e __the scene Said,’ If It’s Good For The Island. = » The Guardian Is For It a VOL. XXVIII. No. 94 ps Authorised Department Otaws. am -EightDeathsInVa_.. -ouver Believed Murder, Suicide VANCOUVER ‘CP; = Eight persons were found shot to death Wednesday in a comfortable home in subarban Coquitlam. Police said a Vancouver po-| Hceman—under investigation in’ connection with the robbery of $1,250,000 .in ,mutilated money— apparently “Shot his wife and ‘six! children before turning the gun on himself. = —Dead are Constable Leonard Hogue, his wife Vera, and their children—Larry, 13: Noreen. 12; Raymond, 8; Clifford, 6; Dar- lene, 5. and Richard, 3. In a statement shortly after the bedies were found scattered through the house, Deputy Chief John Fisk said the dead officer was being investigated in. con- nection with the recent robery_ of the Vancouver warehouse of Canadian Pacific Merchandise Service_Ltd., in de'aced money—destined for destruction—was stolen. Police said nine shots had beer fired. indicating that the six-shot murder weapon had to 5 reloaded. during the ramp- 4 be age All the victims had been shot through the-head. All, except Hogue, were clad in night attire -—the policeman was partly, Polite’'said the position of the children through the house showed they had been trying. ‘to hide’ Mrs. Hogue was found dead in bed. The deputy chief said the in- vestigation of Constable Hogue came about “in the light of the recent arrest of former Van- couver police constable Joseph Percival in Edmonton.” One of the first policemen at “it_was_ a horri- mess.” —__—The—sheoting —is—beheved— ’ have occurred late Monday a Tuesday. REVOLVER USED RCMP said ali the victens were shot with a powerful mag. gum .357-calibre revolver oa beside Hogue's body. “We are assuming for the present that the man shot the other members of the family and. then committed suicide,” said’ an RCMP spokesman. Hogue and the members of his | in which $1,250,000 | family were last seen by neigh- | sa well-co-ordinated robbery could bors on Monday. Hogue failed to show up for duty Tuesday and Wednesday, and a member of the Vancouver force was sent to the Hogue home Wednesday afternoon to find out what was wrong with the officer. The policeman looked through a window and spotted some of, the. bodies: RCMP were searching the house for a suicide note or some. “other hint as to “cause ‘ot the te Shooting ____ Hogue joined the ° "Vancouver _ police force in 1956. Deputy Chief Fisk said police ‘had been investigating Constable ‘Hogue ‘‘for some time” in con-| - nection with the Feb. 11 robbery. | At that time, three men, two of them armed, entered the Van- couver warehouse and made off with three boxes — = faced intended for mint th Ottawa. | Each bill had three holes) punched through it, but police , 50TH [ANNIVERSARY : Gas Attack At Ypres. ls Commemorated By JOSEPH MacSWEEN . YPRES, Belgium ada and Belgium today com- memorate the 50th anniversary of a heroic stand by Canadian troops against the first major poison-gas attack in history. Villagers in this Flanders petictier area, devastated in the First World War, still designate cer-' tain fields by such names as) “Mousetrap Farm” and “Can- ada Farm™ in memory of Canadian action against Germans when the latter at- tacked with chlorine gas. The villagers used those old. terms when pointing out signl-| ficant aspects of the battlefield to visitors in a bitterly-cold rain on anniversary eve. Leo Cadieux, associate de- fence minister, flew from Can- ada to represent the govern- ment at today’s ceremonies in- this ancient city and at the im- pressive Canadian memorial at nearby St. Julien, scene of the gas attack DROP 20,600 POPPIES ; ‘ Two RCAF transport planes were scheduled—weather | per- mitting—to drop 20,000 pobpies over wreath-laying ceremonies at St. Julien. where in a few days 2,000 °Canadians died aut of a force of 18.000 in April, 1915 Gen Von Cools, representing the Belgian defence minister, headed the 100-man_ Belgian’ (CP)—Can- | the | probably paich up the bills. four years ago when he arrested | a murder suspect on a bus. Une of a team of police who investi- gated the slaying of housekeepr Laura Mundich, 35, Constable’ Hogue arrested. Guglielmo Paul- uzzi, 44, who was later sentenced to life imprisonment. ' evenihg; southerly NARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1965. oa. «SEVEN CENTS : = 4 ¢ a WEATHER - Rain, clearing by x winds 20. becoming northwest 20. Low- a me high 28 and 43. Friday: sunny- we rs Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 2 20 PAGES . |: = aia PLANNED FOR HERE | ae Wi Projects For Centennial - Indude Poetry And Clean-Up By BRENDA LARGE lof crafts im every province. ' Aimed at tying im with the OTTAWA (CP) — Centennial Mrs. John A McLean of centennial celebrations. the | projects approved Wednesday by Eureka. N.S.. chairman of the short story project is for 4 work | FWIC centenary committee, of not longer than 2.500 words said provincial ‘contributions for written by a member of a wom- the book are nearing completions en's institute. Clesing date for by groups in Saskatchewan, On- the story contest is April 15 = oe ae New. Bruns- 1967. > British Columbia and Prince cmaeee 100 veda siace Cae Edward Island institutes have federation will be the subject of | pe cad sayy Sig seage airplanes part of the 1967 Lady piers Tweedsmuir competition -spon- The federation has asked for a grant: from the centennial competition commission to pay for the pav- by the widow of the former gov- TO SPEAK William Ladyman, ional vice president for dis- trict I ‘Camada) of the Inter- paigns, donations of scholarships Jishing cests of the book but the ernot-general. ee eee commission has not yet af- ‘The other two parts of the ee ae ar en ” oo : competition are for the best vil-' 1-31 Union 1432’ when they Eleven ornate chairs will be presented to the Fathers of Con- federation Memorial Centre at Chariottetown. The chairs, one from each A competition for-as original lage history and for the best short story based on a Canadian sample of drawn thread work, historical fact will be the feder- one of the oldest forms of em ations citizenship project. . breidery. ~ commemorate the 29th anni- versary of their charter on May 6th. The celebration will be held .:t the Royal Canadian Queen Observes ‘39th Birthday — LONDON (CP) «= The celebrated her 39th birthday | | Wednesday, free of .official en- | | gagements and with her family gathered around her at Windsor Castle, some 25 miles west of London on the banks of the Thames. Prince Philip. 44, was +i to share the birthday tions after a ieee tte series tte abroad. Also present for a lunch party were a four royal children—Prince Charles. cess Anne, Prince Andrew "a Mother and the Queen's sister, Princess Margaret, with her! husband Lord Snowdon. province..and one from the na- tional federation, will carry the~ provincial and national coats of arms. They-are-to-be-piaced-in— |the centre's library. BOOK ON CRAFTS The federation’s main national | grelaat 36 The Conaitinn ewer, | a book tracing the development and will feature presentation of service pins to some 27 Doctors Discuss _ = TB Clinic Value for the event are being made \ by a committee with Henry | Harfinger as Chairman. Jack ‘tBrown is local Union Presi- dent. internat- | Legion Home, Charlottetown ‘CP:—The effec- mass surveys still exists. tideeane Da. mass X-ray ening ae hal ae cdi macs iand tuberculin tests for the de- where the risk of tuberculosis tection of tuberculosis was ques- is hig). He cited as examples. tioned. Wednesday by a United areas of poor durin casa small States health authority. substandard factories and Dr. L J. Brightman, assistant ons. =a To Play Down Heemmiicter at Cran Gefen trv. De B. Hint Croalty \state. said the findings of recent dent of the assoriation, eae be- with Dr. Brightman. oa Begins Bribe Offered LA’ ‘CROSSE, Wis. ‘AP)—The community surveys . have “FREDERICTON | La Crosse with an all-time ree- as the number of cases of tuber- incidence of tuberculésis would<the New Brunswick Society for ‘ord flood-stage Wednesday and caieais has decreased im most decrease but. would never be the Prevention of Cruelty to sent a mighty torrent southward areas. stamped ou. Animals, said he was offered a- Floods Creepin Close To Emerson EMERSON. Man ' Floodwaters crept slowly into military eontingent, which linked up with a similar-sized contingent from Canada’s NATO brigade in West Germany for today’s commemoration. Besides Cadieux. Canadian representatives included Paul Pelletier, deputy minister of |veterans affairs, and Georges | Blouin, councillor _ minister at the Canadian embassy in Brus- sels. Canadian and Belgian army officers worked together Wed- nesday night {o perfect the somewhat intricate arrange- jments in which Canada is rep- lresented by the Princess Patri- cia’s Light Infantry. They visited St. Julien, .sev- eral miles away, in a drizzling rain that caused grim com- comments about the ordeal un- dergone by the men who suf- fered and dier in these fields a half-century ago. Some 300,000 Allied soldiers died in the Ypres area during the First World War. Cadieux, whose trans - Atlantic plane touched down. at Marville France, was to present to Ypres this morning. Canada’s new flag | to replace the old design pré- sented to the 1,000-year-old town in 1961. Ypres Burgomaster (Mayor) Albert de Hem was to present Cadieux with an engraved medal struck hy the city to commemorate the anniversary. | U.S. Rports Simple Test To Reveal German Measles WASHINGTON (AP) The US. public health service re-| ‘ednesday iW ported development of a simple and rapid blood test | fants to be born with defects. The test could help in coping | with future outbreaks of the dis- | pee gh gs ham Sli a opment of practical protective vaccines, the service said. in describ- If a pregnant woman acquires the ee pe three months of pregnancy, there’s a chance—estimated at 50-50 by some authorities—that ee. infected ‘with rubella | The new test provides evi- dence of any virus present | |within about 24 hours. as com- pared with about two weeks for tional Institute of Health related. ‘The potential value of the test would lie in quickly identifying infected women for whom a therapeutic abortion—that is, a medically legal one—might be ru These. if mixed with a pa- | |tient's blood in a test apparatus, enable identification of antibod- |ies to rubella infection, provided the patient has recently been | this southern Manitoba commt- . nity Wednesday as volunteers and soldiers worked to protect the town against the threaten. ing Red: River. ‘ Volunteers,, including young children were building protec- | tive barriers around homes and” buildings. Forty - nine soldiers from Winnipeg were construct- | completely down the 400-mile chute leading Speaking to the Canadian Tu- “A controlled program will bribe Wednesday to play down from its upper valley to a ren- berculosis Association here, Dr. have to be carried on for many. cruelty by hunters in this year's dezvous with the Ohio River. Brightman said a place for decades to come,” he said. seal hunt in the Gulf of St. Law- While the soggy city of La |Tence. Crosse braced itself for a three-| © | Mr. Davies.. observ of day~ crisis TB Germ Resistance {the hunt for the SPCA. said he ‘ . | received a telephone call from Builds To Wonder Drugs 3 ithere was — involved in the hunt. “I told him I was far from Satisfied but I could not say any- thing further until my report’ is ‘made public,” Mr. Davies said The man then said it would be “‘worth quite a bit to us if your report played down this cruelty angle.” crested | at 17.7 feet instead of 18 feet. | Borthern Illinois and lowa strug- | | gled to build up to the chal- heey Qui a wena wom! (CP)—A build-up found that he has inherited a ae of resistance to wonder drugs Strong resistance to the drugs. ‘began cracking Tuesday with Dr. Found, himself a former the river still more than a foot as become a major problem in below flood stage. officials re- the treatment of , tuberculosis, i, the necessity of sending many “ported that wrecked cars, junk Dr. E. M. Found of Charlalie- |= tious beans tor part of thelr and sand dumped frantically town. President of the Canadian latter treatment. At home, many [ ate he: Reneiae ae-eetuine, Tuberculosis Association, said — Genera By NEIL. MATHESON and Farm Editer Voting was generally light in the Potato Plebiscite yesterday ‘ ‘as far as could be learned from seattered results available, and it appeared that the marketing jboard ‘‘plan”, as it is called, would definitely get the neces- sary & per cent of the vote and possibly more. Frank Bryan. Cascumpec,~ who is returning officer for Prince County, said af- ter 11 o'clock last right that from the 16 polls he had heard; . ‘from to that time, there were 167 people voting in favor of the plan, to 86 against, which indi- cated almost a two to one mar- gin. Complete resulis are not ex- pected before Friday at the earliest, but the trend appears to have been established. PRINCE SAMPLING. In Belmont Lot 16, for ex- ample 25 growers voted out of ‘Yes’ Decision For Plan Seen In. Plebiscite Vote Turnout Called lly Light [an eligible 34. There were. 15 against and 10 for. At Miscouche seven voted ‘yes’ and three ‘‘no” with one spoiled balict. There were 14 eligible voters. In Summerside only. three vot- ed out - a eligible 72 and they voted * At Wilmot eizht voted “yes” and three “no” with one spoiled ballof. At St. FEleanors o. voted “ves"" and two “‘no”. There were 15 voters eligible - At Alberton poll only 13 were eligible and nine voted, which was a good percentage of votes polled. Five voted “yes” as far _as could be learned. QUEENS county At North River, about five miles from Charlottetown. se- ven voted “yes and four "at Mt. Herbert, about sevea (Continued on page 3 Col. 5), Oh Pat Heralds Use (Reuters) — esred 4 fins of Handley fase Herald airliners more than 18 months old was banned today, | —— an inquiry into the | of one of the aircraft m Brenig the: The air wjuneaes tne GO said: This is (CP )—Brian | @ Precautionary restriction. pen baby Prince Edward—-the Queen Mississippi. River lay siege to come less and less impressive He added, however, that the Davies, executive secretary of dinz the final outcome of an in- into the Canadian air- quiry erait, where it was felt that the; fuselage failed under pressure.” The aircraft crashed minutes after take - off from Halifax March 17. Another Herald crash- ' .ed-in Jordan recently. A total of 37 Heralds are said to be operating in Canada. A spokesman of the board shid:. It is assumed that the aircraft reached 13,000 feet be- fore crshing. The restriction will hmit to 10,900 feet the altitude of Her- alds built more than 18 months ago. An order fer 10 Herald arrha- ers and spare parts worth £3,-. Tom $1120.00 by the Brazilian airiime Vasp, was an- nounced here Tuesday, andthe Handley Paze Company said ff | is nopeful of further sales im board, an- | South America Handley Paze said in a sist ment later that Heralds have heen in service for four years and that there is no evidence of basic structural weakness to the aircraft. “In one or two of those air- craft we have examined we have detected small areas of skin cor- rosion in the lower part of the fuselaze.”” he said “As a sensible precaution we have advised. the operators of Heralds that have been in serv- ice for more than a set period of time to fly them at reduced pressure until sufficient remedt- tive measures now in hand have been. completed.” EPA Flies Dart Heralds Without Use Of Pressure ing a major dike around the at least temporarily, the invad- Wednesday. im the hospital. “Do you mean money?” Mr general hospital. ing flow. Dr. Found. in a report to the’ The president's report showed Davies asked. , association's three-day meeting that in 1963, last year for which ‘Perhaps, the man _ an- GANDER, Nfid. ‘CP)—East- here, said that a TB sufferer statistics are available, 5,705 swered. ern Provincial Airways Dart jwho has been taking drugs for new TB cases were found im When Mr. Davies . said he Herald aircraft have been flying Oo e ' some time passes on the disease Camada and 83% old cases be- wasn't interested in any bribe at less than 10,000 feet and with- |to another person. When the TB came active again. There were and asked. who was speaking, out pressure in the fuselage jis detected in this contact. it is'756 deaths. the man hung up. since the crash of one of the air- S. ‘Viet Nam Aid (AP) — De-+ WASHINGTON fence Secretary Robert S. Me- Namara announced Wednesday a step-up of nearly one-third in United States military aid to Communist-menaced South Viet Nam for expanding its amy and backing it with more fire- power and helicopters for mo- bility. U.S. assistance to help com- U Thant Fears Situation Deteriorates UNITED NATYONS (AP)— United Natiens Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant said through a spokesman Wednesday he con- sidered the situation in Viet Nam had deteriorated in the ‘last few days. but that he was continuing his efforts to achieve a peaceful solution. The. statement was issued in + Fesponse to a query for com- ment after Thant’s private luncheon meeting Tuesday with Canada’s external affairs min- ister, Paul Martin INSIDE TODAY ' Classified. ..-......... m. Births, deaths ........ 3, 19 Comics 2 60 60 Senses 7 Sport sasscscees Women's ‘sevebeoes 9 Finance. markets ...... EY Raral chorches mee “AE Editorials |. .....+- ove, 4 Summerside .......... ium 8 bat the Viet Cong guerillas will be increased from $207.000.000 to $330,000,000 for the current fiscal year which ends June 3, McNamara told reporters at the White House The defence chief had just briefed President Johnson on the high strategy conference on Viet Nam concluded in Hawaii Tuesday. The White House ses- sion was attended by State Sec- retary Dean Rusk and presiden- tial assistant McGeorge Bundy. | McNamara told reporters) ithat U.S. air attacks on North | | Viet Nam have damaged the |mMorale of the Viet Cong forces land have slowed — buat not - | stopped—infiltration inte South Viet Nam Rusk added that evidence a « morale problems in North Viet) “20 Nam has been found in cap tured diaries and desertions Ambassadors Hold Talks | WARSAW (Reuters) — The American and Communist Chi- | nese ambassadors to Poland met for more than three hours here Wednesday. with the lencthy talks believed to indicate impor- tant discussions om Viet Nam. The meeting between China's Wang Kuo Chuan and US. en. voy John Cabot was one of their longest in several years. Re cause the U.S. and Communist China have diplomatic rela: | ‘tions, their contact is a their Warsaw ambassa-| regis- voting Rural residents of Prince Fd- ers of that district cafting Jewell, "Sm men kept a pact of, Yard Island voted on the their ballets Alexander - |secrecy abont the talks. They ato plebiscite yesterday. 2 i jare scheduled to moet again: | The poll a-North River Jun- Sandy) ‘MacGregor, lef. is list. Allison ‘Larter, right. is ‘June 20, | tot Farmers Hall sew farm “veading the cath at Fred the returning officer at the LIGHT VOTE AT NORTH RIVER | POLL North River Poll, Poll<s were open from I pm. te 9 gm Only 11 voted at this poll, seven “yes” and four “ne.” liners in Nova Scotia last month, PA President A. J. Lewington . said Wednesday. He was commenting on a re- port from London that the. Brit- ish air registration board has banned pressurized flying of Handley - Page Dart Heralds pending the outcome of an in- quiry into the crash The EPA head said the pre cautionary action was taken im- mediately as there were indica tions that the pressure in..the cabin might have iad ceme- thing te’ do with the = crash. which teok eizht lives The air recistration board: ruling affects all Dart Heralds more than 1% month: o'd. To EPA Heralds , still flying are three vears Wid and a third is four vears ald Mr Lewinzten said the air Tine had already taken al! ae- cessary precautions The planes. whieh had flown at more those Ton fect. were now beinz kept below 9.9 feet. The airline has no 'fear< concerning the opera- fien of the aircraft. he said Circus Clown Found Slain NEW YORK (AP). Paw! Jung. &4. chief clown of the Ringling Rrothers Rarnom and Bailey cir- cus who delichted children and adults for three decades.“ was found <lain Wednesday in. his blood - spattered midtown hotel room . Police Inspector Leo Murphy said the five-fant eicht-inch. 1%- pound Junc was beaten with a blunt instrument about the face and head. Rut the motive wasn't immediately determified The former vaudevillian jomed, Rincling Brothers as an appren- tice clown in 1934 and claimed .to have invented some baseball and soldier routines. He had 8 fun factory in Tampa. Fila, where he manufactured preps - for clowns Spectators remember him as the clown who sported large creen eve glasses that iflashed on and off. W s Placed