) If t's Good For The Island ; g WEATHER ; : ' Sunny, showers or thunderstorms by The Guardian Is For It ¢ AT Tcl evening: wind wet 2. Low-high 55 and “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” . VOL. LXXVUI. NO. 194 AP ie me CHARLOTTETOWN” CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1965. wun SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES Early Start Scheduled - On High School In City PWC Action Forces Move a joint meeting with City Coun cil, to make this new. school @ top prestige academic institu-. tion and to, accomplish this the teaching _ staff NO MAIL, PLANS NO INCOME TAX MONTREAL (CP)—After 16 days of the mail - less postal strike Mrs. R. W. Stedman, daughter of late cabinet.-minister C. D. |' decisiveness of her fatfier. AIMED AT SEVEN STATES 3 Negro Voting Measure Is Signed By Johnson nen cmon, |will be made on construction of | Charlottetown’s new ‘prestige’ a ; ; : ES j ‘she | best possible WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-: Johnson’s bill is aimed, olina, Virginia and part of North She will use what high school, Dr. R. Gordon.Lea, 3 4 } “ :would be required. . It will con- squarely at seven Southern Carolina. called “the -most.-potent- chairman of the School Board, pe op nn ae and 20 mem J i his Ni pe Seeman: Signed his “Hegre weapon a private Canadian 44 voting rights bill Friday and states. It will strike down their Those are the areas which re e | announced last night. sare. 7 said the struggle for racial literacy tests and similar de- used tests for voters in last No-| citizen can have,” she said He stated in view ofthe re- 1) vooneth Parker, superin- lequality in the United States vices and authorize federal reg- vember’s U-S. election saw less Friday, and won't pay her | cently announced decision of pact of city schools, ‘ when lmust turn to “a different bat- istration of voters if that is than half their adult populations income taxes “on the | prince of Wales College to aban- asked renardinn (i staff nas thee itlefield” to overcome legacies found necessary to open the | cast ballots. | grounds that the government don the high school field, the new school stated every effort lof oppression. é' polling booth to Negroes. | The same net catches Alaska is not the service (Board felt compelled to accept | is being made, even this early, | Johnson promised swift and It automatically rules out and scattered counties else- for which I am paying. \the responsibility sincé they as-|to obtain teachers of the high- ALEX QUAISON-Sackey secret message fm the chief Ghana President Kwame Nkru- | certain enforcement to put the voter-qualification tests—includ- | where. “T've had it,’ she said | certained space for high school | est academic standing, He add- Ghana's foreign minister, de ¢%¢cutive’s White House of. mah should advance the cause (ballot, ‘an important instru- ing any requirement that per-| It authorizes federal registra- biuntly. “Tam paying for a Classes will no longer be avail- ed specific additional efforts te . a fice Friday. ‘The foreign minig- of peace-in Viet Nam. iment of freedom . . . into the sons be able to read and write ‘tion of voters, if the government | S etti able in the College buildings, (augment the staff would be livers to President Johnson a ter said the message, from (AP Wirephote) [hands of millions.” — in Alabama, Louisiana, finds that is necessary to guar- | service I am not getting. With government authority made this autumn. ‘ e ft | wed on. a four-mi ian ae __Bomb-Laden U.S. Aircraft _[begnght to Skrumah hy: 3-Ghte 5 O0ree ee ee aiciecamer idee eke antl ond ean ek. sey tee ROWeomers. _______iclassrooms, laboratory facilities Western studies into American — ae SS rrr sant rater come aoe eee ee ear can ony _enlene_ about 188-408 — 10P = tev — quired toehighscheol teach Amer ——_—— ? Cc aera In pened S = ~4ram--Hanei,—did not-markany has. jumped the “Machias River Jons on each pass over the fire gesidents-—-of-—-Bronset a= Se TT ieee eckook-wae teegh) cole ver and, universities.” te scostisiilina rashe S$. nto. Main tr. ~-=» notable--ehange--in--Ho's.-refusal.,i the southeastern part. of the _ Wilkins said he. has ‘arranged, ey of leas than 100 per- | U S. : W. ned om siete tetee aah eld Sponsor is Cyrus S. Fates, to talk peace on terms de- State, about five miles from the for ground assistance from Mas- Sons “about “two tiles “east of | Sede: ar. q Ue poole aa wall ee gwash born Cleveland “Indus peeoroate SAIGON (AP) A bomb. \the twin-engine plane nto Nha ™anded by Washington. bog, and. also moved across sachusetts, New York and Con- Chipman, evacuated their homes | iecture laboratory room for team| trialist who founded the confer- laden U.S. B-57 Canberra jet, Trang. on the South China Sea _ These sources ‘indicated that |Maine highway 192 in several necticut under the northeastera Friday as a forest fife—one of | N ft To Send. teaching. Constructed in thejence in 1954. The first and sev- shot wp in a raid against the 200 miles northeast™ of Saigon, Nkrumah was using the occa- |S€clions, - forest fire, compact. He said 15. nine new outbreaks reported in | oO . form of an inter-related cross it eral of the ensuing meetings os Viet Cong guerrillas, crashed. and the subsequent fire and SiO nonetheless to urge moves | ee OL men, using bulldoz; portable ‘power pumpers and New Brunswick and one of five, : jwill eliminate, long corridors were held at Eaton's ancestral and spread war's havoc Frida¥ explosion of four of its 250- fof a. peaceful settlement. ers ‘ aided by water bomb- 26,000 feet of hose are scheduled | oy of-control—pressed closer. | More Troops (while offering fast movement home here, now called Thinkers’ _o0-s-mala-siveet-of Wha ‘Trang, | pound bombs.’ 7 . : eS Seta ee aa were nar te to arrive from these states to The 4.500-acre blaze was burn- | from classrooms in one section | Lodge. ee South Viet Nam. A-spokesman Officials said four buildings Women, Children | Sead | agi sas day. ing through slash and timber on | to those in another. Besides , No Plans Made lo Bomb Hanoi, Johnson Tells Ghana Official He went to the US. capitol to address the cabinet, Con- gress, civil rights leaders and | Americans generally and to sign the bill in the elegant presi- | dent's’ room. ot It was in this room, 104 years jago to the day, that President | Abraham Lincoln signed into jlaw a bill freeing slaves who | had been pressed into civil .war ‘Georgia, Mississippi, South Car- Actor Everett Sloane Dies “0S ANGELES (AP) — Everett Sloane, 55, one of the | antee Negro franchise rights. | “If any county in the nation does not want federal interven- | tion,” Johnson said, ‘‘it need only open its polling places to all its people.” * This is unjust. Iam decid- | haying been granted for provid- | ing now that I will not pay taxes next spring and that’s that.” Postal Union Meeting ing high school education in the leity, the School Board has been | working on plans for a long time jto prepare for any emergency. rAlfred ennessey, city architect has been commissioned by the Board and has already present- ed some preliminary drawings for consideration. Cost of the new _ structure is estimated | } Dr. Parker also stated pre |vision would be made in the new ‘schol for two optional courses for girls, in home economics and commerce. Inclusion of the lat” ‘ter was sparked by business needs for quality office help and |as a result it would not be: just ° |an ordinary course since applie: ‘ants would be carefully screen ed to assure top quality studente only. In fact, he stated, no ap WASHINGTON —(AP)—P¥esi-: do>s~-not~ know whether “Nkru- president’of the United Nations | Setvices for the Confederacy... ster actors tied-Priey- im-his Eee 1. pacer Jame had com: dent Johnson conferred Friday mah plans to visit Hanoi, said general assembly, did not talk | A Statue of a brooding Lincoln 5 itwood home [OVERHAUL CURRICULUM ee aot by which time oe with Ghana's foreign minister further in his statement: with White House reporters. | Wa at Johnson's shoulder as he Conus ar ‘death was, pot im- | In addition plans are aimagatt be cule 1 infastry of the and indicated to him that the ‘The president’ stated that Nkrumah is a friend of Presi- faced television cameras and i ‘completed for an overhauling of ( on page 3, col. 3 United-' States has no present concern (about bombings) was dent Ho Chi Minh of North Viet Tadio microphones with a mes- plans to bomb Hanoi s Johnson met Forei, Alex Quaison Sdckey, brought a personal unnecessary because there is no Nam Minister U.S. military action who Hanoi As and received a letter against Thursday from that- Communist: the president said, message ‘not a bomb has fallen there’.” leader. It is assumed the message 'sage for American Negroes: “You. must register. You must ‘vote. And: you must learn, so | your choice acivances your in- mediately known. Rated one of the finest in the business, Sloane first came. to; Due Today | Hollywood with Orson™ Welles’ Mercury theatre group when MONTREAL. (CP)—The head- n Montreal the . postal workers would’ be ithe school curriculum to put it jon what is known as a 6,3,3 ba- | sis. This provides for six years elementary school, three years ‘junior high school, and three from. President- Kwame Nkru- REPEATS VIEW Quaison-Sackey delivered was terest and the interést of the na- mah of Ghana. Johnson prom-| Johnson, Moyers reported, re- connected with. the letter from tion.” ised a prompt reply and the peated to Quaison-Sackey “what Ho but U.S. officials. expressed White House said all details|he has said om so many occa- initial doubts that it would do will be made public later. 'Sions—that the quickest way to much to break the deadlock | Bill _ Moyers, White House peace is for aggression from over holding negotiations to end press secretary, read to report-.the North té cease.” the Viet Nam war. ers a rather crypti¢ statement’ The press secretary said CARRIES MESSAGE that related to the quesion of Johnson told Quaison - Sackey Talking with reporters before |., possible bombing of Hanoi. ‘that “when the aggression going to the White House, the, Moyers repored that Quatson ceases . . . military resistance | diplomat said: “‘I am not to say | Sackey said ‘that because of | will cease.” anything about the message. I the bombings (of North Viet’ Moyers said. the question of am only a messenger.” Nam by American But at the same time, he said Huge Maine Fire Out Of Control they made. the movie Citizen quarters of striking postal work- Kane. ers in Montreal has called a general meeting of the 4,100 | strikers for 2 p.m. today in east- lend Plateau Hall. A spokesman for the strikers called upon to vote on any rec- eae RGA. |years of senior high. : ; 3 | Dr. Lea said an option on Jand Earlier Friday, there were! - . ; 1 reports of a =i exchanges |°" Spring P Road had a on the picket lines as etrikers obtained and it was hoped con- citieaiee: the aenk of ly- struction could get underway al- said Friday night the meeting hired parttime employees in [moet immediately since & wow | was called so that postal work- Montréal’s post offices. ling ‘ready for oceupancy in 1966. ers could hear a report from: Revenue Minister ‘Benson ‘had | For its first year of strike leaders on their talks with |said Montrealers could begif tion it will only take students cabinét ministers in Ottawa. picking up their own mail at lin Grades 10 and 11, but the The spokesman was unable to regional post offices once th@ /school is planned to for inclus- say what the strike leaders/non-union part-timers catch up | ion of Grade 12 and thus will 'Chinals ‘On Agenda- lars from 10 United States unl- iversities and colleges gather im |this. northern Nova Scotia vil- Hage Sunday for the 25th Pug- |wash conference. The 45° dele- gates to this year’s ll-day ses- | sions will discuss China and tts AtPugwash- ~ | PUGWASH, NS. (CP)—Schol- planes), peace negotiations was not dis- Hanoi has expressed some con- cussed during Johnson's; 15-min- the communication should ‘“‘ad- _WHITNEYVILLE, Me. (AP)—- Wilkins said the state has se- would recommend or, whether with the huge backlog of mail |provide facilities for high school \spawned by the strike, which pupils now attending St. Dun- 'cyjture. “& cern about the president of ute session with -Quaison- vance the cause of peace” and Maine's biggest forest fire in re- cured the temporary use of two : began 17 days ago today.~ ;stan’s, Prince of Wales, Queen| Gh ‘ ” : oT ; imis- cent years defied control Friday water-bombin anes from the Fl H 4 : . i i | The 1965 conference has bees shana coming to Hanoi Sackey. added: “I'm always optimise. (i : ni ined ak . pl ae Gee ee nomes They'll have a heck of a job oa and Birchwod high! | snized. by the Association of. Moyers, who said at least 12 Vietnamese civilians were killed Elsewhere other planes, com- ~~ Seventy-four. persons, includ- ing eight Americans, were re- ported injured by the plunge of Technical Fault Picked were destroyed and_ several : damaged. FLYERS IT SILK sea. But for some reason—ap- Americans have so far not ar-|woods that has few roads. parently a damaged engine— the plane wheeled .ff. course. As Air Disaster’s later ‘said he, Quaison-Sackey, who also ts tic." Other diplomatie sources sug- igested that the Ho etter! Leaving Hanoi _drop_the_crippled_craft_into_the from. Viet .Nam-_‘‘However, the |then..be ina _50-mil | mn ve so far not ar- |: is a eee et $5000 0 SRT SOT nities were reduced to~ashes, | rived. The people are quiet and administration is orderly." Cause The fire, which began in a fpeat bog Wednesday, now has blaze with a fire line. The fire is headed in a north- easterly direction, pushed by southerly winds of 5. to 10 miles BORROW PLANES In Augusta, the state capital Forest Commissioner Austin Fie aa ble of dropping 1,000 gallons of water at a time. i Governor John H. Reed told | reporters in Augusta that the situation now is a very serious’ one. . homeless: ,property. losses to- 1,068 dwellings destroyed, and 200,000 acres of forest land blackened. 3 Before Fire | doing that,’’ cémmented a strike spokesman when told about the catching-up job faced by the + 32 CLASSROOMS tt will have 32 academic a front reported“as seven miles | long and two miles in width at its widest point. ‘ Other fires out of control in- | closed to travel at midnight Fri- lowed a — walkout of U.S Am- | Typhoon W jday. They were: Kent, West- morland, Albert, St. John- Charlotte, Kings, Queens, Sun- | bury and York. Ee By Reuters The Soviet Union warned the United States sending another 50,000 American bassador Foy Kohler from a Kremlin recéption because of criticism _by Premier Kosygin of U.S. policy in Viet Nam. these there will be provision of ispace for the administratiom of. as city school administration. |American Colleges at Washisg- jton as a “‘pilot experiment te encourage introduction of ton- EATON TO ATTEND Mr. Faton is expected. to at- Friday against fice of the school board as well tend at least part of the ses- sions, which end Aug. 18. Co- | } HIROSHIMA (AP)-—-A ~crowd of 300,000, perhaps three times intel a S Zamaee omeate ee ied saa he a bee oven Waals ead Notaries. The fire is the biggest Im cluded a 1,500-acre outbreak at troops into Viet Nam*an ee webttae a aah chairmen of the discussions will reported to have inflicted on members had escaped safely, ‘removed from Hanoi capital. of Residents have been alerted for Maine since October, 1947, when Little Fork, about 23 miles tion which, it said, would _ |mum of distance in moving from oS a a the Viet Cong in -July their bailing out after taking what North Viet Nam, in anticipation (protection of buildings and pos- 2 forest fire broke out in the northeast of Chipman, a 1S to Wide pe alg ‘et one area to another had called Bary chairman of Chinese and heaviest casualties for any one- Maj Gea Gilbert L. Meyers of of US. air raids, the Polish gov- sible evacuation Ber He area. When that acre flareup at Sabbies River At’ the mg On cos Viet for truly unique planning. Sere aaa We ae month period of the war. the US. Air Force called “ev- ernment television reported Fri- The area in- questipn lies | te was finally extinguished. it in Northumberland County and Cong made their first open ap- The School Board“ chairman, University in New York, and oo a : ery precaution to try to safe- day night about 50 miles southwest of the ft behind a trail of death and fires near Salmon River. Road peal to North Viet Nam for | said it was still the aim, as an-|Carler Davidson, president of | ae ’ ae guard lives and property.” “Only men remain in Hanol,”"|New Brunswick border. destruction. in Kent County and Nixon military reinforcements to coun- (nounced several months ago at the association. : a sl a ‘ _ om we", Ome of the precautions was Polish tv : correspondent Jerzy If the: fire does cross Maine Sixteen died in the blaze; 19 Brook in Albert County. jter the US. Geciston to send he ave lost a division 0 troops.” to set the automatic pilot to Telpi said in a voice report 192 on a broad front, it would Were in hospital; 2,500 made Meanwhile, . forests in nine 50.000 troops. : _That_ could mean 10,000 men. : New “Brunswick counties: were} The Moscow ~ statement — fol- | AT HIROSHIMA ashes Out - Anti-Bomb Rallies 520,000 persons. It -was 400,008 when the bomb was dropped By BEN WARD ular__“‘businessmen's “special” Similar alterations were made the numBer killed in the world’s» To about four-fifths of the OTTAWA (CP)—A DC-8F jet flight to. Toronto. in, the Boeing 707, the DC-8's first atomic bombing, stood population, the bombing is not that crashed near Montreal 21; It crashed only five minutes chief rival in commercial avia- quietly here Friday marking the a personal thing. Over the months ago, killing all 118 per- after it began thundering down tion. * - 20th anniversary of the Japa- years, the anniversary ‘has be come tinged with a carnival at- sons aboard, probably was the runway at Montreal Inter- Under the technical ei ity’ r q i , : 3 rcum--| nese city’s holocaust. forced into an excessive dive national Airport. stances that t saat | in -Mosph ced with the real : because of a technical fault and SYSTEM REMEDIED scribed as the ue bo etree ig gg aD griet a 93,000 survivors and hadn't enough height to recover, The chain of technical events probable cause of the crash, the pilot would be Hiroshima’s Peace Park at the ‘atomic cenotaph, a memorial to their relatives j That was the essence of a which Mr. Justice Challies de- : * 5 : : : plunging . earthward with his ; i _ At 8:15 am.-the moment 9,500-word report issued Friday scribed as the most probable two main control devices com- Sot Walk Wit than ey ree years ago when a U.S. B-29 \ by a one-man federal inquiry cause‘ of the tragedy — iS M© batting each other. The eleva- 6. 1945 : dropped the world’s first nu- that investigated the crash, Can-| bonger possible on DC-4 jets. tors would be in an “up” posi-| : : : clear bomb--the city came to a ada’s worst air disaster. In September of 1964 the tion and the stabilizers “down,” | | —A typhoon, whose rains held standstill. “Sirens, gongs and “It is concluded that the ac- tual cause of he accident can- Douglas Aircraft Co., producer of the plane, made changes that jammed there by the air pres- sure. loff until after the ceremony, discouraged the usual anti-bomb rallies. church bet!s sounded ; _ Until late at night. after Ty- not be determined ‘with cer- limit to one-half of one degree His only remedy was to re- ‘ phoon Jean had hit, people tainty,” . Mr. dustic® George the amount of nose-down trim jease his pull om the control col- Vendors offered ice cream milled “around the memorial Challies of the .Quebee Superior 4 Pilot can apply to the hori- umn, momentarily causing a and. gold fish as a new list of monument. . = Court reported. zontal stabilizers. Formerly it! steeper and faster dive but un- 469 names of atomic victims Leftists carried slogans saying was two degrees, or four times was placed in a concrete re- “America get out of Viet Nam.” But he added that “the most probable cause’’ was a fault In the plane's automatic pitch trim compensator that forced the ‘ on we The pilot's efforts: to INSIDE TODAY ae e thew as aie Japanese estimated the toll of 7 aan sent no delegates ae overcome this situation’ put the Classified ..-......... 12,13 | has taken at least 13,000 jdead and maimed at 200,000. thé rallies but Communist part plane into a dive from which it)” Births ceeeee -. i ‘accomplish this pull-out ee ae ae ie fonlincczen aio quieter ei aaen , bo impossible to recover io; Deaths ...:.............. 3 \dure. The Mofitreal jet was | poe were killed. rs that. the “Riissians wee olor ime. | Fimance- markets ........ 14 /about 6,000. feet short of_ that) 4 ; The typhoon, which battered oushiy aeterintaal te ent sThe huge Trans-Canada Air| Comics ..........-....... 11 | requirement. i é ; the city most . - = sesiens ak eas! Lines ‘Air Canada) jet plunged | The circumstances of the ré : washed out noisy ban-the-bom : : : | s ‘ : : The 1945 bomb, an infant by straight into the ground from a Montreal crash were eee ‘ HALF-WAY POINT is REACHED eae eee ae today’s .standards, produced a height of between 5,000 and 7,000 ee vee 4 | with one three months er| : ae have marked the observance in (TOT) ge feet in’ diameter oat oe m6 ine 1963, Kings, Queens, City ...... s (near New Orleans and let to a Two British Columbia wo next leg of their horseback the Sault as the halfway point, an old car, and beachcomb Is AER with searing temperature of Tans eaves crue anders snd, Prince County ..----. g__ joint Canadian-American study. men. Helen Atwood (left). 2. mde to Halifax The wome"’ when they reach Halifax they “Hetf_way to. Florida down the (CITY BUSTLING _ 300,000 degrees centigrade. De- i It included flying ‘tests with and Joyce Mahon. 32. left Sault who began the ride at Cling > Atlantis seaboard Now a bustling and prosperous struction was total sg prospe for a radius $11 passengers making a reg-' ~~ as much. ' stalling the motor on the stabi- | lizers. | ee a ee TOO NEAR EARTH iDC-Bs. | Ste Marie, Ont.; Friday on the don, B.C, April “23, counted plan te sell their horses, buy (cP Wirephote) | esty, Hiroshima's population is, 'ceptacle under the cenotaph. It brought the Japanese death list to 61,447. The Viet Nam war was a chief topic of Communist and socialist anti-bomb rallies - of nearly @ mile.