_ South Viet Nam’sPremier. RulesDa Nang Rebel City ———he_callinig_for the overthrow_of | Leon uN Six Judge children “ied and| HAMILTON. Ont. (CP)-A The. boy asid the ob eae "belleve to ‘see YOU lisa; DD, former canon ef St. the situation becarhe clear. fliree i are in Parry cot ord gen iioy i ao boy has met a buzzing sound ane : wares ee be . ™ have Charlottetown. vi & V ae . hosp: suffering ad) a curved burn on his hand ey t ‘ass oe ” Governot- ‘al Vanier will n essel reck : are: Thomasina, ‘nine - Yyonths, | he claims came from touching nly "one -ah antenna, an on oe first iember ot address the graduates. He and > et Tracy, 2, Dana, 1, s, 4, | the “antenna” of a soft-glow- Me yt ar was thicker at (mous 5 to Aue (Madame Vanier will be in Char. the ‘a: an|at Donna, 3, Abby, 6 and Bg ing “flying ship.” the base .and narrowed to the bone gag this soar is and lottetown for a 5 sea d visit at i MYRON K. MYERS men at Do Nook on the |? Western aa Mary, 73, Jane Judge, the chil-/ Charles Cozens claims twa size of a nickel at the top.” a tocm at Geebaa ‘Gremaae (ome LONDON (AP). — Ten men |northeastern glish coast ———dren’s_grandmother. | strange ships. Hlaodeds in_.g___ When __he touched the “an-_ {Sehoot's- bushland amex. +The al-was—in-aboard—a—300-ton_British_pleas- | spotted the. boat Saturday night” >, station Three of the four Tobobun-| field behind the Hamilton po- tenna a flash “of electricity” * strumental in ‘the tion jure ship died Sunday while res-|and signalled her by searchlight/— 0" 7 ched Thi wil _ dung children were killed: Wil-| lice station on Upper Welling. occurred, and he received a | : of the Vanier’ Institute of the |cuers~ helplessly watched a/to stay offshore. - gg announced intention”. --frid,_3,__May,_5,_and_:Nora, 7-| ton Street Tuesday night. ___ Shock. _PM:Gandhi Family, which was incorporated /North Sea’ gale smash the ves-| They said the Anzio appeared initing the moon. A visitor from the Rama .Re-| Constable _ Arnold Reade Fis father= —James—Cozens- Va!’ 4 jon-April-30; r_the mouth of |to _ __but_ then turned a —The next word _ Fromm | e + oo. for two adults and nine chil- “If It’s Good For The Island - The Guardian Is For It : Authorised 23 Second Class VOL. LXXIX NO. 79 - STAKES REGIME ON OUTCOME SAIGON (AP) _ ‘Premier ‘stupid’: Nguyen Cao Ky declared Da j|gon sion Nang a rebel city in the’ hands overthrown. of the Viet Cong and mobilized | “This city. does not belong to the*South Vietnamese air force |the Viek-Con ng * * Man said. today for an airborne: attempt! A_ score “of soldiers stood to wrest control from defiant au- | guar outside Mah*s house. He | thorities in the northern coastal |saic they ere sent there by centre. “friends,’+« Meanwhile, more trouble for| Da Nang, 370-miles northeast | the U.S.-backed Saigon regime |of Saigon, is the site of huge U.S. developed at the resort citv of |marine and air - force bases. Dalat. 140 miles northeast’ of | They are situated outside ‘the Saigon, where ~ 3,000 students | city limits and Ky didnot seem | were reported to have seized the ito involve these areas ‘in ‘his fadio station. They were said to<: jcharge that Da Nang was. in trol af..Communist elements. 3 the, Ky government and an end |The bases are tightly guarded to the use“of Dalat as fp. rest\and Da Nang city is off-limits | and recreation centre for US. to US. military personnel. ‘ troops. Slay Apparently staking the life of ATTACK VIET CONG his regime on the outcome, Ky| Military operations there were said: “Either the mayor of Da | going on as usual. A marine unit | ‘predicted the Sai- regime will be | . Nang is shot or: the (Saigon) | opened a large operation against | government falls.” la. Viet Cong stronghold 25 miles In Da Nang, Mayor Nguyen. southwest of Da Nang. Van Man branded Ky’s ae Ky’s blasts see Da Nang | Indian Reservation Fire ~-Leavest{PersonsDead Ottawa and fer Payment Of On weg, Mail | the Post Office’ Department. Postage in Cash. A ‘ aA jand its” mayor. came in the| midst of mounting political pres- | |sure on his government. Anti- | government and anti-American jGemes strations have been springing up throughout the country. |: As Ky levelled. his -charges at CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MON DAY . %S. ry Seen é a_Saigon press conference, re- ee came in of: new demonstra- \tions: ;men ment banners; demonstrators smashed — furni-| jture and equipment in a govern. | |ment information office: an-| other demonstration was re- \ported at Hue, the Buddhist cen. | tre: and demonstrators occupied | ;a hotel annex at the mountain | resort of Dalat, demanding an | end to its use as-a rest centre | for U.S. military personnel. — Moving to placate the grow- ing number of demonstrators, | Ky announced his government | plans to summon a political cdn- | tress “of the entire nation” to| ‘create a constituent organization for -drafting-of .a constitution: Military operations in the war |zones continued. at a slackened jbace, almost as if the Viet Cong | had decided to“wait -oat the | aoa of political events which | jhave turned seriously against (Ky for the first time since he | took power from Premier Phan Huy. Quat, a civilian, June 21. At Da Nang, 500-police-+-— marched avith_anti-govern- | I. at Nha Trang, | | Queen, Prince started by_a four-year-old . boy PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP)— A mass funeral -will be held to- n--who- died Saturday jin a fire: believed raging house - who threw a lighted cigarette _intoa_can ofnaptha gas... The blaze“fevelled a_three- room, house owned by Joseph dian Reserve on~Parry Island about four miles west. of here. | Police said 18 persons, includ- | ing 13 children, were in the small house. Nine of.- the chil- dren were Mr._Judge's and the others were from .a_neighbor- |’ ing house owned by~Ben Tobo-. bondung. serve near Orillia, Harry Pavis, 30, also died. INSIDE TODAY _ (Mrs. Tobobundung, _ one - of her | Overshadowing the war~in the ‘last few days has been the growing number :ef~anti-govern- | The survivors are Mrs. Pavis, | children and Mrs. lice linked arms to keep back GOV-GEN. VANIER MME. VANIER Draw crowee CANBERRA (Reuters) — Po- Judge and |ment and anti-American. demon- three of her children: ; Strations._—_Ky’s _response__was ‘The island, {s : linked to the | touch. mainland by an old, one-lane “Either the mayor of Da _|tailway bridge..Only one car at |Nang is shot or the government atime ~can © travel-across~be-/falls,”’-~he-+told—a—press-con cause rotting timbers and~ aged |encé‘ “As soon as the mayer braces have made the bridge jhears“this ‘message over the Ta- unsafe._The—reservehas—no-—fire- | department. he—will_run—to_the_Commu- n sts in the mougtains. Nis BOY CLAIMS CAME FROM SPACE SHIP summoned to the home after | the parents repeatedly ques- tioned their son before report- ing .the incident, verified the three -- inch, yellowish burn’ mark on the boy’s hand. HAND BURN a-—draughtsman, said he ex-» plained the seriousness of calling the police “but Charles was emphatic and could not be shaken.” Last Wednesday Laverne. Emery, 18, and his -brother Owen, 14, reported seeing two objects flying low over the ‘|kissed him on both ‘cheeks and |scores of amateur photograph- iers who. pushed forward as the Queen Mother and Prince Charles drove away. from church here Sunday. rn About 1,000 people turned’ up to see them arrive for the ioe: ing service .at St. John’s Angli- | can church. The Queen Mother. flew here |Saturday night on the latest |stage. of her Australian tour and was greeted by Prince Charles on. a break from school. ° She. embraced her grandson, degrees: will be conferred by St. Dunstan’s University at con’o- sp |Vation “exercises on ~-Monday, May 9, it was announced last night by yRt. Rev. G.A. Mac- donald, president—of -_SDU.-_— Receiving honorary degrees will be Right Hon. Georges P. Vanier, DSO, MC, CD, LLD, Go- vernor-General of Canada; Ma- dame Vanier; The Hon. W.J. MacDonald, ED, BA, Lieuten- ant-Governor of Prince Edward Island; and Canon E.M., Malone, of family life. Returns Home: Madame Vanier was also as- ; | asetated witif her husband ~~ in: NEW DELHI (AP) — raed (ee, work. Active in academic Minister‘ Indira Gandhi returned jaffairs, Madame Vanier was home from her 10-day foreign | named Chancellor of the Univer- tour Sunday night with pledges of food relief for her virioleka city. ar 2, = Charles said he ran behind na freeeeees g ‘ ’ fence after seeing one Cc ek Peewee eee eee “ship” land, dares followed ; CB ieee avalseees . be | by. another. : Weiten’s hs ~’ g ||.. He described the objects as Kdilwlalg 2 op 4 | “eight feet long, four feet Summerside .............. 3 | Wide and three feet high with Kings, Queens, City ean 5 | red; blue and green lights set Prince County .. ........ 2 | i ae EE ee Pecncree Famous British Sea Author Dies At California Home the United States but got great |reception elsewhere. like a comipiter. Me said his sons were “extremely shaken up by: what they had seen.” . They said the objects made “a whirring noise, not at’ all like an: aircraft.” ~ ‘FULLERTON, Calif.,(AP) — C. S. ‘Forester, British author who created on®) of fiction’s mightiest naval heroes—Captain Lord Nelson and Louis XIV—all | He wrote biographies of Jo- | Napoleon’s_ mistress; country and promises of visits She told reporters on her ar- rival from Moscow President assist research into all aspects ardia “Covers Prince Edward Talaad Like The Dew " ABRIL 4, 1966 LT:-GOV. MACDONALD Will Be Conferred By University Four honorary Doctor of Law sity of Ottawa in February of; Canon Malone was ordained in er year. Lietitenant-Governor MacDon- Charlottetown in 1921. He was jald, aioe former graduate of SDU lis an oted sportsman, soldier wars, being wounded in Fran Lieutenant-Governor Of + » PEL) on August 1, 1963. the Humber River. The 58-year-old pleasure boat ‘Autlo had been on the way from London to Inverness in Scotland, where the captain and volunteer Scottish crew planned to oper. ate tourist cruises. Coast guards _RC Holy Week Is Ushered In ct CANON MALONE 4 Honorary Doctor Of Law Degrees WEATHER Cloudy with afternoon showers; : light - winds: Low-high 30 and 45. kor MORE SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES s Another Russian First In Space Efforts Satellite Is Believed. ~ (n Orbit Around Moon’ By FRED COLEMAN ‘MOSCOW (AP) ~— Western |the pattern set when Luna IX space trackers reported Sunday | made _history’s first soft . land- that the Soviet. Union has aP-| ing on the moon March, 2. parently chalked up a new space | a first by putting Luna.X in orbit MOTIVE CHALLENGED around the moon, but authori-| At that time, Jodrell “Bank ities here kept silent about the lreceived, and made public, the | feat. - ifirst pictures sent back to earth West Germany’s Bochum ~Ob- | iby the space station. The Krem- servatory even said it had heard jin later charged that Lovell re- _ the unmanned space craft jeased the pictures for ‘‘sensa- broadcasting the Communist an- tional motives,” and- he insisted them Internationale from near his reasons were strictly sel- {the moon, but Britain’s Jodrell | entific. ent said this seemed un-|. The United States’ program ely also calls for a near orbit Sir Bernard Lovell, director Of moon and a_ soft landing, but Jodrell Bank, said “all may*the program is running . behind Gx be well” with Luna X and | schedule: speculated it was in orbit The American Lunar Orbiter. from 200 to 1,000 miles from the | supposed ‘to take thousands teacher. He served in both Mada capacity for 26 years: until -his in 1918. He was. sworn in as 10 Men Drowned » made a canon of St. Peter’s Ca- |thedral in 1926 and served in this Ce |retirement im 1952. Hel now.acts WC jas honorary assistant “send at} |the cathedral. —{moon while tumbling. Bochum said signals indicated of photographs ofthe moon's — each turn around the moor took . {from 70 to 80 minutes. REPORTS VARIED Lovell had given varying 1906 and began his‘ ministry in iports throughout the day. ¢ “We find it difficult to believe that the rocket, is. meant to be tumbling,” he-*said;~-explaining: way he thought all might not be a the term tumbling, Lovell ant that Luna X was behav- surface and transmit them to earth. This will provide for men to land that Luna X also was such an attempt. Luna X would have also been designed to pave’ the way~ for satellite making a near orbit the moon, and, even- tually, a manned flight to the moon _Heelt: Rail Strike Is Settled _ TON up) — The ee es ee said. Sunday night eight. trie eves Dae serena $6 ake reprisals against carbine and it was ordering an immediate end to the strike ct: PRG: se up mapping for choosing a spot— * the West about Luna X-follows - It was believed likely “here * -—- complete circle in the gale, struck the rock-hard sand and rolled over: Rocket teams raced to the beath. But each time they fired the wind lew back their life- lines._As the encroaching tide drove the rescuers back, the coast guard flashed a signal for Britain when Lovell said his big dish radio telescope had begun ‘The same news came from West Germany’s Bochum ob- servatory. Both said ‘hey were telemetry —hot television pic’ [the Anzio to float g line ashore.| after off “There is nothigg left that |_ Aer te, Signe rolrasocksts wit float,” the aNswer CaM@jiwere ‘fired—-Lovell said ‘my bac : guess is that the age is either picking ‘up signals from it — j moonrise Sunday. Beloe Der NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Viee- Admiral Sir- William Beloe, 57, of the Royal Navy, deputy su- preme Allied commander Atlan- tic, died of a heart attack in his automobile Sunday as he was leaving his home to attend a church service. Sir William had been ‘dis- Johnson, Kosygin and Prime Minister Wilson had accepted invitations to hoped French President Gaulle also would do so. ;may take place next October. She replied: have no solution to. this... prob- lem at the moment.” As Pope Paul Blesses Palms. VATICAN CITY (AP)—Pope | Paul blessed palm branches in| Soviet Premier Alexei in close orbit charged about a. month ago on the moon or around it.”’ Among possibilities he listed were that the rocket, or part of it, landed; ‘that the firing of the retro-rockets was designed to bring the vehicle into closer or- bit but may have been deliv- BODIES WASHED ASHORE of God and ‘those who do not.”| ‘Shortly afterward bodies Addressing youths in the|jeach wearing a. lifejacket— ithe Sistine Chapel Sunday and ‘crowd, the Pope said: ibegan to wash onto the beach. \celebrated mass before 10,000/ ‘You, what do you say? Your |Rescuers ran into the water to persons in St. Peter’s Basilica |presence here is an answer. You |reach them, ‘but each man was to usher in Holy Week for the |have chosen Christ.’ \dead as.he was dragged ashore. world’s Roman Catholics. | The Pope said it is: more im- | visit India. ‘She said she where he had been under obser- r heart condition. Sir William became No. 2 man under the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to Admiral She indicated Wilson’s visit Bits of the ship’s wreckage She was asked if, during the | The blessing of palms-and the |portant than ever, in modern |lined the water's edge for two lerately ¥aried. Thomas H. Moorer of the trip, she had been working.on a |day’s mass recalled the , tri- |times, that such an answer come miles. He then said ‘‘the most logical |United States, supreme Allied — solution for the Viet Nam war. |umphal entry of Christ into Jer- |from youth. To the south, helicopters took |explanation is that the |commander..Atlantic on Feb. 4, his | 38 men off the oil rig Constella- |probe is in. orbit of the moon 1964, and was to have been re- |tion,: whose crew ‘rode out an- jand is snot on the surface of the lieved late this month by Ad- k and were |moon.” imiral David Clutterbuck of the Holland. Soviet silence and news from Royal. Navy. usalem a week before the Eas-| He later appeared at ter resurrection. japartment window to bless 20,- The religious ceremonies of |000 persons stahding~in warm |other gale last Holy Week will focus on the |sunshine in St. Peter's Square. |blown almost te Holy Thursday observance of = ‘ the Last Supper and on_ the mournful rites of Good Friday, marking Christ’s crucifixion for the sins of man. “I am very. sorry to say 1 PM ADMITS from Portsmouth naval hospital - vation for several weeks for a Horatio Hornblower—died Satur- day of an apparent stroke. He was 66. Forester, paralyzed by a Str-ke suffered 18 months~ ago, had another seizure Wednesday with historical exactitude. But lie was so famed for Horn- | blower that his government sent him to the- U.S. during the Sec- ond World War to write and lec- | | PONIES LOSS © hight from which he apparently rallied. “Then today,’ his wife said Saturday, ‘‘all of a sudden was there—and then he-wasn't. The end came so quickly.” Death came at St. Jude Hos- pital” He and Mrs. Forester— his second wife—had lived in Fullerton since last August. A son, John, by his.first’ marriage which ended in divorce, also lives in Fullerton. Anéther son by that marriage, George, lives in Santa Barbara, Calif. Although Forester, whose sel-' | C. S. FORESTER ture about the British navy. | while ~avid;was—limited—to™ cat- dom-used Christian names were| Cecil Scott. lived in California |ter’s death. since the Second World War, he (dies. remained a British citizen. ; So closely was Forester: iden- Hornblower and Forester were tified with. Hornblower that the | synonymous. In eight novelg/average reader thought he} and countless.short stories he | wrote nothing else. But he did. | took the doughty sea warrior| His first successful novel was | from midshipman to lord ad-|Payment Deferred, published in| miral—from fighting pirates to | 1925. It was the story of a man the Napoleonic wars. who got eee tia ath murder but was later hange or: one he NO ROOM FOR MORE didn’t commit * } Then in 1954 he announced he | [ts:dramatization launched the had so filled the seadog’s life stage and screen career; of the with adventure there was room | late Charles Laughton, 4 - for no more. ! Another screening of a Fores- Mrs. Forester, the former |ter novel--The African Queen- Dorothy Ellen Foster of London, | won the best actor Oscar for the said, however, he was working |Jate Humphrey Bogart. on a new Hornblower adventure ; ‘THE GENERAL’ A HIT In it, before stroke 1% mouths agn A honk he considered one ‘of- One last Hornblower tale is in | his best .was The General, a| his agent's vaul. Tt wag not to | cynical study of British military it went unnoticed in be publishe d until s Fores. thinking. ! \ + | that |Bay. | Forester’s own: seamanship, | boats and small motor sailers. He called writing a ‘‘toilsome bore,”’ but in his prime he: never | let a day go by without putting | 1,000 words on paper. When he wasn't writing. he | was reading. At Dulwich Col- | lege in London, He led-his class though he read for enjoyment at least 10 books a week. He once studied medicine but | |gave it up to write poetry. Hornblower |QUICKEST WAY TO POVERTY | “Poetry — unless you are a songwriter—is the quickest way to reach the poorhouse,"’ he once ' said. Then he switched to biog- | raphy, which paid better but not | |much. After Payment Deferred, his | first fiction, he said: “I was never hungry after that.’” : Forester was born in Cairo the son of a British civil serv- ant. He was educated in‘ Eng- land and made many trips there | even after he established per- manent residence in Berkeley, Calif., in an old Spanish villa overlooked San Francisco He was married to Kathlern | Belcher in 1926 and divorced, 20 vears later He married his sur- | perienced enough to know that The pontiff blessed palms and distributed them to 21 cardinals gathered with him in the Sistine Chapel. Then he put on a red ;cape and a bishop’s miter to walk in procession through the \basilica to the main altar for mass. “Today, as before.” the Pope KUALA: LUMPUR (AP) — Malaysia's prime _ minister made a confession Sunday: The ponies were his undoing. Tunku- Abdul Rahman said his fondness for horse racing was “the root causé of my downfall and temporary set- “ : ‘ sald in a sermon, ‘‘the people ae rh te Soe academic Ca- are invited to choose between 1 : "If it had not been for | this weakness, I might have | been today a successful law- yer’ and perhaps a_ wealthy British Election Finals Are-Given man, instead of . . . a poor and struggling « prime minis- | | tér.’ LONDON (CP) — Complete | Rahman initially flunked his British election party vote in all | law studies in. England. He 30 seats, compared with the made thejgrade on his second vote in the 1964 election: | i try at th@Bage of 46. 1966 1964 The prime minister was (Labor 13,057,941 12,205,808 reminiscing in a» whimsical. Cons “11,418,433 12,002,642 speech at the opening of a Lib 2.397.533 3.099.283 grandstand at the local race Others 452.689 349,415, | track. ‘Totals 27,256,594 “I'm still’ as keen as ever The 1966 vote vercentages, with 1964 bracketed: Labor 47.9 (44.1) Conserve itive 41.9 (43.4), Liberal 8.5 (11.2) on the sport of kings,”’ but added: he. said.” “I'm old and ex- those who_love Christ as the Son I.can't get_rich on horses, so Others 1.7 (1,3). I might as well not.get poor: — - I now attend Facing for the < PARTY GAINS fun of it. ; | Rahman. chided \his cahinet LONDON 2CP) Following ts ministers for not showing in- the final summary of party gains terest in racing - except as ay in, the British election ; revenue-earner for the, govern- ‘| Lab from Cons 47, he ment. | Lab from Lib 2 “A few of them can’f even | Lib from Lab 1 distinguish a horse from a [4b from Cons 3 donkey.” Irish Repub. {rom Cons 1, ‘Unchanged 576 Aa viving. widow in 1949, : ' i Total 630 s o Morell, newly-elected provin “efal president of the Young Progressive Conservative As , speaks with. Prem. icr Walter CENTER, and Hon. E. Davie Fulton, formér justice minister jn the } saciation Shaw ; “YPC PRESIDENT, GUEST, SPEAKERS seve Charles Ca mphells RICHT, lea Recreatiqg, Center Satie. Niefenhaker cavernment Mr. Fulton and Prenuer Shaw ‘ : r were guest speakers at meet- day. (See stories ou pages 8 _ings of the YPC’S in the Basil ~ and 5) ips ay -