firmed the election of lib: ‘ representing I If It's Good For The island The Guardian Is For If its @uardiiom “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” v01. LXXVII. N0. 114 SPELLING, Chairman Mrs. (:3. White- side, left. and Col. Leo F. Mac- Donald. spellin-g judge and principal of Birchwood High School study the program and arrangements prior to a spell- Election Unchanged In New Couni REGINA lCPl -— Final count of ballots cast in the April 22‘ Saskatchewan election was completed in half the constitu- encies by 5:30 p m MST Wed nesday without resulting in any turnovers from election - night results in which the Libcralst defeated the CCP‘ governmcnl.‘ "Ilection - night results gave the Liberals 33 of the 39 logis-~ laturc seats. the CCF‘ :7 the Progressive Conservativesl l. v DJ 3 9- Earlier counts. which got un- der way Wednesday, had con- i Five Island Army Personnel l Receive Awards 5 Five Prince Edward Island natives were among the large group of Canadian Army per-i sonnel listed by Eastern Com-i Headquarters. Halifax. as recipients of long service Four of them received the! Canadian Forces Decoration! 12 years cxcmol-l ary service. They are. . .1 A. Doucette. Charlottetown. av member of the Royal Canadian Signals; Cpl. D, S. Paquct. Charlottetown. Royal Highland Regiment of Canada: Gdsm. H. Gallant. O‘Leary. Canadian1 E Guards: te. . . Saunders.‘ Bloomfield Station. Royal Can-l adian my Medical Corps. rs. filth was awarded thdl first clasp to the decoration re-. Presenting an additional to} years exemplary service. Thisi was: RSM. (W01). H. L. Ar- cher. Charlottetown, Royal Ca- lfdian Army Medical Corp. 24 Islanders Receive Degrees, HAWAX -’Many students from Prtnce Edward Island will receive degrees or diplom- as today when Dalhousie Uni verslty holds Its spring convo- cation in the Memorial Rin ll ‘ Incl. ' where less than 100 votes sep- twork in a bus from Authonud as Second Class III! by tho Post Office Department. Otto's. and for pay-cut d loll-(I h on‘ ,Hits Home; CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDArT-MXWIA. 71964. Seven Die lWhen Jet WEA Cloudy with show noon; south winds 58. THER ers beginning about 15. Low-high 40 and ""fifigu SEVEN CENTS LAS VEGAS. Nev. tAPl—An‘ F-105 jet fighter plane faltered after takeoff from Nellis Air Force Base Wednesday and crashed into a north Las Vegas housing project. Explosion and: fire w r e c k e d and estimated , seven homes. l Police said seven persons. ln~ cluding the pilot were killed} The pilot was identified as 26-, year-old Raynor L. Hebert of. Company Limited Ottawa has Port Arthur" Tex‘ ‘been awarded the contract for The civilian dead were re- construction of the provincial ported to include three aduils'government's new multi-million and two children. A Romanidollar office building on the Catholic priest said he adminls-; West Kent School block site. ov'i Build tered the last rites to five per- . Public Works Minister Philip iMatheson announced last night An unidentified truck driver gamofirlsggflt‘fsggfl 1:133:32??? gave this account of the crash: 4 ‘tmotor "has asaurea the gover'm ing lob Thomas Fuller Construction. menl. that. as far as possible. * be local sub-contractors will used on the. ‘ . It is expected that the pro- ject will take about 18 months to complete. Two bids were received on the , was 1 .912. The other firm that , project. The Fuller bid $4.446 bid 'as MacNamara Construc- tion of Nova Scotia Limited. Their bid was $5,241,000. “I was rounding the corner. and could see the plane coming: in n so up and tail down. It struck the first house with the tail aflame and skidded across rooftops to other holnes." l t l .mi l l l SPEAKING CONTEST HELD ; said the. spelling contest was 1 in three member teams and the public speaking an indivi- dual effori. Pupils from Noire ; Dame Academy won both con- Icsts, lSec story on page 3.) ing contest and public speak- ing contest for city high schools which was held last. night at Prince Street SchooL Mr. Whiicside, “(to is a mem- ber of the city school board Results In Sask. i erais. 8 CCF and one Progrcs-ipectcd to continue two or three. sive Conservative. clays. ‘. Included was confirmation of1 Premier Lloyd, 50 - year - old the result in two constituencies: former school teacher, said in a ' ‘ post - election statement he arated the leaders April 22. Don .Vlaclennan. Liberal. wast vote counts were m winner ovcr Industries Ministerrw “ Russ Brown in Last Mountain, and Hans Broten. CCF. retained Bestows his scat in Walrous over Neil‘ Honorary Degrees McArthur. Liberal.\ Liberal Leader Ross Thalciier‘ ANTlGON'lSH. NS. (CPL- Ilalbor Minister Allan Mac- . , l was confirmed as winner Eachern and the president-elect Morse and Martin Peder- son Progressive Conservative of the Canadian International Law Association. Louis leader. in Arm River. Counting, which got under‘ . Bloomfield. received degrees at convocation exercises Wednes- way at different times in many" constituencies. continued into‘ day at St. Francis Xavier Uni- vcrsity. the night in some ridincs. Inl others. cspecially ridincs re-l . "“"“'l Dr . Somers. retiring kr' the lah‘flm'nns “"0 9". president. delivered his fiml re- turning more than one p t after l0 years in office. E. T k :Hc leaves this summer to be- lg S lcomc the. first executive direc- . . for o the Association 0 lantic. Universities. In torate of laws degrees. ‘ Mass for the graduates was NICOSIA (Ap._'phc prim“I celebrated by Bishop Power information office reporicd‘ all” “‘9 baccalaureate “'35 Wednesday night eight Tllrleh-‘ HIV“! by ,M‘Wl REV- "0"“ Cypriots—seven of them special; ONEIll. bl Shot) 0"] l’lal‘bm constables employed at the Brits. Gracc'firan‘l Falls. N d ish base st Dhekelia in south; C. - l 'c. l I waligselgheruglissf12ccordingdinl Embargo "I B It. 11 l. ls-l 9 r1 is announcemen to; Faces st. John’s appeared while travelling Larraca i to Dhekelia. After an extensivev ST. JOHN'S, N-fld_ (CPL—The search. in which United Na- seriousness of the longshore- lions troops and the Cypruslcl-imen's strike that m “ed up vii and British military polceithis pmt for 19 day. d“ joined. the bus was found ahan l pen“! doned outside the Greek village ,wedm’day ‘“ the ONE PM?“ of Trimllclini near Dhekelia. the 3“ embargo on all incoming statement added. 7 . freight. Eachen received honorary doc- DiplomasA’r Dal Diploma In Dental Hygiene. Joan Mary Batchilder. George- town; Lois Hughes, Montagui. Nursing Sewice Administra- lion (Diploma): Jennie Helen Dingweli. RN. Midgell; rm.- delta Emma Nomi-n. RN. Cm. BCom: David Gordon Forbes. Summerside. BEd: Ellen Margaret Mathe- son, Charlottetown; Csrl Ivan Millar. Snmmerside. Senior diploma in education: Wendall George Brown. Wood , ammunition. _ square<block area. ; wave- a Unchanged : in the $15,000 price range. ! would stay in office until final 0 ade. \l- ‘ . Mr. Bloomfield and Mr. Mac-‘ “I! O _ Islands. trsl Bedouin. m 12;) Bernard 5‘ '—————— Public Health Nursing (Dip : ' i: D J ~ Clair McCsbe. Kinkora. m” 0.12:3? - . l d. RN. I ; m... «..l. s. stunts... as Kenneth Ronny. 'c‘ re. Mon- mm“! ‘ - r a -- - " ’g h cite . Catherine Isaz “sue: Micheal Patrick Qulg- COMM ~ - ~ ~ - - - - ' - ‘ - ‘ - ' ~- 1 1 IN. 8t. Monitor‘s. let'. Charlottetown. . . . , . . . . . . . .. i Teachlgmtl sell'lods of N s , lance. llll e .... .. .1 .2 (Dip a): sunset Verna-Ml -'smm rhythm? 3M." ‘ - ' - -‘ [Home ; Kather- m . Klan. 00.39“. City : line lll‘elleln '. ‘ _ - r - - - ~ - ~ ‘ - - ' “ lter iver. arm on , nausea..." "cuff; Women“ -------------- -- 7 law. Alberton. Mary Eleanor out. anal-sum WMW- RN- '- o Authorities, i n f o r m e d the ; 1,400-«miles-an—hour aircraft was fully armed and loaded With. evacuated a 20- Vincent Rhode. WHO lives "1' Six actors and six actresses the area. told a reporter he was . {lying in Friday for ihe Dom. standing in his yard 8" 53‘” inion Drama Festival will al. the crash. lmosl immediately be handed “When the plane hit it wag. copies of a play and then will like a bubble filled with water. ‘ so into rehearsal for it. It was just a big splash. "A _‘ ..l heard a woman screramwl P.E.l. Remains There was a tremendous eat' I The scene is the Woodland North projecl of modest homes . In Papulaiion l CAPITAL suar u ‘ The plane hit homes in Glen— 'A a - . OF THE GUARDIAN ' l . $2103)! Street jus mmsmg d OTTAWA —— 'lhe population of . ' Prince Edward Island has risen A fire chief. George Rambo. : by an estimated two thousand. said the extent of the. damage PEPDle since the June 1961Dom- mnld not he immediately deter imon census. the Dominion . ‘ mined. Bureau of Statistics reported l _———-—-———-—-—— ---------- -~— here Wednesday. 1 a . the an. Two F| res Fla re i population was placed at 105,000. r lOl'l April 1. 1963 it was estima-l In N's. woods lied to be 107.000 and subsequent I lestimaies. including the latest HALIFAX ,CP, W. A forest 1 one made on April I. l'his year, in... near Kmnptvme in Yar. continues to place the Island‘s mouth County was the largest “3"”. at 10 , . f two reported Wednesday ini 155"“?3195 0f ,NOVa 500m” Nova Scotia as the fire index.l popma‘tw“ ondA'thlLl were 763" - - 1 compare w: a census, anger palm m 1 figure of 737,000 New Bruns-‘ ‘wick has risen to 616.000 com-l all I pared to 598.000 in 1961 and A forecast of rain for L areas today offered some relief. Newfoundland is at 488,000 com. ‘. The Yarmouth County blaze“pared ‘0 458'000' . . l was confined to 20 acres of The total Canadian population‘ hardwood, fallen leaves and un- { Kgfneitig‘igligagt Jz-ilncxogse ; dergrowth. It was reported . ' i out early Wednesday night. ixifgg Sm“ the """e 1961‘ The only other fire in the: PEI is the only one of the} province was in Halifax Coun- I prayinces to remain unchanged; Iv when, firemen put am a t in the past 12 months. Ontario; ‘ “ bl' . L _ ' 1ha the largest numerical in- Sma “9 "‘ 3““9 Parkricrease, amounting to two per" just outside nearby Bedford. remained at a most counties. hm Institutes annual Mc LCM. as. (not). our» "in"? Curdy Award for contrbutlon d H10 Canada! "Imul Country's mm in the field of aviation. Awar- fl‘ Droducts dlvislon. receives God for Mr. Cleans worn: in In Canadian Aeronautics and developing usvugation sys- AVN AWARD ed by president D.R. Taylor Drama Experiment ls Scheduled Here No, they have not forgotten lines. in fact. they have never . seen the play before. Montreal playwright Dan Da- niels wrote this original Can- adian play. "The Audition;" 'the twelve actors and actress- es are the winners of regional best actor and actress awarus from those areas which w. not invited to attend the Fes- tival. GUINEA PIGS heir presence at the Thea- tre Conference, being held here ’n anticipation of the DDF it- self this weekend. constitutes something of an experiment. They will act as guinea pigs in a theatre demonstration con- ducted by Leon Major. descri- bed often as Canada's best director. which will take place 1 (V out is artiStic director of the Neptune Theatre, Halifax. Preparing the _ for a reading is their major role in the conference. It is the first time that such a thing has been done in all DDF history. Friday. which is the begin- ning day of the conference, will be an informal affair. The only official gathering will be for an address by well-known Canadian actor Ted Follows, w o is now with the Neptune Theatre. Special guests at the confer- ence. besides Mr. Major. will include several outstanding Can- adian theatre personalities. each one of whom will he conducing different sessions. WORKSHOP PLANNED Mrs. Norma Springford. .pr0~ ducer of the Mountain Play- lContinued on Pafe 3 Col. 3) l l toms. the trophy was present- st the Institute‘s annus. din- ner in Toronto. ((2 Winnin- to) J, judge to the Exchequer Court ITALIAN DIPLOMAT Man- ' lio Brosio poses at. his desk 1 in the Italian embassy in Paris Wednesday after the announcement at The Hague in The Netherlands that no was named secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization tNATOi. He succeeds Dirk U. Stikker. a ‘ Dutchman. (AP Wirepholo via cable from Paris) l Cuban Exiles launch , i‘War' Agai i MlAle, Fla. (APl—A Gubanffle blamed the attack on the 15 members ‘ exile organization said Wednes-. U.S. Central In t el l i g e n c e‘; must ,day night it. began a war on r Fidel icomma-ndo ‘tacks on a sugar and guerrilla st- mill and a Y. x . t In Havana. Flue! Mm m firmed the attack on the port of Pilon in an angry state- ment. saying it was not ground attack but a shelling ;fi~om a ship standing off shm'e. i Parliament At A Glance l By THE CANADIAN PRESS ‘ WEDNESDAY. May 13, 1964 A conservative proposal for an emergency debate on the A lack of French-language re- I porters in commons commit- tee was ruled out of order. l Trade Minister Sharp said i, Communist China has agreed ' to limit exports of "sensitive ' ms" to Canada. He said he hopes the Rus- sians will buy more flour. The C o m m o n s approved measures a d d i n it another and requiring crown cor-pot ations to pay certain taxes. THURSDAY. May 14 The Commons meets at 2:30 pm. EDT to study income : tax amendments. The Senate sits at 3 pm. OTTAWA lCPI — Canadian! unemployment in mid-April was at its lowest April level since m7 with an estimated 403.0001 persons out o work—six per cent of the labor force. ‘ This was a decline of from April last year when the jobless rate was seven per cent. It also was I drop of 53.000 from March when 6.0 per cent of the labor force was unem- ployed. The seasonally-adjusted un-. employment rate for April was 47 per cent. up slightly from.yesr 4.6 per cent in March but still well below the 5.5 per cent of April. 1963. Between Aprils, the labor force expanded by 204.000 and‘ employment increased by 25.1.. These figures are estimates only. based on a survey of .15.- 000 households in the week ended April 18. The report. is- sued Wednesday, wss prepared jointly by the labor department and the bureauu of statistics. moans: UNUSUAL Employment “guru for April showed one unusual lootin- the increase of 07,000 in employ- ment between March and April was below smug. for the time of yer. i l . iSaturdayJ“Mr. Major‘st' pols-‘32"t in “mm?” 3 ‘ arm ‘- Brazil nsi Castro lAgency, and said it was a new Castro‘s regime with not of vandalism of the Wash-z .ington government. 3 The Revolutionary Recovery MRR, issued its “first war "unique" in Midnni, saying its forces hold the port of Pilon for tin-cc hours against “tena- cious fl g h tin g" by Castro’s ; forces while engineers ; blew up a sugar mill. j Afterward. comm-unique ‘said, the commando raiders left Cuban soil while guerrilla units, previously a t a t i o n e d in the n arby Sienra Maestra. re- turned to the hills. ' The exiles said they suffered no losses 1: many Castro militia wounded. 'l l -0Hl;LD WAS WOUNDED : ‘ Castro said houses were (19-, ‘st/royed and a woman and an eight - year - old girl were“ wounded, Havana radio said “as a re-j lsult of the firing. the sugar warehouses were set on firel and 70.000 sacks of sugar which had been produced by that mill in the present harvest were‘ lost." r Brazil Breaks 9 With Cuba RIO DE JANEIRO lAT‘l « broke diplomatic rela- tions with Cuba Wednesday. ‘ that April Unemployment : is lowest Since 1957 However. the report noted this followed an unusually large employment increase between February and March. Another factor was employment in con- struction already was higher than normal due to increased house-building activity. Over the year. from April to April. non - farm employment rose by 277.000 or rout:th five per cent. Biflgcst gains were in manufacturing service indus- tries and trade. The over-all April picture this masked sharp regional differences. For example. although there was a year-to-ycar gain of 23.- 000 in employment in the Al- lantic provinces. uncmployment —while down “1000 from a year earlier - still was rela- tively high at 72.000 in mid— April. or 12.l per cent of tho region's labor force. lUNEMPI.0YMENT U? ? Quebec's position was similar. alts employment rose by 93.000 iand unemployment fell by al.- 5(I!) to 156000. or 82 'of the labor force. 3 Ontario had 89.000 unem- ployed or 3.6 per cent of its ls-' bor force. the Prairies $1.000 or 40 per cent. and British Colum- l bis 33.01!) or 5.2 per cent. l V conccp . 22 PAGES France's Lone Wolf Stand 5 Under Fire Ai ATTalks Ottawa Firm Awarded l ' Rusk Appeals For Unity ‘ l I THE HAGUE (CPI U.S. ! State Secretary D e a n Rusk i asked France Wednesd I 1come forward with any changes PreSIdenl de Gaulle wants m l the structure of the Atlantic al- hance In a secret meeting of alli‘ lance foreign ministers. ls strained by Greek-Turkish dispute over Cy- prus and de Gaulle's lone wolf policies. Conference sources said Rusk in a carefully worded speech in. sisted that the 15-year-old North Atlantic Tre a iy Organization must not he allowed to come ' unravelled. He declared the U.S. govern- ment is determined to maintain its commitments to defen Western Europe from possible C o m mu ni st aggression. De Gaulle has said States won it risk nuclear destruction to defend Western Europe. Rusk voiced support for a warning given earlier in the day by Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak of Belgium who said the of the alliance overcome their differ- ; ences now. iINVlTA'l'ION GIVEN i Spaak called on de Gaulle to ispeak up about changes France lwants in NATO—an mutation which Rusk under-wrote. , Spaak, a former NATO secre- :lary - general, was quoted as {saying a report from outgoing fSecretary - General Dirk U. lStikker on the state of the al- iliance sounded more like a fire ialarm than a trumpet of vic- "tor_v. In his report Stikker sug- gested several changes in the NATO structure but Spank dis- agreed. 9 said the apparatflj should be left as it. is. 3 But Spaak agreed NATO must look ahead to its future de« velopment. Here he turned his attention to France and do Gaulle. He condemned what hr called outdated methods and stres the need for close links between the United States and Europe as the foundation for Atlantic partnership. France has thus far been extremely COOl to this . played attempts to neutralin Southeast. Asia in a direct reference to de Gaulle' stated policy. danger to allied cohesion. ENDORSED BY MARTIN External A f f a i r s Minister Paul Martin of Canada in ef- fect endorsed Spaak's criticism of rance when he said members which desired changes should say cl arly what they wanted. Marlin also stressed the need for a strong tie between both shores of the Atlantic. Foreign Minister Maurie. (‘ouve de Murville of France said the French viewed allied solidarity this way: The impor- lant thing is for the member. of NATO to stand together in moments of great international stress the way de Gaulle sup- ported Prcsidcnt John F. Ken. nedy In the crisis over Soviet missiles in Cuba in October of 062 But there was no he said. for a complete identity of views on all points by the 15 member governments. Confcreoce Couve de Murville pleaded for “tolerance and n sense of real- llv Replying to Spaak. "I. French foreign minister said France differs from the other members of the alliance on H’ military structure of NATO M not on political matters such as the general aims of the allisno. and the need for consultation. British Actress Dies In London LONDON IAPl~Diana Wyn. yard, one of Britain's mated day of a kidney ailment. ~ was 50. Miss Wyn“ Ind ‘ married to film dis-ecu: Reed and to “fiber Costco. marriages ended la a!“ l