me aoa gusans 4 . See PEA ET % ~ The Guardian Is’ For t If l’s Good For The Island. per LONDONERS read ing of the Atlantic Development | Sites .@et news in their evening z lBoard . he The submission | Will be papers as they enjoy a drink prices inthe bar of a Fleet evening. (AP " Wirephote) bagi decélopinent policy. , must /signated growth areas the bud- "ckd a ssh 0 a Geotail Street public house. Tueiday: peg etatgSh pels habe tghigg BES Pate. e : ameter aca x ° - ¢ nian ph me 4 Giettisini aie waar aber wa sionain Eigse ia ti : -e# > Sry: " $% . : ee WEATHER 7 ait - Clear, light winds. Low-hizh 20 and 40, : Thursday: cloudy and milder. re ae af Lovers = Po Edward Island Like The Dew” WN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1965. HALIFAX (CP) — The Atlan- tic Provinces Economic Council -4|Tuesday recommended _ estab- »4| lishment of eight industrial S\growth centres in the Atlantic region with construction of at iegileast -one industrial. park . in ~ieach designated afea e *| The council p ted a 4- page blueprint for regional ‘eco- nomic. development to a meet- avoid attempts ‘“‘to - spread in | even “areas’ for’ assistance should parks, pot be chosen simply. on‘ the ‘tion of land, the progeeees | basis of surplus labor without ‘sites, the installation of power, Charlottetown Included _ As Proposed Growth Area “However; thé submission says facturing. is concentrated ta | “including, the OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Mir- | ister Pearson unveiled the first *> |phase of the Canada assistance’ plan—including greater help for the needy—Tuesday as he en-| tered the tirone speech debate on the heels of a Conservative hon-confidence’ motiaqn. He began sketching’ dein. of | what the governnitnt hopes. to do for those whyjwon't get __ immediate benefits Caniida: Pension Plan = Op- ‘position Leader Diefenbaker 18 PAGES Pearson Gives Details id To Needy Plan | - Dief- Makes: Motion - ~ Of Non-Confidence . the government for failing to tn- tretce a medical care pro- gram. It referred to the ‘‘fail- ure to present specific proposals \for a universal and compre- thensive medicare program for all the people of Canada’ The government should~ act during this aggssion ofeParlia-’ jment.x Some Provinces were ‘already introducing .“‘phoney jPlans . . . with a view to fore. _Stalling _.a__national-—health—in-—— surance plan.” If the zovern- alizati: thi and (pulp and paper mills, smeliers, {ra = Living ‘Ty ake Ss Bes tin. - |e ueatien See. sevion “be |fish. processing plants. and saw- tween ADB and the provincial Thad flayed the goverment for | ment didn't act, it would set the . idesignated an area for assist- |mills will’. be “woepaen’ et bakes and’ low Clock back 25 years. ance with a number of localities | the Se pemimity of _raw Nevin, places.” _ - The prime minister did not ge specified as growth centres. Charlottetown, has beén com- | ay, sailiiaiae _ \into details on all- the welfare a mame reat ieee ae cae ii be'e'gresae GEA tee qrewen conirde -e eee il be voted on ed vr en oes oe ritish axes oostex ae ~ anes ane fect Piss ~ ti Social i ability _and personal | 44.» federal-provincial eon- | provide aie vets ican ‘Sydney. Moncton, Saint John (fect on cnn ee eee eee cane skill in the rescue of 35 sur- (ference this week. said’ Mr : om begin |and Bathurst - Belledune, NB., | Atlantic a expansion and jgrants made — ~~ vivors from a storm-wrecked _ Pearson, the: tadanel sia ae a tae ee LONDON: or ae Reine [stes ton anlinaly 0 #? jensunl sutcmebile liceace- teen Corner Brook and St. ‘Jae, | Gnsonment ey no oe — | tanker on the North Atlantic | |ment would propuse a series of tions twward the cost of health took a beating under the first \per cent, effective next : goes up to £17 10s ($52.50) from |Nfid., aed Charictistowe dheuid {7° cularly — manu- parks. : March 1, 1964. He was a crew suggestions to the provinces to \care for the needy would not major Labor budget in 14 years | he gamete” age tains Hee previous - £15 ($45). with’ be considered growth. centres. member of the destroyer give greater benefits under the interfere with the government's as James Callaghan, chancellor and reduced out- |sharper increases for malt ng ‘conmraced a vac cone | Y ko ¢ Pla ned HMCS Athabaskan. old age assistance program, té determination to, see ail Cana- of the exchequer, pushed taxes lays will reduce { on icyclists and truckers. ‘be constructed in each centre an n (Canadian Forces Photo) provide more help to needy dians covered under a medical up on cigarettes, whisky, wine Britain's overstrained resources |. Callaghan anticipated higher |by the federal . janathers and to have the federal |care scheme. and beer. d {iy about £250,000,000 ($750,000,- licences may reduce road. con- turned over to n il = 4 T Beco TV Switchboard i government pay half the health’ He said te Soret woold -He- also increased the annual {000) a year. gestion, expected in five years’ |thorities for ation,” fe] me RCMP UNIFORM costs of those persons receiving propose removing the - income registration fees on cars and | : to contain about 18,000,000 ve- the APEC brief says. assistance. : |limit from the special ald age trucks and disallowed expense. CIGARETTES GO UP hicles. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) {where it is to serve as the ANGERS DIEF | Mr.-Diefenbaker's motion the. 2ssistance scheme, which now account entertainment, except In Canadian terms, a pack of ; |'WANTS ACTION 5 Bi world’s first commercial com- government no longer enjoys provides a maximum of: $75 & im wooing foreign buyers: | 2 cigarettes,.now selling for {UP 41 PER CENT _ |. ‘The council recommends an A spacecraft y ene i ceaplcations sehelilte. com | OTTAWA (CP) — An irate “tie confidence ‘of : this House |month for persons between 65 : In a stiff, belt-tightening bud- | or 7 cents, goes up im-| On top of-all this, individual immediate start on industrial rocketed ae aes The lobd Ge ition Leader Diefénba- and of the Canadian people” and 69 providing they meet a— get. Callaghan also cancelled |mediately by about seven cents, income tax, as previously tho ax-Truro-and Saint ote, NB. high shove the Atlantic es Ble SP gr go scauannee demanded to know Tues- Recerca: tae Narieee | seen test.° The cost -is split : lax- ig! ocean | : ' had been dealing national -|between the federal and '- ag og peg eg ey pg ig eg) Truro ——|tions Satellite Corp. is to be- iden. on eel lems and the careless indiffer-|incial governments. ae on long - term foreign invest- other 60 cents. An and | Mr. Pearson said the govern ment to curb the drain of Brit- bottle of table wine, selling for_ |ment wants these people to re- ish gold and currency: *~|$1-50 goes up “by “about ceive benefits according to their “We are changing direction,” °C"'S oF more and beer needs and he said it would cad -Callaghan in & two-hour (°°, Will, find the a jextended beyond the age of 70 ; ; cent pint ‘up by. one penny. | ‘Additional benefits would be get. ech Tuesday. an- The : oo ‘proposed for needy mothers, se Test ee Sateen oe Sele te es ca oe ses (mmediately and @ new corpor- changed but from now om, the |DUdset ’ ‘ater ae a Zz few weeks after Prime Min- | : | 950. miles | hold the Canadian West for motion of new session. Yon | cn cont dan domed apeotaman Budget Highlights ister Wilson's Labor govert| BERLIN (AP)—Reacting - to(travel Testrictions om the staff | anes Nigh. ., | Britain, had been treated in |Liberal government is open to $95 q99 000 a year. i. took office last October. | |new Soviet-East German road !of the U:S. mission in Potsdam, | | are bet the transfer orbit, | this way. .Would ae “Royal”’ sever,‘ teats during the” ° , 3 s ges and airport buzzing, | fimiting it to movement. along | must execute a num-' be the next to go » days wide-ranging PLEDGE SOUGHT LONDON (Reuters) — Brit- Britishowned overseas trade |sepbares ax allies demanded |certain roads in East Germany. | |ber of intricate manoeuvres! - or. Favreau said he would throne speec: debate. The opposition leader. said? ish budget highlights: —_ corporations abolished as ‘Battle Ends Tuesday night the Soviet com-| 4 over the next several days te! iook into it reply later. | New Democratic ‘Party Prime” Minister Pearson should Tax imereases totalling an part of measures to —— mander ‘‘put an immediate end |, AtTiving in Berlin, chancellor | attain its Stationary outpost.” | The R announced |Leader T. C. Douglas later have included in the throne extra £217,000,000 ($651,000,- advantages of investing ov to the harassment” of the Ber- “Wes ae pant reporters: | Sometime Thursday morning,| March 22 that it was stand- [moved an: amendment to the speech a pledge his cabinet - 000) a year to curb inflation- seas rather than in Britain. In Viet Nam : lin lifelines. e wi w before ter-| about 40 hours ‘after launching, ardizing the general duty _ [nencuatidence enotion that cited! (Continued on page 3 Col. 6) Beg Ba ay Ngee ees +e eee ir In growing. displeasure over a |. |@ ground station plans to send form of the RCMP. All ; Cigarette nee by caaaee hes, ‘iactat | SAIGON (AP)—A fierce three- | meeting of West German The state department in|a signal to ignite a small pay-| pers would wear the dark : : 2 p. cents) for-a package : tre entertainments ‘ex ‘gay battle in the swampy. rice |Patliament jn Berlin today, the | Washington said the Allies are | load motor. This will jockey, the ‘cap with the veliew | : terands. bringing the price to A tougher capital gains iax *| fiekd south of Saigon endeil | East..Germans during the day Studying appropriate measures satellite out of the elliptica) hand and bine trousers with e en ure a e. Se. 5d (81% cents). on-gains-on all assets except (Tuesday. night - with-276 Viet asain. teinporarily. closed: the + a if Sereomnet com oo Ager = ger gl ee re | faced a eee Li ane ; : plired, | 2utobahn an Viet je swept |tinue which jacket will- i : (60 hates ah . ae ot "well as a ie tae vs. csititecy " dpekeatann re.| low over U.S. and French air-| The-U-S., British and French | Points wil} be about 22,300 miles; The * announcement said : whisky or gin and a penny on £1,000 4$3,000). The rate will fparded today. Six Americans | Ports. |commanders sent identical pro- | high. | there would be no change in E a pint on beer en be 30 per cent for. individuals died in the action. |The high point in the war of | tests.to Gen Peter K. Koshevoy,| “The small, motor is scheduled! the dress uniform consisting |. WS nnoun : e Car registration tax to in and 35 per cent for compan- | U.S. B-57 jet bombers pounded |BeTves May come when most 'of commander - in - chief in|to be. triggered above Brazil.| of the wide - brimmed hat, : erease to £17 10s ($52.50). a_ ies. Communist positions with tons |the 499 members of the West Germany, saying Soviet| Then ground controllers plan to! scarlet tunic and breeches. ; ‘ year from £15 ($45). _ Cancellation of the tactical of explosives during the first|German lower house sit down /authorities will be held “re- delicately fire small jets Bans the time of the announce-~— Provincial treasurer [A.| The second highest bidder was An extra £20 ($60) of all _ reconnaissance plane TSR-2; {major encounter with guerrillas for the first bundestage meet-|sponsible for. any possible con-| gradually nudge Early Bird to an RCMP. spokesman |Farmer yesterday announced the..syndicate of Greenshields incomes =: be free of tax. saving £35,000,000 ($105,000,- lin months in the Mekong Delta |ing since 1958. in this divided sequences o/ interference with| its final target point in space— | said” ‘the change is really to | the>sale of. $3,500,000 Province of Incorporated, and the Toronto- Special treatment of 000) we yee F F paddies, city 110 miles, behind the iron jthe Allied right of access to/22,300 miles above the equator provide more comfort for |Prince Edward Island 5% per Dominion Bank, who offered curtain. Berlin, either in. the air or | east of the Brazilian coast-| men on general duty. It will cent 20 year non-callable deben- |$96.875. Soviet authorities clam ped 'the ground.” é also standardize the uni- tures, to be dated May 1, 1965, The treasurer said the pr- Is Discussed At Meeting Techniques for handling live | lobsters out of —: and keep- McLeese continued,. a2 z = e s a SFE F ° TT dy “s i ceil EPyt i s a ee LRA Ri eee ifily mi | gE as z i Tie 2.8 s “Recently fed lobsters," “have Dr. poor hc tesa in er than unfed lobsters. Before Board thea- shipment in air,” Dr. McLeese |taminated through aay plumb- | nion Build- , emphasized, “lobsters should be ‘ing or improper use.” i keeping with the | 'starved for about three days.” iu i 3 of one of the| The desired temperature for WARNING GIVEN aggressive and |shipping _ lobsters, winter establishments that ly affected by temper-| health _ eigineering, transported F and by lack of lobsters i z ? nae sie Pwo v0. a i abies shale biti oh aA duen® AR x si thal By a th pd z _?% ve 3 ” moisture in | ‘and welfare for Nova Scotia, used for cooling purposes natural habit-|and D.C. Champion, division of illness and deaths would wherever they) sanitary engineering, depart-|have been caused, Mr. for use a3; ment of health, Charlottetown. | said. delicacy they | ‘grees . Fahrenheit. fisheries WATER QUALITY Andrews, The importance of water qual- in contaminated water.” The course stu- ity in canning plants was em-| explanation was that “some of lobsters 'phasized by D.H. Cullen, public the cans were not properly seal-| national ed”. If clean water had been! that! summer, he said, is somewhere the illustration of the outbreak ~ tourists and other tra- between 32 degrees and 40 de- of food poisoning in the United | j A suitable water supply under the act, Mr. Cullen explained, is \‘an adequate supply of ‘clean, | le | Sanitary ‘water from an ere: In Prince Edward Island, |was explained, few drilled-well | ed. lear = unacceptable | Sponsored by - lo de | the we an tate consthoests ia \ocench of the Canada depart-| "he said, at 412 suitable because o {coliform ahrenheit for five | bacteria contamination.” it | INSIDE TODAY Stee e eee eeeeee ajwater the next factor, he said, y not fit into /higher oxygen consumption and |is to maintain it in this condition | alae at a course | will die one to three days soon- throughout the plant by ensur- Having a clean safe source ot | ing that it does not become con- A warning with a punch was | Kingdom last year ‘‘believed caused by cooling of: canned) meat. after.it_ had .been. = the) not | Cullen | | The same thing. could — in any other plant and when this | occurs “it is not only the one plant which was negligent that suffers, but all plants canning the same uct,” he caution- the inspection | ment of fisheries inspection | ; branch, and the department * ot | i fishéries in Prince Edward Is-| land; the course is being attend- | ed by neatly 40 managers. and) foremien from lobster and other fish canneries in Prince Edward | stand. , The four - day traifling course was formally opened by Leo F. Rossiter, provincial Min’ i 7 ister of Fisheries, and W.A. ‘ Murphy, Officer - in - charge of , the federal fish itispection labo- “Gooly,” a - six-inéh gave an ee of the ag- * Gielisch ° of ma ah 1 OA MAMI te @ Mon ratoty in Charlottetown who, gopher’ befriended by Kiaus enda and its aims. | years ago, came out ‘has ’ sinaianineadeannadns <c0 He TOR oo reg erg 4 Silica eel iil ll. 2M |to ‘a syndicate comprised of Island Loan Act, ceeds from the sale of these de- |bentures will be used for paying floating indebtedness of the pro- vince. The issue of debentures is made under the legislative au- thority of The Prince Edward 1965. which ‘au- thorizes the government to raise “from time to time by way of loan such sum or sums of mon- ey, not exceedifz $6,500.000.00. as may be-deeméd expedient for any or all of the purposes men- PET GOPHER "ENDS LONG SLEEP burrow Sunday to end a long winter hibernation. Stays in the Gielisch home during the spring and summer Chou En-lai Tuesday suggesting that a solution to the Viet Nam conflict is up to -the parties directly involved. Diplomatic sources said the oral message came through the! Algerian United Nations ambas- | sador, Tewfik Bouattoura, who | saw Chop in Algiers last week and arrived back in New York | Monday night. | They said Chou took the posi- ition that a settlement of the | fighting is up to the people tak- | img part in it and indicated that | | he meant the Viet Cong. Com- imunists in South Viet Nam on . the one hand and the United! ., States on the other—ar alterna- ‘tively South Viet Nam. | Scholarship ‘Is Awarded |City Student The Canada Council has an- ;nounced the names of 32 stu- dents who have been offered scholarships to study for theit a degree in the humani- "the social. sciences and the \fise arts. Included in this- list is the fame of Ian Ross Robertson of fl Green Street, Charlottetown. -Robertson is studying at main University, Montreal. The scholarship winner is the son of Mrs. A.S. Robertson, fo imerly of Mermaid. The average amoung of Sch and ducks back down his hole’ | in the fall. “Kidi the cat’ - tolerates him. (CP Wirephote) jto quit before the 1962 election. techolarship is, $1,500. © ts ase Gairdner and Company Ltd.; ner and Smith Inc., La Maison , On Solution $97.10 — a cost-to the province United © Nations Secretary-Gen-' the result of a ‘call for tenders Coromunist China’‘s Premier fered ranged frém $95.14 per {tioned in the Act.” MISSUS PUTS FOOT DOWN eS Bankers Bond Corporation Lim- { Chou Comments lited; Merrill Lynch Pierce Fen- | Bienvenu Ltd., and Atlantic Se- curities Limited at a price of In Viet Nam 5 oe : UNITED NATIONS (AP)! —| Farmer said this sale.was eral U Thant was reported to and bids were received from have received a message from | eight syndicates and the price of- hundred par value to $97.10. Herridge Plans To Quit Politi OTTAWA ‘(CP)—The missus younger-man should have the has put her foot down.” opportunity to represent the New Democrat H. W. (Bert) riding.” he says ye Mr. Herridge has advised the riding organization to look for a younger candidate of . ‘long residence’ in the constituency who “understzads the needs and moods of the riding.” This instruction is given with his own 1945 nomination in mind: The old CCF party tried to impose a candidate on the riding. the local. association re- belled, and nemninated. Mr. Her- ridge under the banner of The Peoples’ CCF. In 1948 he and other independest CCF mem- bers were re-admitted te the Herridge. the baron of the Kootenays, was explaining why he has decided to retire from the hurly burty of House of Commons politics to his huge ranchajin British Columbia when’ the next election is called Several factors influenced his decision: His age—he is 70a desire to work the ranch again and a hankering to write the colorful story about. the moving of the Herridge Britain to Canada But the main reason, he said in an interview, is that his wife family from wants him to retire so they can fold spend scene time back in Brit-' Mr. Herridge says he has lost ish Columbia. no interest in federal politics Mrs. Herridge had urged him but feels that “20 years is long fenough" in Parliament During that time he has watched four prime nfinisters and created difficulties fer ™many- ministers while éfteg “ charming or amusing the Com mons with his wit and colerfal language. . Mw é * Her persuasion prompted him on election night in’ 1963 to In- forts his supporters in Koote- nay West riding that he had no intention of seeking the New Democrat nomination again. “H is only right that some 2 tgeat Ment cet aetenreth arse eta S. Aca - ee