‘lt t's Good For. The Island The Guardian Is For " GRAND TRACADIE fisher- wind and ice yesterday. Some man Gorden Watts works at as 4 traps amd some rope was ef a wharf was damaged by seep inte the sea but most u Che Guar “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Fishermen are recovered. scheduled te set lobster gear today if ice and weather con- ditions permit. Loss Of Traps Said Only Slight ‘As Section Of Wharf Destroyed Fishermen reported 2: shgm ! broke 2 4 to Sfoot part off the less im lobster traps «when a Grand Tracadie Harbor Wharf combination of moving ice. tides The wharf! was piled with lob- aed wind yesterday morning. ster traps, ready for the open- Skirmish Fought a, InSanto Domingo te the imternational zone for refugees. He said unfamiliarity with the Dominican capital caused the marines to go into rebel territory imstead of re- turming to their own lines. Washingion announced the US toll im the I3day-old Do- mimican strile at 1@ dead, one missing and 38 wounded The captured marines were shoan te reporters as rebels SANTO DOMINGO ‘AP'— lieved killed Tuo of the miss- tock a television film of them. fag “ere captured The rébel spokesman said the The rebel command am- two will be turned over to the OAS. The spokesman, Hector Aristy. secretary to Col. Fran- ie Yesterday afternoon, a north wind was blowing large chunks of ice were moving with the tide over smashed section. N.S. Mission To Tour Japan 4. rebel spokesman arcesed cisco Caamapo Deno, the rebel may the US. of vielating the cease- chief. said: ent kee auaaie dee fite arranzed between the reb- <We wami to demonstrate to ~....\scotia will arrive here te- ejs and the rival military junta the people of the «orld that we Go. for a two-week tour of Ja. Wedaesdas by 2 peace com- have respect for the rights of .1o.. major inductrion tho mussioe of the Organization of prisomers. We dom't want to se€ Canadian Embassy here on American States lives: lost im this fightinc, nounced Thursday. A US. military spokesman Btither Americans nor Domini- The visit is designed te ac- said. beuever. the marize pa- ©25* quaint business interests with trel tock = «reng ture while He added Nova Scotia's expanding indus- eperating orar the east-aest “We wil! continve to respect trial development, the Embassy coerrer set up te ferry supplies the ceasefire” said. Martin's Paris Reception Sparks Anger Of Officials _ Br DAVE McINTOSH * te read anything inte it. PARIS CP —Camadian Ex- Prtvately however, Officials on the minister's staff and at the Canadien embassy bere were seethmg «ith indignation Officially. however. they de- that ther could pot recall similar eccutreace— Freech officials sani there are new regdlatiens at Orly which prevent military aircraft frem parkinz ip front of the ter- mina! Bot the captain of the airerah. «hich brought Martin from Ottawa ‘on his tour. said he hade’t beard of soch recula- thems and the French officials declined comment «hen asked whether they had informed the RCAF oc Ottaea Que official said Martin's visit i mot am official one bot 2 mio ment ‘ater be adenitted t ! i L fl 1p iy fi i : E ijk that LF i o | i autar wi ! j f INSIDE TODAY : ij ii shi oY Ape i! ! | ? f i 1 A ; af ? i nf iT a j F i ; . 7 t : is i At--i Couve de Murville is officially receiving Martin Friday in the building reserved for such offi- cial functions. OFFICIALS BLOCKED Officials said they were allowed to drive a car out to where the RCAF plane was parked to greet Martin. Conse- quently the French and Cana- dian diplomats had been forced to wait at the. terminal until Martin arrived from the plane by bus When Couve de Murville was in Ottawa two years ago, Mar- tin went to the airport te meet him and was at the bottom of the ramp when the French for- eign minister — from his plane Martin's first tficial function here was to visit the Maison Canadienne established here in 1924 for Canadian students in Paris. Martin himself stayed there in 1978 Martin announced” a gift by the (Canadian federal govern- ment of $45.000 to make needed. repairs to the residence. The. Quebec goverment donates $25.000 a -year-to the upkeep of the house Martin said in a brief speech that relations between Canada and France are ‘improving every day. Quebec and ta “In Paris ‘Ottavarwe afte all working te .wards the same goal,” be said: ne rfe As ¥ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1965. ouy Further Delay Is Refused InLobsterSeasonOpening CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — There will be no further delay in the opening of the lobster fishing season in dis- trict 7B. Fisheries Minister H_J. Robichaud -said in the Com- mons Thursday. He was replying to a question from John Mullally. MP. .for Kings, who asked if the minister had received any representa- tions asking that the opening be delayed further than the an- nounced date of some two weeks ago. or Robichaud said he had received from Mr. Mullally and also a tele gram from the president of the Prince Edward Island Fishenes Federation requesting a oe delay. ; ‘In my reply I stated that, as Robichcud Questioned _ “OTTAWA ‘CP —An_--investi- gation has shown that some for- eign fishing boats damaged the gear of Canadian trawlers eff the Newfoundland coast but mot within the three-mile terri- torial limit, Fisheries Minister pg oer said Thursday. Replying to a qa by oan a uarrie a haud = said as cceiaanael had received jeomplaints fram Newfoundiand | fishermen and investigated. | It was found that some dam- ‘age had been caused but this | happened outside the territorial | limit. He ‘did not give the num- ‘ber of incidents or the amount ‘of damage involved. 3. Angus MacLean Pc— Queéns) asked about progress en establishing the 12 - mile limit approved by Parliament last year. The limit would use On Damage By Trawlers a base-line system that would bring bays and inlets within the linits. Mr. Robichaud said negotia~ tions are’ going on with some countries establishment of the base-li methods. Tom Barnett ‘NDP—Comox- Alberni) asked whether Mr. Ro ina recent-—-meeting with United States officials had asked them to have American fishermen withdraw from Ca- nadian waters. Mr. Robichaud said he had not but he had use- ful conversations with US. of- ficials while in Washington. Mr. Robichaud gave no de- tails of the damage to New- foundiand trawlers. But there have been reports that foreign fishing boats in waters near Newfoundland have destroyed trawling gear towed by Cana- dian boats by running over it. part of the area designated as district 7B was now clear of ice and fishing was possible as from tomorrow morning. it was too late to consider such a request,” Mr. Robichaud said. “Further- more. the latest ice reports which I received a few minutes age suggested the possibility of the ice moving out very quickly providing the wind is favorable. Therefore. I had to turn down this request for a further post- Pponement Late im April the minister an- nounced that because of ice con- ditions. the opening would be postponed from the normal May 1 date to May 8 and traps can be set on May 7. Air Facilities : To Be Updated BRAMPTON Ont.. (‘CP'—The ieaartotans of Transport will “undertake a three - year pro- gram to expand Canada’s air traffic control facilities, R. W. Dodd. air traffic control chief _ for the department, said Thurs- day Mr Dodd, jtold the Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Associa- tion the program will include an automated of broad- casting reperis an westher and runway conditions at all major airports and establishment of precision approach radar sys- tems—used to talk a pilot down during poor weather—at Hali- fax and Calgary. Move Made To Free Banks = By JAMES NELSON ? OTTAWA (CP) Finance | Minister Gordon moved towards He announced. contrary to commission's recommenda- on interest go -gradually into the field of, mortgage lending. and in that field charge the going commer- cial rate. Mr. Gerdon spoke on a reso- lution leading to revision of the Bank Act. The terms of the new Bank Act were to he made pub- lic at the end of the day's de bate. Mr. Gordon's outline won general support of opposition patties. | The resolution was approved shortly before the Commons given first reading but aaa no indication when the gov- would seek second aden—anreel im principle At the outset of the sittinc. Mr. Gerdon also introduced amendments to the Bank of Canada Act, under which the resigned. Of prime interest in the inter- mal workings of the banking system was a change in the re- that the privately- owned chartered banks main- tain monthly cash -reserves in Canadian dollars and in Bank ef Canada deposits amounting te eight per cent of their Cana- Gan dollar deposit liabilities. — ii British Tories Win Byelection LONDON ‘Reuters’ The op- position Conservative party won a by-election in Birmingham Thursday nicht with an 8,150- vote margin over the Labor candidate — only slightly less than in last October's general election. The victory cut the governments over-all majority to three in the 630-séat House @ Commons and brings the lower chamber ap te is full strength Labor .- treasury bills - planes used by Under the new plan this eight- per-cent ratio—in effect since 1954—will be cut to seven per cent. The Bank of Canada has had power, which it has not used, to raise the eight-per-cent ratio, one percentage point at 2 time, to as high as 12 per cent. This power is being discoatia- ued. But under the new Bank of Canada Act, the centra} bank will have power to require the chartered banks to keep a sec- ondary “liquid asset” ratio of six per cent of deposit liabili- ties, and to raise the figure as hich as 12 per cent. Hitherto the chartered banks have had a gentlemen's agree- ment among themselves and with the “Bank -of Canada to maintain a liquid asset ratio of 15 per cent. The liquid assets are in the form of further cash, and day-to-day loans. As previously announced. the new _ bank legislation will pro- hibit ownership of chartered bank stock by provincial gov- ernments. Opposition on this point was expressed by New Democratic. Social Credit and Creditiste spokesmen. Mr. Gordon said a broader and more competitive banking system embracing . both the eight privately-owned chartered banks and the trust and mort- gage Ioan companies is 2 lonz- term objective. This was the main recommendation of the royal commission on banking Argus Aircraft || Will Be Given New Sections OTTAWA ‘CP: New we- tions are to be manufactured for RCAF Argus aircraft found to have a structural defect. De- fence Minister Hellyer told the Commons Thursday The structural defect was nat found ‘in all the four - encired the RCAF for anti submerine patrols. the minister said in reply to ques tions by Douglas Harkness ‘PC —Calgary North). Those planes in which Voe de fect showed up will get the re- Placement sections first bet eventually the section in which the defect occurred would be | replaced in all the planes Patrols would be carried out by Neptune aircraft and those Argus planes found to be serr- iceable. Checks of the Argus were Started after one of the planes. 7%. crashed in the Caribbean dur- img an exercise earlier this yet jkilling the eptire crew. o From Tight Restrictions and finance by Dana Porter, chief coe of Ontario. SOME LEGAL POINTS But there are some legal doubts about how-the trust and lean companies—some of them @perating under provincial gov- ernment charters could be ly under the Bank Act, The federal government has paramount jurisdiction in banking legislation and doesn’t want to water it. By letting the chartered banks go into the mortgage lending field—which the so called “‘near. banks” have found lucrative fo reassure borrowers that lifting the ceil- (Continued on page 3, col. 3) Wanted Man Is Arrested ‘ In Florida FORT LAUDERDALE. Fia. ‘AP) — Georges Lemay. 39, wanted in. connection with a Montreal bank robbery four years ago, was arrested Thurs-- -day-—aboard—his— yacht and -* charged with illegal entry into the United States. Lemay had been sought since shortly after the 1961 robbery of branch in Montreal. Estimates of the money in the robbery have ranged between $300,000 and $4,000,000. Some 377_~=«safety-deposit boxes were @pened by robbers who entered the bank on St. Catherine Street in the heart of Montreal's main shopping afea, by smashing ae “ vault’s reinforced competion service of- ion FBI agents and Fort peamterdete police co - operated WEATHER Cloudy, clearing in winds 15. Low-high sunny and a little w a) See Cree afternoon: northerly 32 and 48. Saturday: armer, -14 PAGES » British Steel Takeover Approved By 4 Votes Controversial Plan ~ Seen Crucial Issue LONDON (Reuters) dustry w. approved by the | House of mons Thursday Bight by votes. . The plan was approved by a pposition Conservative and Libera! parties voted against the plan put forward by Prime Minister Wilson's gov- ernment—which has a four-seat margin in the House. The controversial pian to re- Rationalize steel was a crucial issue for Wilson's seven-month- old Labor government. A defeat could have paved the way for another general election. Before the Commons was a plan—not -a— bill—and ~— Wilson has said he would not resign with his government over a slim defeat. If he lost, however, he has said he would ask the House a vote of confidence in his /party’s general program He would be likely to_win_ such. a vote HAS SLIM MARGIN Labor's present margin is four in the 630-seat House. Whips of both major parties sure_a full turnout. Legislators hg practi op the Houses of Parliament in ambulances and on crutches. Before the House was an of- ficia! document—«hite paper-— eutlining the. zovernment's plans and not the bill itself, which has vet tobe published. The government wants to na- tionalize 90 per cent of the steel industry. Former prane Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home’s opposition Conservative party and the tiny * Liberal party, which has 10 “seats in the House. both served Rotice they would ficht the bill at every turn. Wilson apparently cut short a handful! of “‘stee! rebels” in his own - party -Wednesday~ by say- ing any dissidents could © ‘go te blazes.” Many ‘Labor lecislators see protested strongly in private against the £550.000.000 ($1.650,- 000.000" compensation “the” gav- ernment planned to pav the ma-_ “Jor steel producers_who—weuld be brought under state control. Before the vote. Opposition Leader Douclas-Home ‘said if the steel was_nationalized his party would de-nationalize when a bank of Nova Scotia worked to the last minute to as- it came back to power. De Gaulle Hits - aU. S. Policies PARIS (AP) — President de Gaulle moved his vaunted “in- dependent diplomacy” to a new im arresting Lemay aboard the front Thursday by condemning heat. j they went aboard. Officers said Lemay was be- lieved to have been in the Fort Lauderdale area for the last six months. living under the - game of Rene Roy. Lemay's wife, the former Hu- gette Daoust of Montreal. dis- appeared while on a trip through the Florida Keys about 14 years ago. No trace of, her was found. Immigration officers said they plan to hold Lemay here pending conversations “with Ca- madian authorities. They said he could be sent to the Cana- dian border immediately and turned over to police there. Mill Foreman ls Wounded GRAND FALLS, Nfld ‘CP)-— | Gerald Byrne, 58. steam plant foreman at the Price Brothers (Nfld.). Ltd., pulp mil! here, is in critical condition in hospital foliowing a shooting incident at the mill shortly after noon Thursday. RCMP arrested one man, but mo charges Were laid immedi- ately He was sleeping wen U.S. intervention in the Domini- m Republic and calling for withdrawal of US. troops from the Caribbean_ island. De Gaulle spoke in a meet- ing of the French cabinet and the tenor of his remarks was relayed later to seporters by cabinet spokesman Pierre Du- mas. “France disapproves the American intervention and wants the withdrawal of troops who have landed in Santo Do- mingo.”” t cabinet spokesman said in recounting de Gaulle’s attitude. At the same time, he assured France none of the 20 or so Frenchmen living in Santo Do- mingo were killed or injured. About a fourth of these French mationals chose to take advan- tage of the evacuation organ- ized by the U.S.. he said. In condemning American ac- tion in Santo Domingo. de Gaulle evidently is trying to emphasize his independent role in world affairs Only | Wednesday. in an ex- change of forma! toasts with visiting President Charlies He- lou of Lebanon, de Gaulle ap- parentivy bracketed the . U.S. with the Soviet Union in con- demning “modern imperialisms which, invoking as always con- trary ideologies, menace our universe.” In the case of Santo Domingo, de Gaulle alse apparent tg seeking to build and extend France's influence in Latin America as a ‘sister latin’ power that {fs unafraid to talk back to the U.S. And which can be counted on to protect the in- terests of Latin nations. Dp Gaulle made an official visit te Mexico and toured South Amer- ica last year in. af effort to re- vine or implant French influ- ence there. Thursday's action by de Gaulle is the latest in a string of statements or actions con- trary to American policy fol- lowing the Cuban missile crisis and the British Americas agreement a: Nassau for joint control of Britain's nuclear sub- marines. —- A UC Announces Personnel Move TORONTO (CP:-The United Church. of Canada Werinesday annou two personne! chan- ges at a meeting of its general council executive. Jf Rev. Roy E. Webster, atsnct- ate. secretary of the Board of World Mission. has been ap- pointed senior secretary of that board. He will assume his dut- jes July 1. Mrs. Jean Swan Parker has been appointed the church's as- sociate secretary the Roard of Colleges and Secondary Schools, effective Auz. 1 at Nickname Seen Joke By Belle Of Da Nang DA NANG, South Viet Nam AP —To airmen and marines she’s “the belle of Da Nang.” Miss Betty Olsen. year-old medical missionary, takes the nickname as a pleasant joke “! think I'm the only single girl here. she said, ‘but there are a number of married «0 men in our mission ~ Many an American zirl would think it a dream situation to be the only girl amid 10.090 men. But Betty. who is tal! and slen- der and has auburn-hair ard green eves, is more amused than thrilled Every Saturday morning she | serves as a volunteer worker at the USO building in the heart.of the city, Many of the men have asked for a date, but each has met witht a refusal. “They are all nice and po lite.” said Miss Olsen “If they wam to be friends, that's fine “| aeBut a don't date them I am not intetested in) romance. and I have no idea of getting mar- ,” s a deeply relizion since chi idhood te do medical mission- She was bora She man whose goal has been afy work abroad in Africa and beth her parents ate missionares “‘ationed there on the Ivers Coast Betty was educated at the New York missionafy College and studied nursing at the Me. thedist) hospita’ °c Brooklya. She was sent last Dererm- ber bv the Christian and Miss- ionary Avance which has @ missionaries in 24 foreign coun- tries I spend learning the missionary the first year.” she attends meetings «weekly and spends tuo mghts 2 “week teaching Enzlish to a group of © Vietna- mee a: Mast of thet zers but a few are : said. They are very wterested and jeager t learn. oS here most of my time langquace.a new always does that Retty said. But six religious alse are teen. older.