‘ Terrorists’ Activity Puzzle MONTREAL 'CPI — Morel pieces of the puzzle created by; terrorist activity fell into place as police squads conducted two raids that produced explosives and radio - transmitting equip- ment stored in suspected ter- rorist hideouts. 'l‘lie raids. on a north-end Montreal apartment Wednesday and a vacant summer cottage in the Laurentiaiis Tuesday night were described by police as major breaks in their con tinuing crackdown on terrorist elements in the province Specifically. the. police are looking for arsenals built up by‘ terrorists as the result of re- cent ralds earlier this year on armories in M o ntre al and Shawinigan. But. in the meantime. their investigations are leadin: them to all sorts of other caches. RAID 0N COTTAGE The raid on the Laurentiu cottage. near St. Jerome. :5 miles north of here. uncovered 450 sticks of dynamite believed part of the TOO-stick haul of a construction ranio robbery last; year. This theft was blamed on Io Front dc Liberation Quebe- cois. smashed last summer with the arresr and ronVIction of several persons. In Montreal. a two-day police stake-out by eight-man police squads watching around the clock. resulted in the seizure of a transmitter console from CHEF. a French-language Granhy radio station in Granby. Que. Police also found television SPECI I P Raids By Police Partly SoIVe I stolen ‘ arts believed h the Montreal area, and an array of separatist pamphlets and letters. Laureatum. They identified the I which sought to separate Quo- men as Robert Hudon. 20, de-‘ bec from the rest of Canada scribed as an electrical - me-; through violence made its first Chi“ InSlJt- Gerard Houle 0f chanical expert. and Andrei appearance Jan. 20. . cal the ucbec Provmcial Police. waitier. 23, a radio technician; letters were left behind after “I!” Manned the Stake-out arid The dynamite found in the; the rat the usiliers laid 0“ Ill? 39" Sire“ aparl- Laurentian cottage was hidden‘ menli 531d "0 arrests were in the attic in sacks and beer made. cases. Fearing a booby trap, He said police had watched they sent Bernard Peclet, their . the place in the hopes the apart- chief chemist. to the scene to men! dwellers might make an check the sticks and authorize . appearance. But, when it be- their removal. came apparent nobody was ris- A special unit from the 34th ing to the police bait, the raid1 Area Army Ordnance Depot in on‘ihe vacant apartment wentl Ste. Therese took charge of the head. explosives. Police said i'cccnt raids in Mont Royal Armory. A few days later the 62nd Field Artillery Regiment Ar- mory at Shawinigan, 90 miles east of here, was looted in a similar raid. The ALQ took credit for that one too. Police say two persons raigned in St. Jerome Monday on bank holdup charges are sus< pected ALQ members. They and MOVE AROUND A LOT ‘ .. . . a juvenile were arrested at a . . . . - th th Mntreal died and “We ve discovered tn our in- ggumnueans (have uncoveredlroadblock after the bank was vestigations that these people some of the weapons they say robbed of $a.000. Police said lterroristsi move around quite were stolen in the smasfhand, maChlne gun‘s {156d m the WI)- a bit and never seem to stay grab armory robberies for bery were similar to ones sto- ‘ in one place more than 59"“ which the separatist Arm'ee do‘ len from the armones‘ days.” lnsp, Houle said. , - » _ l Police are seeking at least Liberation du Quebec has taken two other suspected ALQ mem_ bers Meanwhile, police issued at cred" public. appeal to help locate two ' 1 young men want for questioning APPEARED JAN. 30 in Trois-RiVieres. Que. Wed- in connection with a bank The ALQ. which claims it is nesday. Clau e Perron. 19. llioldiip at Mont Rolland in the continuing the work of the FLQ pleaded not guilty and was re— AL FOR THE MARITIMES! who: @nnrdticm‘ l SECOND SECTION manded in custody to April 23 on a charge of theft of arms from the Shawinigan Armory. Most of the loat from the ar- 5 Shawinigan A r m o r y robbery has been recovered. SEARCH FOR MONSTER ST. ALBANS. England (OP) Eight students from the Essex lnstitute of Agriculture are gar ing to Loch Ness in a bid to establish conclusively whether a monster exists in the lake. They WlII use echo-sounding equip- ment developed from research into the hearing characteristics of amphibious animals. by buying a package of the new full King Size Peter Jackson filter-tipped cigarettes Certificates worth $100.00 cash are inserted into a number of packages of Peter Jackson cigarettes—one of these packages could be the next one you buy. If it is and you answer a skill- testing question correctly, the $100.00 cash is yours. BUY PETER JACKSON TODAY AND add TO YOUR ENJOYMENT! length increased from 80 to 85 millimeters- the longest size available across Canada IN PACKS OF 20 AND 25 FILTER TIPPED KING SIZE A FAMOUS NAME SINCE IBBl Charlottetown, Fri., April 17, 1964. I Residents of Ste. Bridgette de Laval, 25 miles northeast of Quebec City watch swirling PAGE 9 E‘UEES WATCH FLOOD floodwaters from the Mont- morency River wash throuin their homes. About 200 peo- ple were evacuated when an ice jam caused water to (AP Wire rise. photo) By CAROL KENNEDY DUBLIN t CPl4ean O’C six years ago withdrew permis-I sion for his plays to be per- formed in Dublin. is once again. at odds with the famed Abbey! Theatre company —— this time over the prospect that. the com- pany may stop a special pre-' sentation that O'Casey has au- thorized. The 84-year-old now living in self - imposed exile in Devonsihire, England re-3 . laxed his ban so that the Abbey. company might take two of his greatest works—The Plough and The Stars“ and Paycock"—to London and Paris . for the world theatre festival honoring Shakespeare‘s 400th anniversary. He allowed the plays to be shown commercially in Dublin first and the two Irish war itragedies have been playing tO‘ packed houses. . Now, however, the Abbey ; players . long among Europe's llowest - paid actors — have threatened to go on strike Sat- Iurday if a labor court recom~ ITribunaI Asked For Arbitration I QUEBEC tCPt—The creation by Parliament of a tribunal that ‘ would act as an arbiter in edu- cational disputes between a cul- tural group and a provincial‘ igovernment has been suggested b French-Canadian move- ment. j Le Conseil de la vie I“rnn-' ycaise. a group whose. aim is to idevelon and maintain French .culture on the continent. made public the suggestion Wednes-t day. lt is contained in a brief that Iwill be presented to the royalr |commission on bilingualism and i biculturalism. , The brief milline: the educa- itional situation as it affects French-speaking Canadians ‘ ! other provinces and says thati this situation remains the niost‘ ‘ acute for these minorities. : The constitution. the brief lnotes. already has made the 1federal government the arbiter iln legal disputes but this role; should be made more effective. 1 The council suggests that the .role should be put. into the .‘hands of a federal hody re- ;moved from politics. It would. :be composed of representatives‘ :of the two principal ethnic [groups chosen outside Parlia- imeni and the Senate I It would judge grievances gpresented to ll and make rec- Iommendations to the provinces concerned. s u c h ‘ were rejected. 1 h e tribunal .would have the power to ini- ‘pose measures that would en- . sure. the group involved gets the instruction to which II right from the religious and cul- tural point of view. aged titan of the Irish stage who! they do strike. they would miss} their London festival date, start» atre. IS FURIOUS “Casey is in a telephone interview the Irish Times. he said he sympathizes reported furious. strike should have before. since they had been in negotiation with the Abbey man- agement since October, 1962. O‘Casey said the Abbey com-i Famous Irish Playwright On Outs With Old Theatre imendation for higher wages is him to present his plays at the asey. ‘ not met by the management. If? London festival. ‘ “If they do not honor their bond now. yo I ing Monday at the Aldiwch the-: sured that I i them to stage my plays again." 11 may rest as- will never allow ’Casey’s outburst is believed to have influenced both sides in with the dispute. Rates of pay with the players' ! company —- ho .plight, but the decision of the cramped. shabb playwright. Irish Actors' Equity to call the. tre since the been made ‘ down in 1950—are astonishingly low. After 37 years' service. the lbwrpaid artist gets only £17 ($51) a week as maximu' in bat- Juno and the pany had "made a bond" with dry when acting, for the Dublin used in the y Queen’s Thea- Old Abbey burned By BRENDA LARGE i ()TTA WA . Canadians Termed Lazy I In Approach To Languages Mrs. Asselin took aim at Que- lCPl—Calling Ca- bec’s Social Credit: Party, call~ nadians lazy in their attitude to ing the Creditistes and their languages. the president of the National Women's Liberal Fe - eration made a strong plea for here Wednesday. ' .lrs .l. O. Asselin of Mont- real told the Ottawa Women's Liberal Club: A “We, see people arriving in seven or eight languages. Lazy, that‘s what we Canadians are. tia. when it comes to languages Mrs. Asselin, who spoke in both English and French, said there is room in Canada two official languages and two distinct cultures. “There is also room for peo- ii ll i (1 ll e contributions. u n i q uu 9 contributions. di ic lleader Real Caouette crack- ots. She also urged the women to —— bilingualism and biculturalistn maintain their political activ- .V. “.\ political party cannot sur- vive if its energies are only re- , leased at election time _ The federation president said Canada from Europe who speak the main problem of women’s stracted." Women al scene. who were and concerned could have a tre- mendous influence on the polit- political groups is female iner- not masculine opposition to n r r e a s e d participation by women in politics. "Most women toda for do pay a little attention to pub- lic affairs. but they are easily y can and informed There is room for the people 0 a province to be both ciiizens and ClliLCllS of of that province Canada as well '0 SONS {VIPs Mrs \Ssclin. “ho was elected national president. of the feder- ation last Oi-iobei has eight children Two of her sons are Sips—Edmund T, for Montreal Notre-Damc-dc-Grace and o- seph P, for Richmond-Vl'oltc. The Liberal women's presi- dent said Enzlish Canadians must show that they have; V “largencss of spirit" at this "orifgapfgsmh time in the country's history. ‘ b “We must not deny or distort “mod French t n n a diis Aspiiaiious. for Labor We. must together make a sound adjustment " Tracing the historical basis the British North .\nierica .\ct. Mrs. Asselin said the act was designed to :zve a strong fed- eral government. prOViding cer- tain rights and prerogatives to the provinces MORE RIGHT SOL‘GHT "Today. it seems right that iii cation has e council ROMFORD. . giien increasing TlZIilS meet inn-casing responsibili- In: holidays. ties" is catering Federa' » provincial financial swittb enough to meet the changing times facturing Resolutions Turned Down BRANTFORD. Ont. The Brantford Board of Edu- turned down two resolutions that would have re- opened committee meetings to representatives of radio and (UP)— the board an- nounced meetings would be and Tuesday the Brant- Council and the Brant County Home and School- “ Council proposed resolutions op- posing the mo Trustee Mr moved Tuesday acknowledng and filed. leaving ve. s. Ardell Hagey that they com mittee doors barred to reporters. 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