~~~-—ombines sincerity and vitality; If It's Good For The Island The Guardia VOL. LXXIX NO. 98 n Is For It _ Authorised ca Second Class Mail: by the Post Office Departmem. F Ottawa and tor Payment Of Postage tn Cash AT CLC CONVENTION Federal Cabinet Charged Playing Game With Labor By BEN WARD to allow the breakup—of—national- bargaining units as an appease- | federation of. Leonvention. F. D. Nicoll of Ottawa, a vice- Move with everything at National Trade [Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- WINNIPEG (CP)—A warning |Unions was sounded Tuesday at ‘port and General Workers, said that the federal cabinet is liable |the Canadian Labor Congress the entire railway labor move- iment is preparing to fight the its ment to the Quehec-hased Con- president of the Caradian|command. | Support Being Sought —Fortsland Federation ni WALL be. national M. K. Carson of “Ottawa, the) ~|CBRT's director of organization, | said the cabinet should be told | in no uncertain.terms that there | tailway..walk- jout if national units: are placed | In peril Soviet City "Hit By Gucker WINNIPEG (CP)—An emer- tificztion in P.EJ. have vir-, Nelson Cox of Brantford, Ont., | gency resolution accusing the tually—blecked—all—efforts by 4 —‘lelegate_from__the—barbers’.. MOSCOW __(AP) —The __ worst Prince Edward Island govern- unions to secure bargaining Union. said the CLC itself should éarthquake {n. 98 years struck ment of ‘vicious anti-labor leg- rights in that province, "was accepted by the ularly in the construction indus-|Strike_on the issue. {slation"’ partic. | reaten a national ,protest | The CNTU, bitter rival of the | ithe Soviet Union's central Asian icity of Tashkent Tuesday, kill- ing four,’ injuring 150-and de- j WEATHER ‘Cloudy with snowTlurries;- winds north- west 25, gusts to 45. Low-high 25 and 35. Thursday; sunny and a little milder, . € ___NOT wont SEVEN CENTS. 16 PAGES 1 3 Discoverers Are Canadians _ |control method too eostly op ho now for antibiotics. - Fred_ Delmar Cook, 45, By KEN KELLY | OTTAWA (CP) — A red-col- Canadian Labor__Congress__con- | try, vention Tuesday and referred to. The. convefttion was asked to CLC, has been campaigning in|stroying many homes, the news lored liquid discovered and; Dr. a committee for study. pledge support to the P.EJ, Ottawa for a reversal of the agency Tass reported. | tested by three federal ‘agricul-|now on the faculty of the Unl- William Dodge, executive Federation of Labor “in its Canada Labor Relation Board’s| The quake struck at 5:23 ant ture department microbiolo- oe of aoe ae a2 vice-president of the CLC, told campaign fo get rid of the vi-jlong stand against the removal |tocal time Tuesday (6:23 p.m. | bists may furnish new anti- | soi se ine ere at a ca” delegates the action was based cious anti-labor legislation and ‘of any regional groups from_a! EST Monday) too. early . for| biotic weapons to fight’ diseases |celled micro a prevente ~~ on information received-bytele=| 'procedures—which—have—bloeked- nation-wide labor unit. The spe- | public..buildings ta he ‘occupied. | of plants, animals and man. |growth of many other organ. phone and telegraph during the | development,.of the labor move- \cifie case is the: board's recent | ve T [It Hits the gernis which cause | lisms causing serious crop. dis- previous two days. ment and“the establishment of refusal to certify the CNTU for) Two smaller earth tremors, | oor a ae oo The -resolution said the proce- dures laid down for union cer- fair wages.’ conditions of work anda group of CBC workers in Que- |bec | Zion Church Minister Receives Doctorate SPEAKS WITH EMOTION be an attempt -by the cabinet | ito make the railway worker a| ‘politica football to appease the | said fe an emotional speech | from the floor of the conven- ition | The rest of thé unions in the | country should go before the |heaviest in the old section of | ; -eabinet “and. tell them to keep | about half the strength of the iginal' quake,, shook ter. There were no immedi- | \ate reports of damage from. - “There. apparently is going to |these. Leonid J. secretary of the Communist and Premier Alexei N. in Quebec,"’ Mr. Nicoll |Kosygin flew to Tashkent, 2,185 | to super- | miles from Moscow, vise the relief work. Tass :said- the damage was, the city of 1,127,000 persons., the’ city | Brezhnev— general | | | |growth produced a red-colored | material. Dr. Douglas Charles Gillespie, /39, agriculture department re- isearch officer, extracted the \ colored material from a .broth Its potential to battle cancer jin which the bacteria had grown |now is being studied by the can- ‘and, with Dr. Cook, showed in jeer_research institite at the tests it had the same killing ef- University of Saskatch@wan but/ fect as the living bacteria. ithe results -won't be known for MADE. CRYSTALS a year or more, a the | Dr. Gillespie also developed uses, ¢ Ns production, isolation and purifi- oes tion methods and made M ger which resist current an- - tibioti¢és and which have: caused jthe shutdown of -a number of Canadian paepitals to check its | spread. “Muberculosis and staphylococcus | = the “golden staph’’; medical kills | Besides new antibiotic Riv. D.A. Campbell, minister , | of Zion Presbyterian Church in} eo ae off the labor | Rie wi? pore are in~ crystals, thus making ' Charlottetown since 1959, was) | euaue iw ruit tree fireblig further. extensive tests possible, : William = Mahoney, Canadian | ar ia men | ‘halo blight in oats and the Boe Dr. Edwin Arthur Peterson, conferred with an: honorary Doc- | tor of Divinity. degreeat .the | convocation of the Presbyterian College held last evening in- St: Andrew and St. Paul's Presby- | terian Church. | He was presented to the Prin- _cipal by the Rev. Dr. C. Richie |director of the steelworker jion, said the fight involves ptt than the national ‘railway an lions. “Every worker in this country is on the firing line. | “This question goes _right to) the heart and soul of collective {bargaining strength,” Mr. Ma- : At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS | TUESDAY, 1966 -The-Commons:-was.-informed_ April 26, DOCTORS E.A. PETERSON (LEFT) and D.C. Gillespie ex- amine a plate showing action of newly-developed antibiotic ““Myxin"’~ compared with that of a well-known antibiotic. The top circle shows the-area of bacteria killed by oe while i (that rot cereal roots the bottom circle shows. area Announcing the discovery at) killed by the other antibiotic. a press conference Tuesday, The discovery was made by Agriculture Minister Greene \plant. disease through. three Canadian scientists. \predicted: that the names of the /treatment or by spraying. three. discoverers ‘‘will Jong be} Mr. Greene said strong inter- \remembered and honored in the |est in Myxin is being shown by *- jannals of man’s struggleia number of companies which |want. to-perfect and produce. it. 45, another agriculture depart- ment researcher, demonstrated [Myxin s potential in combatting see = ~ Bell, . Professor Pastoral Theo- | honey added. ainst-disease.” logy. and Homiletics. The sabi that the. government. has de- pea ; net was “playing iThe government's patent. — cided to refer the Steven Trus-. [IMPRESSIVE IN TESTS tholder, Canadian ~ Patents and “The sitation by Professor Bell, | read in part: Since Canppbell has served four chur- ches: ‘First Church, Pictou, No- va Scotia: New London, Monta- - gué and Cardigan, P.E.I. and “from 1959 his present pastorate, Zion Church, Charlottetown. In all of these churches the story ~“has been thé samé — sutstand= {ng expository preaching that pastoral leadership characteriz- ed by courtesy, tact and sound 1945 Mr. | # DH. CAMPBELL upon his ministry, the eternities _ttion_at the expense_of the work-. games’ with labor for political reasons, hoping to win more Quebec seats in the next elec- ers Labor Minister Nicholson was seated on the convention stage during the ee waiting to deliver 4 speech. . DOESN'T “ANSWER When he rose to deliver his speech he gaid he was tempted to answer some of the argu- ments but would stick to his 4+—CBC President —1_ eott case to the Supreme. Court of Canada. =-Industry— Minister Drury said General Motors Corp, will fix sticking accelerators in its Canadian-made 1964 Chevro- lets and :Chevelles. —_Alphonse— Ouimet rejected the request of the executive of the Toronto Producers’ —Association—t-h-a-t— the Watson-LaPierre case be reopened. By JOHNS LeBLANC = Leo Landreville had some rough ‘weather Tuesday before the Rand judicial inquiry into his behavior before closing his de- Judge Faces Tough Questioning | Before Closing Probe Defence __jinvestigating the 56-year-old. On- OTTAWA .(CP)--Mr. Justice (tio Judges fitness to “hold of-. fice, occasionally jabbed the |witness over shifts _in_his-. mony at the present inquiry as leompared with an Ontario gov-! jernment investigation . in 1962 Their discovery is named.|Development Ltd., will be tt Myxin for the group of soil bac-jcensing it for commercial de- teria known —as- myxobacters velopment by. private pharma- from-whieh-{it-was-extracted, In ceutical firms. aaa lab tests—it has prevented | Dr. Rolf M. Hochster, ‘diree- wth of 34 species of bacteria, | itor of the department’s micro- \49 species of fungi, 12 species | biology._research institute under During. questioning - Tuesday ,°F sqtinpmvsees and 12 species | whose. direction -Myxin. was. de- fe ee veloped, “said animals used ta ce: strikes at a wider va- jtests- showed ‘no signs whatever riety of. disease-causing -organ- jof toxicity of any kind. isms than any known anti-|" Any organism stccessful ts {biotic, is relatively easy and ithe test tube furnishes reason- leheap to produce and can be/able hope it will be effective ia as to why he “had not volun. of ee: information about ‘stock——holdings——before being subpoenaed by an Onlario gov- ernment inquiry into NONG in [the fall of 1962, the judge at! judgement; solid church ed in| ing that has been evidenced in|and gives to men and women fence with a declaration he had’ prepared text instead. Conservatives in the Com- \first said he sought advice and|used on crops as a spray, a humans, he said. increased membership and ‘en- larged > missionary “givings. | Throughout his ministry, Mr. Campbell has been dedicated_ to | the preaching of the word and he opens up to all who~attend Conservatives Named In 3rd Kings District ‘ Thomas Curran of Peakes Station last night was nominated assemblyman candidate in the May 30 provincial election and Preston Maclare of Montague councillor candidate at a Pro- gressive Conservative party con- vention in Cardigan. Nomination of Mr. Curran, a member of the last legislature, was moved by Herb MacLeod of Dundas and seconded by Emmett McKenna of Victoria Cross. Mr. Maclaire, a former mem- ber of the Montague Town Coun- cil, had his nomination moved by -Douglas McGowan, Mon- tague and seconded. by Clement a of Dundas. . McGowan, member of the | what the hymn calls, in the sim- ple familiar phrase, ‘‘the soul re- freshing view of Jesus and His | Word.” Mr. is so much Campbell last legislature for Third Kings, announced recently that he would not offer for re-election, giving. pressure of business’ as one of the reasons. Speakers, in addition to the two: candidates, who were un- opposed, were Walter Dingwell, candidate in Second Kings, Mr, McGowan, John Kenny, Char- lottetown, Hon. George Dewar, minister of education, the two candidates for Fifth Kings, Harry McConnell and Dr. J.C. Sinnott, and Melvin MeéQuaid, MP for Kings. C.A: Shaw of Montague was chairman. -The convention was held in the Legion Hall and was largely attended, William Houle, president of the Montreal postal workers, said the question of defections to the CNTU was chiefly one of union service. It had to be improved or defections would | continue. é Bob Rupert of Ottawa, rep- Tesenting- the American News- Paper Guild, said his union has been sub to CNTU raid- ing. He for an enlight- ened approach to increased unity, within the entire labor movement. i The matter before the conven- tion was a resolution from. the CBRT calling for a campaign ;againstthe.CNTU's efforts to break into national bargaining units and CLC insistence that the--policies ofthe labor rela tions board he left intact. ASKS FOR VOTE President Claude finally cut off the long debate and called for a standing vote on the resolution. The whole hall rose amid an outburst of ap- Plause. The labor minister told re- porters later that the cabinet committee looking into the CNTU complaints about the la- bor relations board has—not-yet made a decision. He hoped one would be announced “at a rea- sonable early date.” Former Mountie Receives Five-Year Prison Term STELLARTON, N.S. (CP)— Magistrate W. A. Richardson was a member of the RCMP Donald sai Tuesday sentenced former would not affect the length of |*‘cool RCMP Cpl. Harry Sutherland to five years in penitentiary in) what he called ‘‘one of my most. difficult cases.” Sutherland, 32-year-old native “of Plaster Rock, N.B., pleaded guiltys Monday to the armed holdup April 18 of a branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia —at nearby Trenton. Sutherland, missed from day, appeared made no remarks Richardson passed sentence. ; The magistrate said he had! know'n Sutherland personally | when he served with RCMP de- tachments at New: Glasgow anit Stewiacke, N.S., and had re-) “garded him as an_ efficient. member of the force. | He said it was his ditty to} impose sentence and in doing | di s- Mon- officially the RCMP composed and after Mr. s0--would—look upon Sutherland, | a member of the RCMP’s H Division headquarters - in» Hali- | fax at the time of his arrest, as. an individual. The fact he ‘the sentence, Mr. Richardson said. Defence lawyer Elmer Mae: |j Kay told. the court prior to sen-' ‘tence that its severity should) ‘not be determined by Suther- | Jand's position with the RCMP. The defendant yielded to the! temptation of -crime-because he way iracinlACIS be Went retool he ha the. Tobbery for AhPilae | portianity to steal a car. : es “He then proceeded to the bank where he held the staff INSIDE TODAY_!2t gunpoint and~ escaped. with’ '$8,900. After the robbery he re-! Classified ......... 15 |turned to his apartment (in New | Births... 246.4 i es is Glasgow) and later hid the) Deaths ......4: (SUS SR eI aes (money in the car at a used-| Cents oceans at leat lot _and=teturned to Hali- Sport erheres 10. fax.” Women’s... cieeee 6 7 The prosecutor also said that Finance, markets ........ & although Sutherland had not had Editorials... 0... 66.0% -+-. 4 |the occasion to usé his revolver Summerside ~~ ess. 8 |during ‘the robbery, the fact Kings, Queens, City .... 5 |shouldn't be overlooked that he_ Prince County PCR kud bare 2 (was armed at the time of the Jodoin | mons attacked the govern- ment’s use of economic. leg- ‘islation. for - the — political pur- pose of applying sanctions against Rhodesia. progress, passed bills tne ing the life of the Export and Import Permits Act, ing the borrowing capacity of the Farm Credit Act and es- tablishing the Science Council of Canada. WEDNESDAY, April 27 ¥ The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. EDT to consider redis- tribution of federal con- stituencies. The Senate is ad- journed until May 3. | Crown Prosecutor R. B Mac: | the robbery was calculated,’ that “was a person of, and Sutherland complete assurance in his abil- | lity to form the act: Mr. MacDonald said ‘‘on the |day of the robbery Sutherland) booked off sick from his duties and left Halifax. Arriving in New Glasgow, he parked his, | jear and then walked down Pro- | holdup, | | | Actress ‘braces Hedy Lamarr em- her attorney, Jordan M. Wank, » a Los Angeles never been motivated by greed in~his public life. For-a “second day, -he-—was under criticism for discrep- jancies in his current and past, pany stock. He also came—under sharp questioning on his reasons information during a 1962 inves- tigation. i At one point. he brought -in the name of a former federal | Liberal cabinet minister as a man from whom he had sought advice when the stock deal was on the verge of leaking out. Later he changed his testimony. Ivan C. Rand, the retired Su- preme Court of Canada \justice | courtroom Tuesday just after a jury found her.innocent of a shoplifting charge. She had and a court trial in 1964. | : ‘MADE TASK DIFFICULT It--was— difficult to get the facts, Mr. Rand , commented, ee you have Yontradictory | Another time, he o served the judge had a “false ‘memory’’ about details of the | increas- for refusing to give the RCMP (1957 stock transaction that |netted him °$117,000. The inquiry;. expected to end | jpublie hearings today, deals with the circumstances of Mr. Justice Landreville \7,500 free shares of Northern Ontario Natural Gas Co. stock seven months after the company |had _received a municipal gas franchise -at Sudbury, Ont., in 1956, while he was mayor. mentioned that he commu- imicated with Lionel Chevrier, [whom he described as minister of justice. and his administra- | bak chief. {minister of justice until April, \1963, and after lunch the judge said ‘his earlier testimony had ‘been wrong and that he actually | in| telephoned Mr: -Chevrier early 1963: obtaining |SOUGHT NO “ADVICE This time he said he did not ask- Mr. Chevrier for advice— he had already appeared be- fore the Ontario inquiry by then—but had told the minister | he was willing to go to Ottawa jto give him any information he | wanted, | He quoted. Mr. Chevrier—who now is high commissioner. in: London—as_ saying something like: : “I've known you.a long time, |Leo. That's not necessary. If it |becomes necessary, I'll let you | know.” The -discussion came about} when: Mr. Justice Landreville , \was’ pressed for an explanation of why he had refused to ans- wer a series of written ques- tions presented him by two _, RCMP officers at his court of- + fice in Toronto in 1962 after the _ fact he had received, the stock _ from a Vancouver broker had : been turned up by West’ Coast jinvestigators. He accused RCMP Sgt.” Ar- * thur Bates of Vancouver—now JURY FINDS ACTRESS INNOCENT. heen charged with taking $86 worth of merchandise from a department store without pay- | retired and an insurance inves- tigator at Windsor—of trickery and said he had refused to ans- wer to questions becatse he was ‘annoyed at this. He also felt he Should reserve his evidence un- itil he was subpoenaed by the provincial inquiry. nih Hedy. Lamarr Acquitted | LOS ANGELES (AP)A Mu- |nicipal court. jury acquitted ac- |tress Hedy Lamarr Tuesday. of | a shoplifting charge. The 5l-year-old former movie star smiled as the court clerk | read the verdict, then walked | to the jury box and shook hands with and thanked the seven jmen and five women as_ they ‘departed. The actress Had been charged | with: petty. theft of 18 items of | merchandise worth a total of | $86 from a department store | last Jan. 27. “I think everyone's been very | |kind,”’ said the green-eyed, Vi- ‘ennese-born actress. Did she expect the acquittal? “IT really did—but you never’ ean tell.” Mr-—Chevrier—did-not—hecome* Liberals George Ferguson:.of . Murray River and Arthur MacDonald, Little Pond, last night at George- town were nominated as Liberal candidates to run in the Fifth District of Kings in the forth- coming provincial election. Mr. MacDonald's nomination was moved by Ray Lavendier of Georgetown and seconded by | Howard MacLeod of Primrose. | The nomination of Mr. Ferguson | was moved by Grant MacLeod | of Primrose, The nomination of | Mr. Ferguson was moved by | Grant Graham, Murray Harbor | North, and. seconded by Frank | Gaudet, Red House. Mr. Ferguson is councillor can- | Tax Deadline Is Extended OTTAWA (CP)-Personal’ In- be filed without penalty up ‘to midnight Monday night, Revenue - Minister Benson— said Tuesday in the Commons. The normal deadline is April 30° but this falls on a Saturday this year Munsing To Hear By DAVE McINTOSH | OTTAWA (CP)—RCMP Com- |missioner George B. McClellan jand his predecessor, Clifford W. Harvison, are scheduled to tes- tify- today at the Munsinger_in- \quiry when it resumes at 10:30 )a.m. EDT. But legal fireworks may pre- leede such testimony as Con- servative counsel conginue their argument only Parliament and the electorate, not a royal com- mission, can judge the exercise jof discretion by a prime minis- ter. Justice Minister Cardin has stated two or more Conserva- jtive cabinet ministers were” in- jvolved with Gerda Munsinger and former prime minister Dief- baker mishandled the case when it was brought to -his_at- tention. The chief ¢ommission eoun- come tax returns” for 1965 may” May 2, ! Picked. ok For 5th Kings didate while Mr. MacDonald fx assemblyman, ~- Speakers at the convention held in the Lions Club hall were Lib- eral Leader Alex Campbell, Dr. Lorne. Bonnell, candidate for Fourth Kings, Tom Kickham, former federal representative for Kings and Harold Smith, Pownal. Ray Soloman of Georgetown | presided. Secretary was Mrs. Frederick DeLory, Georgetown. Search Widens For Escapees SPRINGHILL, N.S., ‘CP) — | ROMP. said Tuesday they have expanded their search to include provinces outside the Maritimes for two prisoners who escaped the - minimum security institution here Stinday night. The escapees, described as po tentially dangerous, are Lau Robert Silliker, 23, a Sine Port Elgin, N.B., and Leslig Joseph Doucette, 28, of Toronto. Silliker was serving two years for car theft and, Doucette four ~ years for breaking, entering and theft. er Probe Police Isel, J. L. O'Brien, told the in quiry Monday an RCMP secur- ity “file states Mrs. Munsinger was a common prostitute, petty. ‘thief, bad cheque artist and A one-time .Communist. spy whe had an “‘illicit sexual relation. ship” with Pierre Sevigny when he was Conservative: associate defence minister. He said the file also states ‘Mrs, Munsinger was on: a_first- ‘name basis with George Hees, former Conservative trade min- ister, and with an executive assistant to a cahinet minister. TESTIFIED AT PROBE Commissioner. McClellan; who testified last year at the Dorion inquiry . into influence-peddling in high Liberal ranks, is said to want to complete his testimony today—soe-he-can_leave for Kur- rope Thursday on a month-long, jundisclosed working assignment,