause the men disappeared for two bodies thought buried in jsome time ago. communities south of Quebec} Sought are the bodies of Mau- *City. rice Gingras, owner of an ap Police, confronted by what ipliance store in Quebec City they call “one of the worst jand missing since 1962; and an other unidentified man. Authorities expressed the be- lief that. they are.on to one of the most important arson rings ever to operate in Canada. They said too that the“ring may have United States connec- tions—a point about bankruptcy and arson rings in Quebee which has been made by other investigators in the months prior to Monday's linking of multiple slayings to the rack- ets, CRIMINALS IN PANIC Mr, Wagner's department has been pressing its investiga- tions of bankruptcy and arson ifor the past year, and this, said ithe justice minister, has the un- criminal networks to have op erated “in Quebec,” have al- ready found three bodies. These ‘plus the two now be- Ing sought are the known dead —slain, said Mr. Wagner Mon- day, by racketeers anxious to stop their talking to authorities about such activities as fraudw lent bankruptcies and arson. _ -Mr. Wagner said in his Mon- day staterhent that there may be six or seven more dead be- yond the, five known slain. SEEK MANY BODIES ‘But. he. told enquiring report ers Wednesday that there may be more than 12 altogether, that the dozen figure was only ai’ approximate estimate. Johnson Maintains Usual Work Schedule » WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi: ;late Sir. Winston Churchill, _ dent Johnson;-who faces Friday | Johnson will be at it until the what one of his doctors called jlast minute. With Mrs. Johnson, “preventive maintenance’ on he plans to attend tonight's sa- the operating table, kept “a bu- jlute, at the White House and siness - as <usual schedule the state department, for mem Wednesday. ‘ bers of the 89th U.S. Congress. He signed a $340,000,000 health bill without aword about his (Pate nis ay ewact time own ailment, a faulty gall blad- |1.5 yet. been set for the opera der which surgeons will remove |1;,, "but in preparation. for. it Friday morning at Bethesda ‘the ‘president is expected to” go Naval Hospital. speci ; *T heard one of the doctor» hed ea use the term something) hazardous the picture, left fo right are Hon. Mr. MacPhail, Attorney- General and Provincial Trea- surer M.A. Farmer and Phil- lip Kinch, manager of Aiber- Industries ton . (See story on . page 3.) , Delage OD | & poh derworld in a panic. The killing of possible informers came as a consequence, he said. Already found by police are the bodies of Redempteur Fau- cher and Paul Brie, both of Quebec City, and Alberic Bile deau, of St. Joseph de Beauce. They were discovered in wooded marshland near St. Gilles, about 50 miles south of the pro- vincial capital. The search for Gingras’ corpse is centered on ‘St. Fer- dinand de Halifax, in the East- ern. Townships, and that of the unidentified- man. on. St. Nic near Quebec City. : Numerous persons are being questioned in Quebec City and Montreal, but police ate mum on their findings. Rhodesian Negroes Talk Exile Gov't. LONDON (CP)—As a hint of. \deadiock. entered. the second jday of independence negotia- itions between Rhodesian. “Pre- jmier Ian Smith and the British government, Rhodesian Negroes here threatened to set up a gov- ernment-in-exile and use: _mili- pendence illegally. J. Z. M.yo, treasurer-géneral of. Rhpdesia’s outlawed Zapu party, which claims to repre- sent one-quarter of the white ruled colony’s 4,000,000 Negroes, teld a press conference W. day that if Britain does not re- lateral declaration of indeper- | dence, Zapu would immediately form a government-in-exile to- joperate ‘“‘politically and mili- itarily"” both inside and outside Dozen tary force if Smith seizes inde. |. taliate against any possible uni- | P Nuclear Arms And Birth Conto hated By Ecumeni a4 GERALD MILLER war, yet allows it implicitly in |. VATICAN CITY (AP) — A|some situations,” he said. iview fevored by many U8, that the Roman Catho- ¢ church approve nuclear te ’s bishops, told the | jatms for defence, ran into stiff) iii it “should issue a ‘con- opposition in the Vatican Eeu-| aemnation of totat war, with no ms was a blow. to of the U.S. hierarchy campaigned to revise by. .eliminat- condemn nu- j BOB MacKENZIE “QTTAWA (OP) — The Cana- | Union of Students Wednes- p attacked the “28th century tute” of Dean Vincent Bla- [a protest against his rec- dat th at. university of university financing. att fi ; ie 3 e i “te is “i Ask an interview. = —*- “But Dean Bladen is like an 18th century” capitalist| in his appreciation of the problem of university fees for students. “He must realize we have to cope with problems of society if the 20th century.” (The University of Toronto dean told reporters earlier in the day that he realized stu- dents would _ be disappointed Wheat Crop Now Expected To Fall Short Of New Mark OTTAWA .(CP)-— The Dom-, The Sept. 3 estimates were inion Bureau of Statistics said |based on mid-August informa- Wednesday” the record: wheat |tion when the thafvest was crop” predicted -earlier- is ex- {scarcely under way. Bad pected now to fall short of the weather has hit since then and all-time mark. interfered with or halted har- Based on survey returns to vest operations. Sept. 15, the federal agency esti- SEE LOWER YIELD mated the 1965 crop at 703,900,-| There has also heeen a general 000 bushels, the second highest reduction in yield prospects for production -on. record. lother grain crops. The bureau In its ‘preliminary estimate {said all its Wednesday forecasts Sept. 3, DBS placed the 1965 were based on an unusually low crop at 759,800,000 bushels, well jpercentage of threshing returns. ahead of the record 723,400,000 |Little harvesting had been com- i ui i: S i E a i 5s fe Fee 2 2 chapter ie i “The text condemns nuclear menical Coune!! Wednesday ” fi E Africam | “tinction of means. U flareup against the word-. the draft decree on mod- University Fee Proposal s Students Criticism Report (al Now, many |to want those words back in. ee | ' MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — | That mysterious, last-mir 88! 6ute.-conference before the Ou ncl start of the first World Se | a poNaLp LEREL ies game between mana- — 7 ; gers Walter Alson of the OTTAWA (CP) — University | Leos Angeles Dodgers and | representatives leaped into the bishops | Sam Mele of the Twins and election fray Wednesday, calling commissioner Ford Frick (for a dramatic boost in federal FAVOR DEFENCE ARMS | hada simple explanation. aid and @ new ministry of American bishops and some| Frick produced a most, higher education. ; iz others had managed to have the |- U.usual ground rule: | A commission of ae case te original wording changed to ex- “If a ball in play hit the (named by the . press appfoval for “defensive Secret Service man who \Universities and sae = larms,” noclear and conven-| W4S in the umpire's runway Canada reported ee tional. | to protect Vice - President will have to move e “ Most American . bishops have | Hubert H. . the jversity field in a massive a \said that in this age of nuclear | ball: would be dead, and the: (to keep the economy -—. |parity with the Soviet Union, ‘it }’ Pap would : ee br oeport 4 national s would wrong nited| ‘0 advance as far as the luc. ; |States ‘is put = a ee umpires deemed proper. In a 9%0-page report that = ‘defence arms wnilaterally to be| The. Secret Service ‘man |stantly became 8 campaign is- left with no atomic deterrene| W858't hit. sue, the comenission pone \against potential attackers. | ctr eeee the lowing | —Federal grants totalling at | least $330,000,000 in the next fiscal year and rising to more than $500,000,000 annually by 1970, compared with the cur rent level of about $80,000,- 000. ; —Appointment of. a federal minister of higher education with an advisory committee of. professors to coordinate federal aid and review the program each year with the provinces. |with the section of his report urging provinces to “resist pop- lular pressure” for abolition of {tution fees. ciety, surely they -can spare money to help the productive section.” He ‘said students were not (I expect to be burned in ¢ looking for a free ride. —Increased assistance to. uni- figy all across Canada,” versities by the provinces, added WILLING TO PAY busi a “We're quite willing to pay = == for our education, but the pres- dividual ‘grad [ATTEMPT SAID MEAGRE. . A statement issued by the um-jent system of loans just present ction F Timing © Called Lucky ing to assist universities,” the eminent political scientist told reporters with a chuckle. Dr. Corry and Dean Bladen declined to comment on Prime Minister Pearson's announce- ment Tuesday that his govern- ment plans to spend $10,000,000 annually on, scholarships for college students. WANTS AID DOUBLED : The Bladen report said gov ernment aid to students should be doubled immediately to $80,- 000,000 a year and jacked up to $245,000,000 in 1975. It adds, however, that income tax relief. for university students and their parents would be more effective and more easily ad- ministered than the Liberals’ 1962 promise of 10,000 scholar- ships of $1,000 a year. Mr. Pearson said Tuesday this pro- posal will be modified so that the value of the scholarships will vary according to each student’s financial means. Premier Duff Roblin of Man- itoba, one of the big guns in the federal Conservatives’ ¢ a m- paign, commented in Winnipeg that it was time for federal action to assist universities. ‘““The federal government has put us off time and again, ask ing us to wait for the report,” he said. ‘Now it is here. There for further stal- aa hee by The i Dean Vincent a. of the Uni- versity of Toronto, estimated that university ‘costs- will soar. to ‘more than Po ekoe by 1975. from about 000,000 in 1964-65. Of this amount, $1,704,000,000 would have te come from federal. and provincial goverr ments, the report said. A brief based’ on the Bladen. study will be submitted within a week to both levels of government by the association of universities. Initial reaction from univer- sity heads and provincial lead -lers was highly favorable. - ; Increased federal aid to edu- cation became a leading theme in the election campaign even before the report was published. Prime Minister Pearson prom- ised Tuesday to call a federal- provincial conference “within the riext few months” to study how federal grants to universi- ties could be beefed up without interfering with provinetal rights. j CALLS FOR ACTION “The problem is urgent and some action is required imme diately,” Dean Bladen told a ion said conclusions in the re-|a psychological. berrier to the port “were a m Ri oes : to. panscisl sbaades| “He has ehough problems with “students, and~sought-"to this ~ studiés “without © worrying preserve the status quo, and as the loan. Ss sreNe existing social injus- Loans, bursaries and scholar- ships were “an outdated substi- tute for the elimination of tul- tion fees.” id Mr. Good said he welcomed. Prime. Minister Pearson’s an- nouncement Tuesday of a $10,- 000,000 annual fund to provide scholarships of up to $1,000 a@ year for students. . "We're always encouraged to see federal parties advocate more aid to education,” he said. . “But I hope this is only the start. Much more is required and this is only a token ges- ture.” : He said elimination of ali un- dergraduate tuition fees would cost about $100,000,000 a year. and should .be provided by_the federal government although & federal - provincial conference “Rersonally, I'd like to see a system whereby a university graduate would be able’ to pay for. his education when he is best able to assume a financial bur- den—when he is working and paying income tax. “Maybe _a special structure could be set up for university graduates to pay a higher tax jrate after they graduate.” Youth Given Life Sentence TORONTO (OP). — Daryl Aw- ofd Clark, 19 today, was ser tenced Wednesday to life im- prisonment for non - capital murder in the April 18 stabbing death here of a feliow New Brunswick -man. Chief Justice George Gale of the Ontario Su; eme Court di- rected the jury to find the Fred- ericton youth not guilty of ne ital murder, but guilty of press conference. lesser charge. “We need (government) dec!- would be needed to work out details acceptable to each prov- ince. “If they can set up a $500,- Premier Roblin objected te the recommendation for a fet eral minister of higher educa- SEES TANGLE “This would unnecessarily complicate the constitutional the | situation,” he said! Saskatchewan Education Min- ister George Trapp, a Liberal, said he was confident the re- port would result in bigger fed- eral grants. Premier Ross Thatcher said. any university aid from Ottawa would be wel- come and would enable his gov- ernment to pump more money into” primary and secondary schools. The Bladen eommission urged the provinces to distribute their pendent commissions and ac- cording te enrolment, to rule out political interference with aca- demic freedom. The report called for the fol- lowing federal grants: —$98,000,000 or $5 per capita immediately. for operating costs, rising by about~$20,000,- 000 annually, compared with $39,000,000. budgeted for this year. —$98,000,000 or $5 per capita 000,000 fund for medical care for the sick and aged, the non Clark was charged after 22- ‘sions within weeks, not within | production in 1968, jpleted by Sept. 15. Rhodesia. Pope May Tour United States like - ‘preventive. maintenance,” | ; White H ress secretary | : Bill D; Moyers said of the com. Leaders On . ing operation. : ; a Hustings On his next-to-last day at the White House before surgery. By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY Johnson Signed the bill, passed out souvenir pens, took a fast paced constitutional, greeted = ‘ . tourists, filmed a speech, talked — In Winkler and with NATO's secretary-general trip to the National Press Club. uch of the afternoon was |Abbotsford, B.C. left open, as it usually is. But Thompson + In Ottawa and Johnson's official schedule ran | Winnipeg. = isto-early evening, with the | Caouetie -— In Riviere-du- Loup, Que. Presentation of a bust of the . NEW YORK (Reuters)—Pope Paul may undertake another near future, top Roman Catholie clerics here said Wednesday... | A senior official at the rest dence here of Francis Cardinal Spellman told Reiiters that the possibility of such a trip has been widely discussed during the pontiff's visit to the United |Nations Monday. “I should say it was a: definite possibility,” he said. -He, added that on such @ visit an extended tour of the whole visit to the United States in the | the Pope would probably make | year-old Wayne Basil Jay died months.” of knife wounds in the me Dr. J. A. Corry, president of | following a fight. the universities’ group, said it | During the three - day trial, was a ‘fortuitous’ -coincidence | witnesses testified that Clark that the report, commissioned | was jealous of Jay's attentions 18 months ago, was issued in to Rose Ward, 26, whom Clark [the middie of a federal canr | had picked up as a hitchhiker paign. | near: Fredericton and taken to; ‘It has been a most incredible Toronto, two weeks before the |spectacle and intriguing pros- slaying. pect to see politicians compet- | CAVE BOY RESCUED Held In (AP) productive section of our so- MEDINA, Ohio big | ” was tugged to safety Wednes- day from a foot-wide— crevice which had imprisoned him face “poor | down for 2% hours im a cave | | | capita néxt fiscal year for eapital costs, rising each year ° “with the population. —$104,000,000 next fiscal year for . university research pro- grams, rising sharply each year, compared with actual aid of $40,000,000 this year. —Unspecified capital grants for new medical, dental and nursing schools and teaching hospitals. 26 Hours Akron got straps around his slender body. He didn’t have much to say while Peck and Ulrich worked to tug him free. But he kept calm and in good that once hid fugitive Negro/| better than T ‘would be wnder! spirits most- of the time. slaves. the eee hi he added. ‘I've never seen a boy with The 110 - nd boy, Morris| Baetzold said he had ‘been|so much guts in my life,” said Baetzold, was taken immedi. | told the boy would be fed intra- | Jim Lea, one of the rescue ately .to hospital. for the first | Venously while he is under se- party. — ; food and rest since he crawled | dation. | Morris’ father and brother Tuesday into a narrow, slant-| Morris was inched loose after | kept a vigil outside the cave. ing passageway and got his Mike Ulrich, 15, of North Roy-| Once Wednesday the brother, body wedged between solid alton and Curtis Peck, 26, of Donald, 15, crawled inte the Gindstone rocks. leave to talk to Morris. The i brothers have lived in foster ge pte eae be INSIDE TODAY homes most of the time since Dr. A, J. Karson, a Medina, (Classified ............ “us oe physician who had kept a check, Births ....... geese ae Morris was placed last. year aatnaiek con aes ceomenae toa. | oe jabs. vatnemee® in the Methodist Children’s lowing ‘an examination in Bow: | Sport csccnn.n > th WEE ty Ge eens ocean injuries were mf-| Finance, markets ...... 13 : nor, but that he would be Kept/ Rural churches ...-.... il His father, a disabled boiler- mand-Vietnam. Strict security | Under sedation for a while. He} Wemen’s ...........:+«- 6 |maker, said he hadn't seen the restrictions have been put on said no one but members of the) Editorials ........sss..00. & boy for a year The home is the show's schedule to pre-* | boy's family would be permitted °. Sum ’ vent terrorist activities. (AP | 0 see him for now. | Kings, Queens, City Wirephote vin radie from | Morris’ father, Raymond) Prince County . Saigon) Baetzold of Cleveland, said his! j : os “ university grants -through inde ~ em sae Lilt, 19 ages LE PE oe pa PNR Ne RS et A on BE AA NA BE FS A he 6 ile GREG te mak NS OR Cg iy ce ily sien? Sabi is seed pi tll Hing " - " Sebi a :