\ VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 272 ~ If It's Good For The Island _ The Guardian Is For It Payment ef Postage in Cash, “Covers Prince bid Island Like The Dew” by ihe Fost Ottice Departmen CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1965. WEA nor Mos® SEVEN CENTS THER Sunny with a few cloudy periods; winds westerly 15. Low-high 28 and 30. Sun- day: sunny and cold, 14 PAGES settlement In Sight As B.C. Walkout Nears Two Aims Are Outlined British Colonial . right, hands pen to British Guiana tional Conference agreement setting up plans for British Gulana to become independent In N.B. Municipal Plans FREDERICTON (CP) — Munt-|jextraneous worries and obliga-! The new act was the first bill cipal Affairs Minister Theriault, tions so that they may exercise{in a program to modernize gov- introducing a massive new muni-/ their full initiative in providing| ernment institutions. As ao | Province-Wide Tieup fs Due Wed. Night ions in every industry and serv- ice to join in the work stoppage. ex-| 3 es act in the New Bruns-|local services of the variety and; ample of other institutions -| 5 eVANCOUVER (CP)-—No face- of evolution” has two aims. sential services; to strengthen | local government to fulfill its, local obligations. | | “Implementation of our pro posed legislation will change the structure of all forms of munict- pal government but it would have its greatest effect on the Dn a i aia vig | nor general representing Queen ally no functions per- Elizabeth II as its titular head “formed hy county councils. i with British support for the We believe the creation of vil-; Common- province’s people of at least] autonomy and , said the| standard which their residents! going examination and desire is, we believe | he referred to ‘“‘the ecu’ (municipalities)| movement sweeping the’ world These are: to ensure all the|im a position of greater financial | and the agreement by the United : accountability! Church of Canada and the Ang- basic minimum standards of es-| than prevails in any province of lican Church in Canada to dis- nical cuss union.” > OTTAWA (CP) — The prime minister's office decided today to end the corridor scram- PM's Office To End figures had been under consid- eration for two years, the an- | nouncement added. | | to-face meeting is in sight for | the men who must come to |terms or leave British Columbia A Open to an oil-industry strike ;and possible general work stop- \page. | A government bid for settle- ment of the bitter oil dispute had not reached the stage Fri- day wiiere union and manage- ment representatives could even ‘be called to the same building for separate. meetings with chief = Si ste bad ett seid “ edenighatr alive walk," 8 ' 5 N Ist P ‘eonciliation officer Reg_C€lem- manship.” ; Sei “ith : NR tin. “The assumption by the prov. | OM] Ol (fd mbii Canon E.W, Scott, associate (©: ae . est mall, would kee egg ince of the responsibilities; | | tary of the Angli- The Oil, work sfoppage, ° INDEPENDENCE DUE FOR BRITISH GUIANA and. costs for education, healt, | can Chureh of Canada's social | Workers ‘Union “CI.C) is set to ing hundreds of work contracts dlectea Ser inches Nahe day night, Nov. 24, against six of Kootenay. ,Election took _%! companies. place at me g of Kootenay The B:C. Federation of Labor Synod“in Nelson, 8.C., Friday. (has éalled for a province-wide Many independent unions have lined up with Canadian Labor Congress affiliates. | Several forest industry. lead- ers a cern about how a stoppage might affect \a- bor-management relations in the future. T. N. Beaupre, chairman of \B.C. Forest Products Lid., said labor leaders are playing an “extraordinary game of brink- labor action, he said. J- G. Prentice, president of Canadian Forest Products Lid., jsaid he was disturbed that un- Prime Minister L. Forbes next May 26. The new consti- new lages will provide the necessary : + saad eae ci ; art ‘ ew country to seek machinery for the provision of |blings and jostlings that almost But it seemed evident that the | i ' ‘Burnh signing Lon-~ tution calls for a sovereign —_ wealth membership, (AP Wire- seus Bo services.” invariably mark the quest for corridor tangle outside the Nov. ee hsegeotd a ar a a posh esses’ g i oe as don Friday of the Constitu- democratic state with a gover- photo by cable from Lends) | “'yériier, Mr. Theriault told re- S. Viet. Nam Children’s Hospital Is Being Considered By Canada By DAVE McINTOSH that they could take over opera: porters the province will\ take over assets, as well as obliga- tions, of counties when county councils disappear. County boun- dary lines will remain un- changed. Government spokesmen pre- viously said the program is a long-range one reqiiring action over a period of years. THREE TYPES : The municipal affairs: minister tion, $50,000,000 by the external said in the house Friday three tional Development Association mews after a cabinet meeting. The second-floor corridor out- side the cabinet room in Par- liament'’s East Block is to be “off limits” to reporters just before, during and after cahi- net meetings: . Instead, reporters are to wait in a special press froom for ei- ther the prime minister or 4 @pokesman to &ppear after such meetings to make statements and answer questions.’ The step apparently “was sparked by a noisy corridor 8 election. 10 post-election cabitiet meeting | that brought some com- ments -from Prime jnister | Pearson played a part in the | move. ‘ | |SAW CORRIDOR JAMMED Mr. Pearson found the corri- dor jammed as he went into that meeting. He told reporters there would be no announce- iments after it and they might as well not bother waiting. 1 ,~- He appeared’ annoyed when. he emerged three hours fater to | find the hallway packed | with | stration’ of support. | The oil workers, already on atrike against British American Suffers Attack and Imperial Oil, Friday ith Mr; Clements. Government MOSCOW (AP) — Marshal |sources:’ reported “some pro-| i 2 Fw your ee igress” in Mr. Clements’ talks 0 Sovie! ence T with ntati { ousted in 1957 by Nikita Khrush- thursday | chev, suffered a mild heart at- But no break was in sight. | tack recently, usually well-in- | formed sources reported Friday, SUPPORT IS STRONG but is recoveritg “in” his” home” The labor” federation reported” outside Moscow. strong commitments from un- Marshal Khukov Canada has had only two gen- eral work stoppages in its his jtory. A 24-hour revolt on Aug. 4; 1918, over the shooting of British Columbia labor - leader Ginger Godwin was nipped in the bud by federel zovernment actic~ 't set restrictions against strikes and jailed a number of labor leaders, including CCF founder — J. S. Woodsworth. LEADERS JAILED A year later a general Strike paralyed Winnipeg for 42 days OTTAWA (CP) — f ; of i ; ; : cone th. ~ th bounce ee. jae ee nee about $8,000,000 _— brine ee ore ae por conclave following the first newspaper reporters, photogra-_ jand spread to almost every ma- appropriations have been sent|some food to Viet Nam and miptions to the Interna. | villages. There would be no dif-/cabinet meeting after the Nov. phers and television and radio’ Pri ncess rgaret Hus nd is aaa Canada, Ma ; ba » re to the cabinet for approval but |some limited technical assist- no significant change from the |ance—one technical expert last last two poerig is expected, im. In the 1984-65 and 1968-46 ‘tis- (at French-language universities eal years, the Canadian foreign jin Canada. aid program amounted to scme , Outright aid—that is, grants year, for instance. Some lyear above the except in name ‘and’ se’ They 5 would have identical administra- tive “and financial powers and | . Informants' said there may be }@m increase in food aid next Steps to end fhe scramble reporters clusteréd arqui prime minister of ; ‘éabi Credits ‘Insurance Corporation residents wish and and the external aid office are services for which they are prepared to expected to be approximately | Pay oncom JOHNNY BOWER ic. w as | men, and a bafiery of flood- . as | lights. the} =} don't think this is very | nice,” he said. “J have to push | Ne nota foot. Mmiy way boing | | with questions and there was a | Enjoy Sight-Seeing In N.Y. By BORIS MISKEW as the visitors arrived at the of Winnipeg metal shops to ne- |\gotiate with the Winnipeg Metal Trades Council. Council leaders / were, jailed..and.the companies won. ‘NEW YORK (CP)—A boycott 'delegates’ entrance. iers dispute is their demand for by African Commonwealth lead-| Greeting Princess Margaret against automation. $225,000, mostly loans. The |and food—to developing coun- the same amount. “Some persons m : | i 1965-66 gram has not yet |tries in the current fiscal year! ‘The Vaidin our proposals lessen Sousicipall TURNS SINGER {fot of jostling as photographers jers at a United Nations recep- jand her husbad on behalf of iey. wank 18 months notice of been approved by Parliament, |@Mounts to some $90,000,000. i arparation now | autonomy,” said Mr. Theriault. | eee Keyed for position. Reporters |¢ion and a bomb scare in the |Secretary-General U Thant WAR technological chatiges, semer- acheduidd to reconvene Jan. 1@| The remainder of the aid is 55 Parliament's authorization | “It is our belief that municipal, _ TORONTO ‘CP) — Goalie | ted queries and radio men | Empire State Building Friday |Pierre de Meulemeester, chief ‘ance pay in the event of partial blac t:\nenmner Véeation ond 61% loans—$76,000,000 by the Ex- to make ‘longterm loans total. | governments will be freed of Johnny |Bower u veil ily ple won: usa ee failed 'to deter Princess Marga- | protocol. a cemuslete Gant sme Wt fall election~ port Credits Insurance Corpora- ling $400,000,000. It has com- | Christmas = surp riday— to” ir ‘op! ret and the Earl of Snowdon. , 000,000, ‘ : tion. A couple of rters i |GAVE RECEPTION the: form of one year’s pay for Pn eee ee * "7 : from making. a sight - seeing “re Royal visitors were es- every five years of service and Eternal Affairs Minister Martin told the Commons eter- GATT Suspends this amount in loans to develop- i mitted about three-quarters ot | nal affairs ‘committee June 29) British Facing | that the government hopes to | increase foreign aid to $400,000,- Breadless Days 000 by 1970. Informants indicated that no| LONDON (Reuters) — More advance toward this goal will than.J,000,000 British homes Fri- be made in the coming 1966-67 day faced a weekend without fiscal year, which begins April bread unless housewives made ¥; it themselves. |ing countries, The government |may have to ask Parliament to \increase the ceiling in the next year or two if it wants. to con- Four Naval Ships Rhodesian Tie GENEVA (AP)—The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, which: controls 90 per cent of the world trade, tem- porarily suspended rela- The ageless Nationa) League star has taken time from his duties in Tor- onto Maple Leaf goal to record two new songs for the Christmas season. The songs are Honky the Christmas Goose and Banjo Mule, which go on Sale in Canada this weekend, . were pushed off balance and landed on a corridor couch. The gallery announcement said the executive takes the po- sition ‘that the prime minis- ter’s presence in the press room on every possible occasion after a cabinet meeting is an essen- tial. part of the new arrange- ment.” There would be recon- sideration if the system. didn't round of New York. The Royal party began their corted: immediately to the sec- |retraining of employees whose ond floor where a reception was jobs are made obsolete. At the centre of the oil work- day with a visit to the Empire jgiyen in their honor by Lord| The union also wants a wage State Building and it was there |Caradon, Britain’s permanent jincrease of 50 cents an hour on that police received a report of representative to the UN. a-basic wage of $2.75. a bomb threat. |. Lord Caradon invited about 50 The bomb seare was touched guests to the reception in the) Hu i r Dies In N.S. Accident off by an anonymous telephone Indonesian J.ounge, including call from a woman who referred-| senior officials of the UN secre-| to the building rather than the tariat and leaders of the Com-| ai eileen In the recordings, Is | riae work out. Royal visitors.. The threat led |monwealth delegations to the FORM CHANGE LIKELY Though no significant change | im the financial allotment is | contemplated, there may be one fairly significant change in the form’ Canadian © aid takes. The possibility of Canada equipping and - staffing a chil- dren's hospital and _rehabilita- tion centre near Saigon in South | Viet Nam is under study. Buildings already exist for such a purpose. The idea would also be to train Vietnamese so A 48hour. strike of bakery workers in four of Britain's most heavily - populated areas spurred a’ rush on record quan- tities of flour and yeast. +The strike, which took place | |in Birmingham, Liverpool, Dur- \ham_and South Wales, is over. shorter hours and more pay. Breadless bakeri¢s in the |worst-hit areas prepared seven- ounce bags of flour and gave: in-- structions to young housewives | making bread for the first time. SOME DISAPPOINTMENT Religious Liberty Okay | Back From Cruise!tns, ith Rhodesia Friday Das) IGATT Director - General Eric HALIFAX (CP) — More than ndha ‘ it ai 1,800 sailors on board four Can- ae vectra ctl teen oreage adian navy vessels returned here Friday from a nine-week training cruise in Europe. One of the vessels, the heli- | copter-destroyer._Nipigon, . lost- three crew members in a fire Oct. 18: The other vessels to arrive were the aircraft carrier Bonaventure, the helicopter-des- | # troyer Saguenay and the des-| troyer escort Kootenay. fol- lowing a request by the British government. All GATT member countries, including; Canada, were informd of the British Te | quest and of GATT’s decision. | joined by his. son John Jr., 11, and a group of Toronto young- sters called the Rinky Dinks. “It was a lot of fun,” said Bower. ‘‘We plan to record More next year.” Bet RS a ro oak. — GRANBY, Que-(CP)—A: judi-= \ballots cast in the Quebec ‘con- | social activities. } istituency centre Mnday, it was/a large contingent of UN em- | ! | { | Recount Is Due To Begin Monday cal recount of general election | stituency of Shefford has been | scheduled to begin in this con- | learned Friday. | Conservative candidate Paul | Trepanier, who lost his election- | night vote was announced, said , he had requested the recount.\) He gave the starting date as} Monday—-and-—election-— officials and other sources confirmed | this, though Chief Electoral Of- ficer Paul Langlois was available for comment. The officials not Saulnier, city of Montreal ad- oe ministration chajrman, an- said Creditiste |mounced Thursday ‘plans to build to a police search of the build- | UN. ing but found no bomb. | It was at this reception that Princess Margaret and Lord {the boycott by the African lead- Snowdon, who arrived here jers took place in an apparent Thursday for a six-day private | protest over Britain's unwilling- visit, then. were dtiven by po- | mess to use military force to put lice_escort to the UN headquar-|an end_to the rebellion in Rho- ters for a three-hour whirl of |desia by the white minority gov- ernment of Premier Ian Smith. A crowd of members of the |. gs diplomatic corps as well as) ployees welcomed the party | with warm rounds of : applause Montreal Plans Expo 67 Tower MONTREAL (CP) — <Lucien LIVERPOOL, N.S. (CP) Gerald Wallis Martin, 40. of Me- jlanson, N.S., was killed in a ‘hunting accident Friday at inearby Bangs Falls. | Police said Martin was shot_ by one of three hunting compan- ions who mistook him for a deer. Given At Rome Meeting Shefford’s member in the last estimated cost of $11,670,000 as Parliament who ended third in the \gity’s ‘contribution . to | the By GERALD MILLER VATICAN CITY (AP) — The le: o he Rome; Cat i Church voted final approval riday of a religious liberty ration designed to -improve relations with all the world’s mon - Catholics. Protestant ob- servers at the Vatican ecumen- , ical council said it would. ; 3: 2 vote of 1,954 to 249 the bishops the Vatican ecumen- ic? . il cleared the declara- | tion for promulgation by Pope | Pau’ Dec. 7. The declaration | says all men must have reli- gious liberty anc recognies the | right of followers of non-Catho- | lic faiths to wor hip according to their conscience. t Protestant observers at the | council greeted passage of the. declaration as “an immense step forward." But they, and Americar pre- ; lates who had led the fight for th- document were disapnointed at the sie of the opposition votc and changes in the declara- tion made in hopes of satisfying ecnservative ovponents. ; ; REPORT. PLAN APPEAL . Reports spread Friday night that the conservative led by Italian Bishop Luigi Carli, was planning a “do or- die” appeal over the head ot | the council majority to Pope Paul to kill the religious liberty declaration on his own author- ity. Council insiders said such an appeal was doomed to fail. In an attempt to satisfy con- servative objections to the dec- laration, the drafting commis- sion had expanded a statement that: Roman Catholicism is the only true faith and moved. it from the bottom of the text to the top. In addition to declaring that all men must be free to wor- ship according to their con- science. the document says gov- ernments must prevent any co- ercion in matters of faith and must not interfere with any re- ligion that does not threaten public order. Settee 08 bro f ONLY 30 SHOPPING E DAYS TILL CHRISTMA % \schema on world problems, in- | ¥~ leluding birth control and nw- | ¢ clear warfare—will be before it. | os pean, In another development, @4 move by New Orleans Arch- bishop. Philip M. Hannan te} change the tone of a council statement. deploring the deter. rent policy of nuclear stockoil- | ing ended in failure. The out- come of voting two days before on an anti-war declaration, an. nounced to the council in- St. Peter's Basilica Friday, gave | i the statement the required two- | & thirds majority for passage, | without change. | Archbishop Hannan, contend. | ing that the phrasing of the| document could be mistaken as | criticism of American policy, | had sought to force a teword- |} ing. i The council now goes into |.! recess until Nov. 3 to: give}; ‘ drafting commissions time for | | their work. On that day the ‘council will’ meet for a final vote on a schema on mission- | « ary activity. It will meet again | Dec. 2 for approval of a docu- ;ment on the priestly life; two | days later the last of the un- | jcompleted documents—the vast | a. Buses, : SRR ‘Lesley Langley, Miss United Kingdom, parades in bathing suit at London’s Lyceum ball- room Friday night on her way to victory in the annual Miss World contest. The new Miss World is 21, 5 feet 6, and mea- 37-24-37. She is a model, | tlue eyed and blonde, who Adjournment date for the | council is Dec. 8, after the Pope formally promulgates. the final ;documents approved. NEW MISS WORLD ero Gilbert Rondeau. 's tower 1,066 feet high at an ithe tight race, also, asked for a (4967 Montrea says her ambition is to be a film actress. This is the sec- ond year in a row a Miss Uni- ted Kingdom won the title. Miss United States, Dianna Lyn Batts, 19, of Walls Church, Va., was runnerup. (AP Wire- phote by cable from London) recount. The proceeding is expected ta last at least three to five days under Mr- Justice Evender Veilleu of Sherbrooke. a Que- » bec ‘Superior Court judge. 1 The official count in Shefford ‘last Monday gave Mr. Neveu a |45-vote victory over Mr. Tre- |panier, who is mayor of Granby. } Classified .....0.. | Mr. Rondeau was 60 votes off the leader's 9,520 votesM lucien ‘Pearson, an independent Lib eral. was fourth and last with 514. Mr. Langlois said Tuesday he ‘found one of the constituency’s 185 ballct. boxes sezled an? empty during the official count, held one week after election day. INSIDE TODAY | Comics . Finance, markets Sport ... 9 Wemen’s isecesicecccs os< 6 Editorials --.....cccceces- 4 Summerside ............ Kings, Queens, City ... Prince County . eee e ec etenens - ing basis. jot world’s fair. The tower will take the form of two twin elliptical concrete structures which will be linked at the top by a platform build- ing that the city says will be the highest observation point on a building in the world. This replaces an earlier abor- tive Montreal - Paris plan to build a. single tower-at-an_esti- mated cost of $23,000,000. Paris will not take part.in the twin- project. City council, at a _ special meeting preceded by a caucus Thursday, was asked to signify whether it would be interested in going ahead with the project if the cost could be kept to $11,- 670,000. If it were interested, the coun- cil was to be asked to authorize the adrhinistration to cali con- struction tenders on a non-bind- Once the tetiders were in, the administration would seek the opinion of the council on whether to implement the pro- ject. Mr. Saulinier said the height the - project—1,066 feet—is equal to 325 metres and <aid this is symbolic of the fact that in 1967 it will be 325 years since Montreal was. founded by men who left aN 50.