If It’s Good For The Island . The Guardian Is For It ‘ed VOL. LXXVIII. NO. #60 uses” Daregae 34° out - ave first July) £ “observance... Donald: stands’ -in the’ back- with Canada's bed flag was ~ ground. The flag-raising cere- marked at Confederation Cen- mony was part of ecumenical tre yesterday. Here the flag services highlighted by ‘the is raised at the Centre, while Blessing of the flag and of , Lieutenant. Governor W.J. Mac- Confederation - Centre. Pilat- FLAG-RAISING MARKS CEREMONY wa: Che Guardia WEA THER Clear, litt) Z ter... sure; winds at Looe high Sie and ‘72. Saturday: showers. e! -. sereeet Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” 6 os. oe CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965... y "aan SEVEN ee aw Sone i ' Death Toll Reaches 22 Need For Unity Stressed Largest Canadian Proble tion of the At least 22 persons died acci- dentally in Canada, 17 of them OTTAWA (CP)—The need for good in whatever|in a pond to affect actions and in traffic, during the one-day unity is the most important |form it takes, a willingness t6| outlooks far beyond that pér- Dominion Day holiday. single problem facing Cana- open our hearts to understand; son's original ken.” The Canadian Highway Safety |dians, Governcr - General iing and affection: All of these The statements were con- Council had predicted. 15 high- tained in a text of the speech way deaths, or one more that issued to the press before de- the 14 killed on Dominion Day, livery. | 1964. are the most tagious of at- |tional Day message broadcast titudes, and shown by one on CBC television. person ‘spread like the ripples =< :5*** Five Fatalities Reported | = On Holiday In Maritime tomorrow, for tomorrow may be isfactory condition in a Monc- too late,”’ he said. od “The trouble is we ‘don’t see enough of one another and I feel. that before the c ahodd ton hospital, Also in the Moncton ‘hospital in fair condition is Kenneth Tea- kles, 26, of Portage Vale, N.B., .of Confederation there driver of the second car. 'Georges Vanier said in a_Na- be mass exchanges betw provinces.” Canada had the most wonder- ful future if only remembered By THE CANADIAN PRESS He was otiending a church piec- the importance of unity, At least five persons died in nic with his family. ~ duly 1 was an-occasion “when accidents in the Maritime Pro- Two members of the gRoyal | at of us should pause inthe vVifices during the Dominion Day Canadian Navy — Petty Officer. ' pursuit.of our own personal and Holiday Thursday. Three: died Stephen Fuller, 30, and Petty Of- “8 | and. its . people are, and where in Nova Scotia and two in New ficer William Thompson, 2, By THE CANADIAN PRESS | we are going.” nswick. {Prince Edward Is- both of Dartmouth, fen Pe |, The governor-general said: Was {atality-free. killed in a car-truck ision farm guests in the background “Let us approach and appreci- Charles William Lee, 16, of near Mount Uniacke, N.S., about ate our differences in the way Glace Bay, N.S.. drowned when 25 miles west of Halifax. R. Shaw ‘and representatives |g mature man should. he attempted to swim from a!’ Fuller was a crewmember of of three réligious faiths. (See “Let us remember that no raft to shore on the Mira River. the destroyer estert Resti- story on page 5.) }one point of view, nor any one ———— "| gouche and Thompson was at- Peace Mission Torpedoed By N. Viet Nam 4 COMMONS RESUMES SEPT. 27 _ -Parliament Observes way, of life, has any monopoly i res \of virtue, Quite the contrary: Sh adlesivn. Scott. Both ships are based in TOKYO (AP) — North Viet | The road of ultimate wisdom ned Nam Thursday torpedoed plans jlies in comparison, mutual com- * The driver of the fe, laden by Britain's Prime Minister Wjl- | passion and understanding. . ,> -PM Warns. | with heavy machinery, was un- son for a fresh appeal to Handj ‘Whether Canada eanachiene | injured. - receive his Commonwealt junity_in diversity will depend in _ Leon Robi- Peace mission, { Joseph .Aurele chaud, 32, of Saint- John, N.B., [drowned in a lake near the city, ‘moment of: what this country SALISBURY (Reuters)-- | children-playing in the area dis- as eee Prime Minister Jan Smith said covered the bidy- later recover- espect for each other. a8 rhursday he had warned Brit- ¢d by RCMP. An inquest was eagerness to learn, an apprecia- ain if it tried, to convene ,a con- unecessary. l the last analysis on our attitude regional goals and think for a Hands Off son's mission because we have ta for doubting Mr. Wilson's will. for peace,” ‘gaid the facie Communist Viet- |mamese news agency in a broad-. Holiday OTTAWA “~CP)—Former. Jus- tice Minister Favreau said Thursday night in a statement it is “amply. clear” from the -evidence.that he told the Dor- ion inquiry he had not advised Prime Minister Pearson Sept. --2; 1964, of the involvement of Liberal MP Guy Rouleau in the goes Rivard affair. * The statement was issued by les prime minister's office in ;the continuing dispiite between Mr. Pearson and Chief Justice Frederic Dorion over ‘a_ state- ment in the pe report which picalled the prime mipister's werd into question. g The statement was imme- diately telegraphed to Chief Justice Dorion at Quebec. City. The Dorion report said Mr. Favreau informed Mr. Pearson Sept. 2 of the part played by Mr. Rouleau, then parliamen- |tary secretary to Mr. Pearson, jin attempts to get narcotics trafficker Rivard ‘out of jail. |AWARE OF STATEMENT : | Aides to Mr. Pearson said the me minister was aware of | Mr. Favreau's statement. Mr. Favreau. was in Mont- real. : The prime minister's staff worked most of the Dominion | ay holiday on the statement, ‘communicating with -Mr. ~Fav- | “We Yo nol receive Mr, Wil- reau by telephone in Montreal: | Officials said they believe the, statement will end the dispute | |as far as the government !s concerned. Chief Justice yet: ~~ be- Favreau Supports | PM ER In Dispute On Report Dispute Erupts: Over Evidence advise the prime minister ‘of the fact that Mr. Rouleau could . be involved, or that this affair existed?" Mr. Favreau: ‘I do. not. be- lieve that Mr..Tremblay asked me to advise the prime minis- ter. What was decided was that I should be the one to advise the prime minister, even if it was his assistant who was con- | cerned . Mr. Favreau's statement said it is apparent that Chief Justice Dorion ‘‘must have taken_ this exchange as indicating that f spoke to the prime minister on Sept. 2, not only about the afr fair in general but also about the specific involvement of Mr. Rouleau. NOT MENTIONED “I did not mention to the prime minister at that time Mr. Rouleau's involvement. The commissioner (Chief Justice Dorion) in reading back t evidence may have misunde steod-my reference to ‘his as- sistantwho was -concerned.’” This didn't refer to Mr. Row- leau but to Denis, Mr. Favreau said. ‘ Mr. Favreau's statement con- cluded: ++ “There are obviously only twe | people who can know what was | geferred to—in” the conversation hetween myself and the. prime minister. There is no conflict ia lour respective recollections. “Both were recorded in the evidence before the commission. “It is possible that the com- ~ With Start Of Summer Recess. eRe ee | stitutional. coaference on Rhod-'| A two-cab collision on the! By MICHAEL GILLAN | was at home, pad only about 30 OTTAWA (CP) — Members of | | MPs were present when the fi- | ~€ Last, - ” earlier this year, one in Canada holiday by embarking. on their | | APPROVAL GIVEN Parliament marked the July 1 inal measure’ went through. ‘first summer recess since: 1963. | Unless Prime Minister Pear- son calls. a general election, they will return to the capital | to resume the third session of the current Parliament Monday, - ~—Sept—27- ne Senate te Fe sume —Oet-12: minute business ‘was - a compromise on Industry Min- ister-Drury’s-proposals-to-make— alterations in the legislation pro- . Viding incentives to slow-growth areas qualifying for federal help ,to promote economic growth. The- prospect of a holiday resulted in the opposition put- ting up only token attacks against the government on two controversial items of the’ pres- ent session Quebec's | pro- posed constitutiorial address to! the Queen and the Dorion report into allegations of -bribery~ and: coercion in high places. - Opposition Leader Diefen- baker, who had spoken at length on both subjects, was’ out of the capital on a speaking engagement when the House closed. d. Prime Minister Pearson | Taschereau,; _eral_ measures Final approval in the Com- | ;mons and Senate, and royal as) nt by Chief’ Justice’ Robert | the deputy gover. nor-general, were given to sev- | —The $10,000,000 fund . ‘to. pro- | vide’ six-per-cent loans to aid™ auto parts producers and a $5,000.00) fund to aid. displac ne sid. dipnleced | stage of the Cnasdi - United States auto trade agreement. - —Industry Minister Drury’s bill setting up a $50,000,000 fund to provide capital -devel- - opment grants to manufactur- ing and processing industries - locating in reclassified desig- nated areas under -- em- ployment @id- slow economic growth. Arnold Peters (NDP —Timiskaming) had_ threat- ened to stall the bill, but re- lented when the -government agreed. to refer the new cri- teria for designated areas to a committee When the Com- mons returns: in the fall. —A sheney “balk (0 provide in- terim spending authority for the government until the end | of Mh OC bs oe Handley Page Asks Aid InAirlinerDevelopment -LONDON (CP) -- ie. avin: avia- _fion ministry says Handley Page has “asked for a British govern ment grant to help further de- boomer eld 56-seat Herald | Tinea! of these planes crashed and the other in Jordan. ._ A spokesman said the request for | further aid is being considered. » The ministry's comment fol- |. lowed a ‘Daily Mail report Wed- | néesday that the company hes | Mainland service, $f Eastern asked ‘for £25000 $750,000 to carty out new - cabin-pressure | trials under watef, The Daily Mail said Britain's | Previncial Airways into and out of Charlottetown is equipved with the Handley-Page Herald high- wing thonoplane. powered = two Rolls Royce Dart turbo- prop . ot INSIDE TODAY | - Classified ..-....... 10, i Births, deaths ........ 3, il Comics ...... Veeeece see. Women’s ........ popeoess 6 Sport . ahs h~ It had been expected the op- lesia “we would regard this as ‘Trans-Canada highway three} Britain To Buy — jimterference- in our intérnal. af. | ‘miles from Peticodiac, N.B., ‘ position would use this pi fairs.” | elaintied the life of 39-year-old | ply debate to demand further | U. S. Aircraft Smith was making ‘his first | Cleveland Steeves of Moncton, |" overnment action on Chief istatement io Parliament since | | His brother Renford, ustice Frederic Dorion’s re- | port on scandal. allegations. Guy Favreau has resigned as Phantom fighters and Rereilos ters. | uation minister as a result of C-130 turboprop transport planes the report, and the’ justice de-_, from the United States, the min- |partment has been asked for istry _ possible crim- | opinions about imal_charges_against persons _in- | ; volved in attempts to win bail Said the first order for Phan- \for narcotics smuggling suspect toms would probably be for 50 i ana ama Ne TaN OOS (Continued on page 3 Col. 2)° Lightning Starts Fires | In N.B: Woods. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Forest fires continued to rage Thursday in the woodlands of Nova Scotia and New Bruns-) wick ahd the latter province re- | mained the most setously af- fected by both™tack of rain and | electrical storms. ~ The forestry service at Fred- | ericton. reported , lightning | strikes had started six {new for- est fires’ of undetermined size— | five of..them~in—Gtoucester St: — Northumberland: ‘Counties. The | other is burning in the Doak:- town area, and officials say it. may have been started by a dis- “carded burning cigarette. | _A major fire was out of con- | trol in slash and small timber mear Patterson Siding. . about eight miles rer ‘from Newcastle, | N.B. The fire has burned over. more than 1,500 acres since | erupted Monday. Forestry officials said afl | a \tres except the one at Patier- | son Siding and the six new out~ Hbreaks were under control or | being patrolled. There were %4 |the UN General Assembly next | fall or winter and expressed hope the pontiff could speak to ithe 114nation body. from the Vatican said Thursday | he expects Pope Paul to visit | : ‘been given for the total Phan- ternal affairs. |tom- order, although the figure LONDON (Reuters) - will buy 1,400 - mile - _ Britain last week's. London conference other person in the car, is in sat- | - hour of Commonwealth’ prime minis- | French To Vote -On December 5- PARIS (AP) The Wench should attempt io convene such presidential election will be; a conference, we would -regard held Dec. 5, with a second } He said. “Within the last few | ‘of aviation announced days I have written to the Brit- ursday. ish prime minister warning him Well - informed sources here that -if ‘the British government aircraft... Ne-xofficial-tigure-had:: candidate gets: a majority on “I hope no one-has any fatse | tthe first ‘round, Information of 290, later reduced to 250, had illusions as to what that would | Minister Alain Laan an- | Mounced Teapeday. been mentioned, they said. ~ mean.” | “LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR ATTENDS CAMP -ns sen might be received because othig--ais.-interference.in--our .in-:-round- of voting..-Dee. 19-44 he 2 [NATO and Warsaw pacts. |he took office eight month ago.by Mr. Is-/ Thursday statement jtanbul newspapers Th this as “assistant.” New Federal Labor Code least from—Hanoi. \fore -the statement . issued Government informants that he won't ae “oh iota | missioner may, in his report, /im London had said earlier in in his report. ‘have intended to refer to some nt day Wilson would send a| Mr. Favreay’s stathvonat—he | other. ‘secretary’ or ‘assistant’ -message to Hanoi’ within resigned his justice portfolio|than Mr. Rouleau, as several |48 hours requesting an oppor-|Tuuesday under. the Dorion re- | others of different levels of sen- tunity for the mission to visit port's fire—was mainty a re-| | tority were involved.” and discuss the possibility of aiview of ‘testimony ‘before the - «1¢ js equatly possible that he |Dorion inquiry about~ the point May have misunderstood ‘my hope had been. at issue. |meaning in my answer at page ‘lgaised in London that the mis-| He said one portion of his own | 7308 but this answer was clari- k British Consul-General | wish it had been.” Democratic . Party counsel Tee P te This portion concerned his reported. at page 7332. ; Monday h_ ‘the director of statement that he and then Im-| .. ‘migration Minister Tremblay? aaa eee saree = : ‘foreign affairs bureau. “=the prin ition Urged crn ir even if it was his assistant who INFORMED BEFOREHAND ; was concerned” about the Ri-| Official’. said Chief Justice Of Two Pacts ivard affair. : |Dorion was informed before- _ REFERRED TO DENIS ‘hand that the statement would ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) Soviet Premier Kosygin has re-|. He said the “assistafit’ re- (woes and about its general iterated a Soviet plea for simul- ferred to was Raymond Denis, |tatieous abolition of both the executive assistant .to Me.| Mr. Pearson was in Ottawa </Tremblay, and not Mr. Rou- | Thursday and in the evéning at- He spoke in the first’ inter-|leau, the prime minister's par-| tended some folk dancing and Communist liamentary secretary. singing at the lawn of Parlia- since’ The word “adjoint” was used, Ment Hill. Favreau in his French Transport _ Minister Abol view. with a non'- Bewspaperman reported Pickers- Details of the interview — -by testimony before the inquiry. | gill took part in the drafting of Turkish_journalist Metin Toker |The English version (of his | the statement, officials said. He June 25—were translated opened the exchange Wednesday in the Commons by saying. there wasn't a tittle of evidence te the prime minister's office in support the statement in the the statement reads: Dorion repor that Mr. Pearson Ross Drouin, Conservative. was informed Sep. 2 about Mr. party counsel: “Mr. Tremblay Rouleau’s party in the Rivard told us that he asked you to affair. Toket quoted Kosygin as ew . The transcrip as rendered by ing he did not mean that NATO |should ,be abolished ard the | Warsaw pact continue. He said they should be repealed to- gether. Becomes Effective July 1 ~ By BEN ‘WARD through some tough opposition industry . or company . applies OTTAWA (CP)—A new era in ‘in the cabinet and Parliament, ‘for deferment of these sections | federal labor legislation dawned | says he is hopeful that the prov- the deferement-is-automatic—un- Thursday, but it will take many | inces will bring their labor stan- | til such-a time as the labor. de- months to reach high noon. dards up to its level within a partment hands down a ruling The Ca nada Labor Code, few years. jont he application. ait registration board asked for fires burning in New Bruns- | the’ tests in view of the discov- Hwiek: + passed by Parliament last'—ts fulleffect in federally:| There has-been a flood of | ay of metal corrosion in tthe | In Nova Scotia, officials re- | March, became the law of the jlexislated industries won't be se applications in recent wreckage of the Canadian Her- | ported five fires burning but all | land on Dominion. Day for. all-jfelt for some time, however, | Weeks, t60 many to process be- ald which crashed in Novajare under control and. con-|. industries under federal juris- | The code, provides a transl- fore the code became law. Most Scotia last March, killing eight | tained. i a caatiae tees tour tisia (Oe period for the adoption of eae eee ma ee pedsons. — Sicadingde: ' the wage and hours sections’ in | adi ‘ —_ months and A_ Jordanian Herald re 8 ; those industries that can prove ee aaiae eee instances—from ‘in Syria in April killing 58. Pope Paul —$1.25 » hourly minimum they would be hurt by immed: the hours-of-work lifts. : wage. I ; ae Themen ae bene 40-hour hesié:. Work wise jiate application of these _stan- eo —— stupy ra with a limit. of -eight hours | ‘ : y fave_come_ from aia Expected To overtime, at tithe-and-a-half | it alse provides that where an ee reas _compenall, | Heralds have been purchased | er wong one ge ol —Eight | paid statutory holt- tors, and each requires a spe a ee inet ce ae Visit UN Gays. y Princess Gets pr oye to ae — f : —Two - week vacations after ual harm wou jone by mo iii Haropeon | UNITED NATIONS (AP) — one year of employment. Strong Guard enforcing the full Jaw immedi- y fess ‘The United Nations observer The code covers about 400,000 ately. STOKE-ON*TRENT, England| The labor department has de- Princess Margaret jones to identify the applicants, work in the handful of indus. | 4% given a ‘strong police guard | pending formal notice of the de- tries under federal control. Pro- | |here Thursday after an anony- | cisions, but it is known that vincial laws govern minimum ;mous telephone caller threat: they account for more than two labor standards for the rest. ¢Med to shoot her. | thirds of the work force cov workers—roughly one in 17 in| the natiqnal labor force—wha | (Reuters) testimony was ‘‘not_as. clear as \ fied by .my_ reply to the New 9.’ ~~\ decided that Mr. Favreau would —mntnister;+ {2 Particular POI eos ih | | Msgr. Alberto Giovannetti, the | rieutenant-Governor W. eerie. ‘ch three | - Main industries covered =e The princess, sister of the ered. | a loly See's permanent UN ob-| MacDonald, henorary-c a oa Paar a at and Pa pa aa after ‘at Camp Alder- |Tailways, shipping, banks, n. | Queen, was on a visit to a hos-| Shipping lines, for example, server, set up an appointment | of the Prince Edward Island sage. Lt. Col. E Leod, shot — 5 Signal Reg’t., P.E.1. | terprovincial trucking,. seme. pital here. jhave argued that the 40-hour | with Secretary-General U Thant,| Regiment; spent two days. hone comma nding the Reg’t., and 5 Medical Comp- | nications, broadcasting, grain A lice spokesman said: | week is impossible for them. Levidently to {ise the Pope's + with the unit-at-summer camp Pei R is at right. any — arrived at Aldershot | elevators and-teed mills. leon expect a 7 =f a hoax, —— a _ 54 mo prospective trip at Aldershot, N:S., this week. made trip last Saturday afternoon and | as { we are not treating it as week and the companies +. ee aT SEEKS IMPROVEMENT 4 <[tend there ish’t living space om ~*~ He told a reporter beforehand it was premature to talk about _| dates“for a papal visit but “it! in a reconnaissance exercise, ‘seems to be quite sure.” will return late today. Some | 200 officers apd men from P.E.I. attended the annual He paid a visit io. the’ train- to Aldershot with Col..D. J. ing area as his unit took-part i Labor: Minister Allan Mac- The threat was tmiade_in athe vessels to take care of the Eachen, who drew up the code telephone call to a loca) news- additional men who would 1. | and in this picture, His Honor camp. ; and steered it practically intact | paper. ‘Meeded: to reduce this to 40.