If It's Good For The Island ‘ The Guardian Is. For: It Che Guar Sunny, becoming ora WEATHER cloudy by evening southerly 20, > Low- winds in.veasing to high 52 and 75. ¢ e . fe | | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 189 gioneet 2 meint, Eom Sat “oy te Sat ates CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1965. nor wor® SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES MEETING IS CALLED Montreal Postal Strike May End Deadlock Today MONTREAL (CP) — Mont-\been called for 2 p.m. EDE ‘he é : realer's postal workers doggedly | Monday. see oe Union officials de- his investigation.” continued their strike during the|clined to specify its purpose. weekend amidst indications that! But there seemed to hos aot Be yo aes ge the deadlock may end Monday.| nite feeling around headquar-| indications, too, that in Brees Strike headquarters _an- jters that-an interim report mayreal it has burgeoned into some (Reuters) — nounced Saturday that a gen-! be forthcoming by Monday from | ¢pj eral. meeting of — strikers. _had-judge—J.-C.--Anderson. pies of ¢ cxmente fer Setter lumbia and Ontario as well as Quebec. SYDNEY, N.S.W. Saturday and brought . them rushing out of their farmhouse C | to see—they reported later—a | TERRACE, B.C. (CP)—right the Canadian Postal Employees’ tying saucer” hovering over persons died in this northern in- , vadecs swith (he farmyard. The object-had three rods pro | truding, one from the top and! traffic history. i was no reason to summon a @Mitted two beams light, | RCMP investigating the head- ‘general meeting of the strikers. they said, | Se | ‘Judge Anderson was a | Bointed conciliator by the fed-|business community is groggy jeral government following the/from the effeets of ne mail ser- : | walkout that began July 22 and vice. jat one” time included postal! The fact that a general meet- ing. has been called appeared ngage .| Meeting of strike leaders with t go vd Boome coe — ‘Postmaster - General Tremblay on collision between a converti- : bie-and—a~ second—car—in—the —Prior_to the announcement of _ The object stayed there for | workers in Vancouver, Toronto. : | B ( Dogs Bark At N a o significant in itself. one of! that the government had noth- passing lane of the Terrace-Kit- oes meeting, Mr. Houle | 4bout I5 minutes before moviag| and other centres in British Co- a Flying Saucer 8 | |CHANGE IN ATTITUDE ‘ As late as Friday William Houle, Montreal president of the worst road crashes in B.C. ing new to offer and that there two from the ee it) imat highway seven miles south 52/4: — ae ae of here said a bizarre twist of| “‘We are just waiting for the, Two of the McClintock boys, fate was involved. news. I think it is likely that 12 and, 10, said they saw it the A-girl victim in one of the the judge will make recommen-|4aY before but kept it secret, cars was the sister of two broth-| dations about postmen’s sala-, The incident was reported at ers who were killed in the other ries in an interim report so as Goonumbla, only five miles’ + working conditions as well as’ ap- salaries and that the Montreas | A chorus of howling dogs woke! up the McClintock family early! | | On Presid JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP)— President Johnson ordered the defence department Sunday to tary job to ease the manpower drain of the U.S: troop buildup in South Viet Nam. With troop needs mounting, he told defence secretary Robert S. McNamara: “I want you to be absolutely certain that there is no waste or misapplication of America’s manpower in the de- partment of defence.” identified only as a prominent Republican, saying he broke a presidential. confidence on delib- erations about Viet Nam and put out untrue information. Johnson said this man was the trim away every unneeded mili- Meeting reporters at his LBJ | Ranch, the president also | US. Army Trims Jobs ent’s Orders Troop Needs Are Mounting {mation Agency, succeeding Donald Wilson. He said he reviewed in detail with Ambassador Arthur J, 'Goldberg the reactions of United Nations diplomats and ‘more than 70 foreign countries to his decision on a Viet Nam buildup. : Johnson made his announce ments and statements then an- swered a few questions. : Johnson's manpower orders. were in a memorandum to Me Namara. “I want him to be absolutely certain there's no waste of mat ” the pr. ‘Johnson added he wants Me Namara to ‘concentrate on |personnel to-Viet Nam, forthe |general augmentation of ouf lactive duty military strength’ ‘and for the increased readiness esident said, < } ; ' ; , source of published reports that |of our reserve forces makes it’ “\...far going in the opposite direc- to get.the strike over with. Then from a big radio telescope. | = | the opposition of Senate Demo- |imperative that all military per _ . SMuggling racket. is. scheduled ‘stiri oct" NLS. Leads AccidentToll, | Weekend Roundup Indicates in the convertible as: Ozzie Le- gace, 28, of Terrace, who has near their home at Port Wil- relatives in Grand -Falls, N.B.; John Seneiw, 27. of Terrace,! whose parents live in Edmon- ton; William Jepherson, 26, and his brother Earl, 2, both of By THE CANADIAN PRESS | At Jeast seven persons died in- ams, N.S. The victims were Tegrace. - ; Victims in the second car accidents in the Atlantic” Pro-| Mentified as four-year-old: Mary were identified as: Clif- | vinces ducing this weekend, live | fan ee and Carol Ana ford Cirtchlow, in his early 20's: | of them in traffic his wife, ‘Marie, 17: Melvin Jen- | : : " ner, in his early 20's and: Carol | Nova Scotia led. the. toll_ with Ann Jepherson, 20, sister of the | four highway fatalities. New! ~-borthers_in_the other car, All| Brunswick has recorded two | . : | were from Terrace. - | deaths and Nowionndlned” one, into the path-of-—a—passenger- Seven of the victims died on Two young sisters died Fri-| Ti". The accident occurred at the spot and the eighth on the day night when struck by a car | way to hospital. jas they walked along the road ~ Rivard Location Seventeen-year-old John Gil- lette_of Bedford, N.S., died et i = i At Minto, N.B., a 45-year-old | Fredericton construction com- | | pany owner, Charles E. Wey- Ss e eci e | man, was.killed when struck by : . : | ° aD. : the. ‘whirling propeller_of__his S¢Vet_its new ties with Commu-; Washington apparently has not ; : % ., Plane. | LAREDO, Tex. (CP)—Lucien| U.S. district judge B. C. Con- Joseph Jailet. 7, of St. Ea- Rivard, a Montrealer charged nally increased Rivard’s bond ward. N.B., died Saturday after in the U.S. as a conspirator in from- $150,000 to $500,000 before being struck by a car near his | -was taken to Houston from | home... _.,at_Washington, Ayu seee FOOD Cyr! A. Davies, left, gen- eral manager of Gulf Garden Foods, looks on as Premier Walter R. Shaw shakes the hand‘ of Jens Moe, president Pakistan Continues Red Ties Despite Growing U.S. Frowns RAWALPINDI (AP) — Presi- dent Mohammed Ayub Khan said Sunday Pakistan will not nist countries fo improve de- teriorating relations with the United States. In a rapid broadcast* aimed d_Pak- of Gulf Garden Foods Lid.. at the opening ceremonies Sat- urday of the Gulf Garden pro- cessing plant at Georgetown. The function was attended by His speech left in question 14 years of economic and military co-operation with the U.S. since l initiated moves either. | Pakisatn has received more i than $5,000,000,000. in economic and military, aid since 1951 and any peace PLANT OFFICIALLY OPENED AT GEORGETOWN ing for some time, but. only erupted into” public view last month when Washington an- nounced it was delaying new foriegn- aid -commitments. - Ayub said “‘our friends in the West’ do not understand _ that all Pakistan wants is what he called normal relations with its | Survives- “| WOODRIDGE, N.Y.” (AP)—A Montana led him to decide against calling to active service U.S. military reservists. : Johnson announced last Wed- nesday the draft will be more than doubled and 50,000 new end also fresh food stuffs from | American troops will be sent to Island farms: (See story on yg Nam immediately to boost page 5.) |U.S. forces there to 125,000, _......_ SAYS STORY MALICIOUS ‘Frail Boy — — | The president said the story jmot to call reservists was pdlit- ‘|ically motivated and added: = i jperhaps malicious.” 4-Day Ordeal "iemcor named robert _w. | Akers, a retired Texas neyspey jper man friend, to become de- frail nine-year-old boy, lost for |puty director of the U.S. Infor- four days in swampy woodland where others before him have. | disappeared and perished. was) rescued Saturday. | | “Take me back to my. camp” were Hershe I. Babad's first | words when Theodore Houy of | \the U.S. Air Force man came| .. Se ‘upon him. The boy, hungry wat}.. LONDON (Reuters) — Prime alert, was sitting onthe ground, | Minister Wilson, girding for his leaning ‘against a tree, in a | first clash Monday with Edward forest clearing. Houy gave him | Heath, La_candy. bar... __|leader, faced a flank attack that -Mansfield—had-urged him | “1 would brand-it-untrue~agd- the. new Conservative | |which there is a direct military requirement,” Johnson told Mé- Namara. “To this end, I ask that you ,once again_review the functions now being performed by. milt tary personnel with a. view te eliminating unnecessary fune- tions or, where functions « are \mecessary, but. do not have te be performed by military per« sonnel, accomplishing them is other ways.” - | Johnson- said he and | apent ‘‘a delightful and i weekend’ reviewing -world re |The president said -he to return to Washington, t. foe seid they talked 4= well about the financial problems | confronting the UN. Wilson Faces Flank Attack In Clash With Tories Today | “I believe there are about 9 |(Labor) backbenchers who feel tas I-do. yet “Although I have not action to the Viet Nam buildup, ~~ heard of any active su 1. cratic Leader Mike Mansfield of |50nnel are assigned to duty for | o be arraigned here™ s—more—to~sustain—its—eur--eighbors, China ana een “4 = : ana 0 Tele OF Wind sta ““(Monday’ “in federal court. ~ vin A “A Montreal newspaper said sero Nald > drowned” uldimagine that a. ~eolleagues will -follow--mgy- ig for-friends;-not-meed - cacti ceca ee : ‘ alt esacennnebcatsinrisasenaantamnaampanioniniortin iti swinvahoes Our. relations, w United |, Hershel, _ siting “child PM Frent-economic.improvements,—~<i tes ran into difficulties wMen, Weighs” only 33” po ult @'s.~ hail Labor ~perty- eee meee BT me ce The whereabouts of Rivard remained a mystery Sunday. A U.S. marshal took the Canadian out of the Harris County jail in Houston: Friday but a . Webbp, iq is to be arraigned is lo- County jail spokesman here_in- sisted Rivard had not. arrived in this Texas-Mexican border city. Informed sources said the shroud of secrecy is designed to prevent underworld efforts to help Rivard escape or to kill him to keep him silent, Rivard managed~ to escape March 2 from Bordeux jail in Montreal and was not recap- tured until July 16. ‘Friday it had received word the - swimming in a pond : few miles | |bail would be posted. Authori-| from his home. | ities here and in Canada denied | Cary Grant any such knowledge. The federal court where Ri- cated just a few blocks from Ayub’s speech was devoted mostly to a quarrel with Wash- ington. Pakistan has “been un- * |happy with Washington's aid to; has India and Washington frowned on Pakistan’s warming up to Communist . countries. ‘ Ayub said Pakistan will ‘'re- order our priorities’ in econ-| imomic planning “to reduce ~ de- | pendénce on foreign aid: The trouble between the two | Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza- | jtion allies has been smoulder- the point at which 76 pounds of heroin was seized 21 months ago. Attempts to “block Rivard’s ‘extradition from Canada to face the U.S. charges resulted in the Dorion inquiry into bribery and coercion involving Canadian government officials. Rivard was extradited rapidly following his capture near Montreal. ‘Marriage ‘Leaks Out BRISTOL, England (AP) ;Movie actor Cary Grant, 61, was secretly married in Nevada jlast month? His fourth bride is blonde American actress Dianne Can- ;}mon, 27, his constant companion |for more than three years. Two Georgia Churches Reject Negro Groups AMERICUS, Ga. (AP)—Two racially - intégrated groups of civil rights demonstrators were unsuccessful Sunday in_at- tempts’ to enter the _ First Baptist and the First Methodist whites-only churches in Ameri- cus, a city torn by -two weeks of bloody racial violence and a slaying. At the First Baptist, Fire Chief H. K. Henderson, a church deacon, told the demonstrators: “T can tell you seriously, if you come down here looking for vio- lence, you're going to get it; if you_come down here looking for bloodshed, you're going to get it.” The demonstrators left with- out incident. At the First Methodist, at- tended by Mayor T. Walker Griffin, a group of 12 white men stood in a line at the top of the steps leading to the church. A group of teen-agers and young pefsons stood behind them. ; Negro leader Willie Bolden of the Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference said: ‘“‘We just want to worship.” An unidentified white e@hurch ; official answered: ‘‘We don't have room for you.” | In Seattle, Wash, Ben W. | Friesen, the bride's father, said ithe wedding took place July 22. | English-born Grant, here with |Dianne, let slip the secret of |his marriage Saturday. He said in an interview: -‘‘We {kept it secret because marriage }is a Very private affair and. T prefer to do things quietly, with- out fanfare or intrusion.” | To keep things that way Grant engaged in a battle of wits with ‘correspondents Sun- day. The. staff at the Royal Hote}, where Grant~ and his~ bride’ are staying, told chillers that the ice had left at 6 a.m. “for Five_Ne 5 ees iptaved \t e country,” However, they re- lame ene, ohne ae men | ™ained in their third-floor suite. {attacked demonstrators shortly | visits MOTHER 'before ‘funeral services for.An-| The couple made a trip Sat- |drew A. Whatley, a 21-year-old jyrday to a nursing home at jwhite man shot to death on @ nearby Clifton, where Grant's: istreet corner Wednesday night. |37.year-old mother, Mrs Elsie Two Negroes have been charged Leach, is a patient. : with. murder. | Grant and Diane met four | Henry Fredericks, an Ameri-| years ago when he saw her on | cus Negro, was treated for head 3 television show. jeuts after he was struck by a@/ Grant's first marriage in 1934 actress Virginia Cherrill |pistol wielded by a white man. | to Denny LeNow, 21, a civil jasted less than a year. In 1942 |rights worker from Sheboygan, |he married Woolworth heiress |Wis., was among the injured. Barbara Hutton and that mar- |Civil rights leaders earlier re- riage was dissolved in 1945. In ter the Baptist church. Only one | group went to the First Metho- | dist. | | The ‘demonstrators turned. | away from the Methodist church iknelt on the sidewalk and {prayed before leaving. jported that LeNow was struck | 3949 he married actress Betsy | 'with a pistol but they later said | prake Fredericks was hit with the gun. | years. Vacation Rush and this lasted nine twood career eight years ago “lwhen a W Brothers pro- © | : i ; _| ducer saw a theatre pro- Begins In Italy (duction whi she was attend- 5 jing ROME (AP)—Italy’s big sum-/for a bit part in a movie. Since mer vacation rush started Sun-|then she has ‘appeared im a day. Most Italians traditionally number of motion pictures and Miss Cannon’ began her Holly- 4 university and signed her f Bolden said_he is a Methodist; begin their vacations Aug. 1. television shows. the churchman replied: “I don't Authorities estimated 400,000; Her most recent part was the ‘eare what your religion is." omans—a fifth of the city’s | lead in the touring stage pro- Both groups=there were about population—left the capital by | duction of How to Succeed in aix persons in each—tried to en- ltrain and auto. | Busitiess Without Really Trying: : * ye OR ry PU NR, STOTT TNL Be GEM ee Te day whete they went to visit nny MPA ny erent, > ab sd | | 7: 4 contrary to a clear understand-|been the’ object of a 1,000-man) ing, arms aid was rushed to search since he vanished last India without prior consultation’ Wednesday from a camp near! with us, he said. “Subsequent here. to that the United States en-| In the last ll three ered into a long-term agree- other young boys wandered off ment with India under which|into the woodland. Two were years William Warbey, a 61-year-old Laborite| maverick, astonished the government Friday night by demanding Wilson’s resignation, election pledges. Warbey, who has paid several contending that he had broken | example on Monday and ab- stain from voting in the censure debate unless Mr. Wilson stands down (resigns).”’ Warbey’s announced intention |of abstaining would reduce Wil- }son’s basi¢ balloting edge for | military | massive military assistance ts found being poured into that country. “In spite of this we continued to reason with the United State: | in hope they would appreciate the damger to which we were being exposed through their assistance to India. That our fears were not un- founded was proved beyond doubt by the massing of ‘ae whole of the Indian army along our borders during the last ©) | three months. + | I ll | » = as a Grant’s mother The 6l-year- old actor married Miss Can- mon quictly i” Nevada last (AP Wirephota” by Bogus Cheques, Bills Seized MONTREAL (CP) — A com- Tbined force of Canadian -and, United States police descended Saturday and seized counterfeit bills and travellers cheques with a face value of more than $400,- RCMP agents _working owith the FBI, United States Secret Service, Montreal fraud squad and Bank of America . agents, arrested one man and seized close to $200,000 in. counterfeit Bank of America $100 travel- i Jers cheques. . It was described as one of the largest seizures in recent years and one of a series of arrests in Canada and _ the United States aimed at break- ing an international ring. The arrested man, Gary Ball, 31, of Montreal, was charged with possession after police found the fake money in a small satchel. Police said the bills all came from the same plate but have a wide variety of serial num- bers. INSIDE TODAY month cable trom L\,ondon). + ? found. Houy from which he disappeared. and one was never - stumbléd on the boy 3 about five miles from the camp visits to North Viet Nam, has |Monday’s crucial vote to only been a strong critic of Wilson’s |tW°. policy of, support fomthe U.S.| The government, however, in thé Viet Nam war.. ~ |seemed assured of staying in of- He accused the prime minis- |fice because of strong signs that Mercury Lamp Inventor Dies PALO ALTO, Calif. ‘(AP)—Dr. Cornelis Bol, inventor “of the ter of reneging on election }the 10 Liberals in the House of ‘promises about a national in-|Commons would not vote with come guarantee for old persons, |the Conservatives on the cen- cheaper housing mortgages and | Sure motion. a new initiative for world peace.| Thus, eVen if Warbey ab The Labor party's patliamen- |stained the Liberal votes would tary manager, Edward Short, | give Wilson a comfortable mar- mercury vapor lamp, died at|retorted that Warbey was ‘‘talk- his home near here Friday at jthe age of 80. A former research associate at Stanford Univer- | sity, he perfected the lamp— jone of the most powerful light tsourcesin-existence—in— 1939. | WASHINGTON: (CP) chief-flaw in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization is Presi- ‘dent de Gaulle of France, im- plies a report prepared by some old American NATO buffs for the Atlantic «Council of the United States. De Gaulle’s name ig. never mentioned but his presence colors the whole tone of a re- on whether changes in |NATO are. necessary or desire- able. - - : . The Atlantic Council is a private group—national groups exist in each of the 15 NATO countries including Canada—and these organizations meet an- nually. The NATO treaty itself of 1949, on which NATO is based, is as good as ever, says the report. Any changes in the or- | ganization of NATO should be |toward more—not less—integra- | tion,:a view directly contrary. to |the doctrine that de Gaulle has ibeen appearing to preach. | The study committee, which ‘|prepared the ‘report, included | Livingstone. Merchant,. twice |inga-lot of nonsense as he does |frequently. - . . He should re- sign his seat and fight as an in- dependent.” | Saturday, Warbey told report- ers: U.S. GROUP PREPARES REPORT - ton a downtown Montreal hotel) 7 ' DeGaulle Slows NATO The ican ambassadors-as-John- Hick- erson and Theodore C. Achilles, who drafted the NATO treaty. ‘None. now is in government service.- MAY LEAVE GROUP Official American government policy toward de Gaulle, whose latest tactics include boycotting some NATO exercises, is si- lence. Some think de Gaulle ac- tually may leave the Alliance. “Despite whatever real or ap- parent -improvement—has--taken— place in East-West relations, there is yet far too little evi- dence of any change in the Sicily Swelters Under Heat Wave ROME ‘AP) — A scorching Sirocco wind blew north from ithe African desert Sunday and ‘drove temperatures throughout Sicily up to a blistering 106 degrees. Sicilian cities _ were virtually deserted as their -pop- ulations sought relief at:the is- (there was an apparent gin of a dozen votes. 'There re- {mained the possibility that, as -Warbey~predicted;-a-number-—of dissident Labor MPs who share his resentment against Wilson would follow his lead in abstain- jing. basic Communist objectives of world-wide Communist domina- tion to justify the West in letting down its guard,”’ says the study. --Future “defence-_of whatever | kind will need to be more inte- grated. : The report also notes with re- gret. the failure. of NATO to de- velop more of the political and economic trappings which Cate ada, for one, attempted to ip- ject. Canada's insistence re- sulted in the addition of Clause 2. providing framework Tar éco- nomic moves, over lukewarm American feelings. The report quotes the late ,American senator Arthur Van- |denberg on the vulnerability of the Alliance to the -first. Soviet peace offensive unless it- adopted More than military equipment and comments: “The prophetic truth of his words has beeh demonstrated by the discord among the Allies which has increased every time ight re- duction in East-West nsions, The long-range future of the At- lantic. Alliance depends upon land’s many beaches. At the Gen. Alfred Greunther, who suc- same timé, snow fel] in the Dol- ceeded Dwight D. Eisenhower ‘omite Alps in North italy. and “as NATO's" supreme com- the- village of-San_ Candido re- | mander: and such former Amer- ported a temperature ‘of 23. f |U.S. ambassador to Canada; developing positive Atlantic un- ‘ity of the type which would be in the common interest even if the Communist threat had never | existed,” :