8’ «r 7"»! .nn— é r If it's G‘b'od For The island .The 'Guardi an is For It who @otmotinn “‘Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Sunny with a few cloudy intervals and warmer; winds southwest 15. Low-high 52 and 75. BRACKLEY Judging for the Prince Ed- ward Island Dairy Princess was with Elaine Bryenton of Brack- Fire In Royal York Hotel Pu’rs 800 Guests To Flight TORONTO (CPl—A fire broke out on the sixth floor of the Royal York Hotel {Jere early Saturday. causing an estimated 533,000 damage and sending 800 guests streaming into the lobby and out onto the street. fire. believed to have started by someone smoking in bed. destroyed a third - floor droom occupie . a who registered as‘r Lloyd Downey of London. 0nt.r Police later arrested .Iohn‘ Francis Boswell. 48. of Toronto and charged him with obtain- ing accommodation by fraud and theft. Poice said Boswell told them he fell asleep and awakened to ringl the room filled ' is actually the sixth. Tire lower convention floors are not num- bered. Damage. estimated at $28,000 to the building and $5.000 to furnishings. was ' to about four rooms, All 22 floors in the hotel. the largest in the Commonwealth. w e r e smoke- filled. The building. at Front GIRL " Guy Girprdeau. trainer Mistral ley chosen winner. The five crmtestarnts seen here are (left) Phyllis Taylor. Millview; Flor- ence Richards. Alberry Plains: and York Streets in downtowni . . _ . Toronto. contains more than 100} was treated for minor mJurles suites and 1.600 bedrooms Among those forced to evacu- ate their ooms was Jim Trimble. coach of Montreal Al- ouettes. and his entire club. he team was here to meet Toronto Argonauts Saturday night in an Eastern F o o t ball Conference W D: me. Also ghtciub s a n d on the guest list were inger Dorothy Dand- actress Sherree m ridge North. Four persons were taken to hospital for treatment and later released. TRAINER OVERCOME sen DAI PRINCESS for football club“ was. overcome by smoke when e knocked on d oors to: arouse guests. Mrs. Frances Fitzgerald of Middleton, N.S.. fractured her ankle when she fell from a line of bedclothes from her room to the roof of the main mezzanine 11 feet below. She and her hus- band. Peter were taken from the. roof by aerial ladder and sent to hospital. SCORES 0F FIERY CROSSES SEEN- Racial Violence Flares I- Across Sou’rhWes’rern U .S. JACKSON. Miss. (AP) -—- Ra- cial violence flared in the south- ern United States during the weekend. leaving one dead. sev- eral persons injured and scores of burning crosses dotted across the countryside. A rash of incidents were re- ported in Jackson. Miss. Satur- day night. while other major flare-ups occur G wood. Miss. and Albany. Ga. Most of the cross burnings were in Louisiana and Mississippi. Police at Jackson arrested two young white men for shoot< ing a Negro. The victim. Willie Earl Guynes. 18. was not seri- ously wounded. Police charged Markus Perkins. and . . Hawkins. both in their 205. with shooting with intent after police said they shot G ynes in the thigh with a .n-calibre pistol. 5 I a . About the same time. Philip Hooker. 19.year-old white civil rights worker and student at Princeton University. was beaten by a youth with a base- ball bat at a busy intersection. ocker, of Corning. N.Y.. was admitted to hospital. SIX CROSS BURNINGS A cross was burned at the in- tersection after the attack and five other cross burnings were reported in the Mississippi capl~ tal. an earlier incident. five workers for the Council of Fed- erated Organizations reported ce that eight or 10 shots were fired at their car on a Jackson street. Police recovered three bullets from the car. At Greenwobd. Silas McG’ice. w-year-old Negro civil rights Bandit Tells Court Hoped For TORONTO (CP) -- Russell Bobday. 34. brother of a man bank robbery Friday. pleaded guilty in court Saturday to attempted armed robbery And was remanded until Thurs- day for sentence. Hood”. in a statement read mdMaglIh-ata Donald Graham. . . "We ruined we'd get 820.000 from in. bank. but i guess i 'mfimontbulbaurco on how." ' We leaner Ronald, 33. 3301 between the eyes by Const_ James 1' at the bank ent- “300. was h critical condition in in following reams! of I build: from his temp . lie in about“ statement Rounders and he a: up the our of the look branch i $20,000 in East - end Toronto. When police appeared. "I grabbed a couple of the staff andwalkcd towards the front door. I heard a shot and saw my b all." Magistrate Graham read Hobday's criminal record. 1“ ifie Phyllis Jones. Pownal: Lindra Dockendorff. North River: and Miss Bryenton. Miss Jones was second place winner. (See story on page 2.) .Iack Gardiner of Winnipeg ospital and released. Edith Brouillard. a third-floor chambermaid. was the first to come upon the fire when she saw smoke billowing from Dow- ney's immediately = called for help. . l at CHARLO'ITETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1964. "mafia" SEVEN CENTS Greek Cypriots Are Joyful Over Russia's Aid Offer l i De Gaulle Hos Nuclear Appeal marking the successful Allied r On Aug. the American 36th. 45th and 3rd Divisions—with a token force of French armored troops and British paratroopers—opeoed a second front in the liberation of downfall of Nazi Germany. Gaulle capped a day-long series of patriotic ceremonies along the beaches with a speech ]to thousands assembled in Tou- on. landings on the RiViera 20 years tober after 20 years of service ago during the Second World Haida was towed to Sydney. War to sound again his call for where she was later declared‘ an independent French nuclear surplus and turned over e. 15 two decades ago. ation. I O'Leary :Fatally Iniured O'LEARY -— Keith Edward Cooke. 17 died in Halifax hospit~l at Sunday of injuries he received earlier in the day when a small car went out of control nearl West Point. The English-madeg‘ Former Destroyer; To Be Museum HALIFAX (CP) — The form- er Canadia'n Navy destroyer Haida is on her way under tow i . RAFAEL. France (AP)- ‘0. “mm Where she is to be president de Gaulle took advant- be ‘converted into age Saturday of an anniversary museum . a naval Paid off by the navy last Oc-il ' l to‘. rown Assets Disposal Corpor- A group of Ontario business-. men brought the veteran of Se- cond World War and Korean War action for $20,000 and France which hastened the made plans m have the Ship restored to operational appear- is... i The Haida was towed hack to ,Ha'lifax earlier this month an l-had some equipment and fur- .nishings installed. Another maid. Mrs. Martha Roberts. arrived and together they crawled on hands and knees under the smoke. holding wet towe s to iieir faces. screaming and pounding on doors to awaken the guests. The alarm was sounded at 2:30 am. sending guests pour- ing into the. lobby. Some slid down bedsheets to the street'. gro smoke-filled hallways. 10 Persons By The “ Canadian Press Ten persons died in Weekend accidents in the‘Maritime Prov- BESUED BY FIREMAN Fireman Bill Cheetham car- ried Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Atkin- son and Al King. all of Lowell. Mass. down an aerial ladder to , safety on the street. Their room. was next to the source of the r . worker. was wounded in the head by a pistol bullet. At Albany. one person was in- ured and two arrested in a brick - and bottle - throwing pree by egroes after police fatdlly shot a Negro man. Sev- I... inces. Traffic mishaps claimed eight lives and two persons drowned. New Brunswick reported five traffic deaths. Nova Scotia had .wo traffic deaths and two drownings and Prince Edward Island had a traffic fatality. A two-car crash at an inter- section near Chipman. N.B. Saturday night killed Clayton Nash Grant. 89. an Oromocfo. N.B.. native serving with the army at Camp Gagetown. and Emile Edward St. Clair, 50, of Upper Gagetown. Leonard LeBlanc. oi Latimore Lake. near Saint John. died in hospital in Saint John Sunday after he was struck by a car in Simonds Parish. N.B.. Saturday night. Floyd Arnold Taylor. 21. of Lancaster. N.B.. died Saturday night when the car he was driv- ing collided with a truck at Evandaie. NB. Roger LeBlanc of St. Ansel- 54. me. N.B.. was killed Saturday lose lives In Maritime Accidents when the car he‘ Was driving left the highway at Neil‘s Folly half way between’Moncton and r Memramcook. N.B In N a Scotia, brothers Harold Davenport. . and Philip Davenport. 12. drowned Sunday in Bissett's Lake at (his Harbor. N.S.. One brother is believed to have fallen into deep water while fishing from a rock and the other drowned in an attempt to rescue him. Gary Wayne White. in his late teens. of North Noel Road, N.S.. died Friday night when the car in which he was driv- ing left the road near Stew- iac e. Edmund Allan McNeil. 17. of Sydney was killed Saturday when his car crashed into a tree after striking a utility pole guy wire. The Prince Edward Island accident claimed the life of Edward Cooke. 17. of O'Leary. . .. He ied in hospital in Halifax from injuries suffer. when the car in which he was riding left the highway near his home and rolled over. 1‘ r K d l Youth vehicle rolled several times and god. was heavily youn Halifax from Summerside by an RCAF Albatross but died ly after arrival. this village and then the Community Hos- pital here prior to being flown to Halifax. His death is said to be the 22nd traffic fatality in the prov- ince this year. i Two companions from Cape Wolfe were reported to have re- ceived only minor injuries. Dewar of ved to Boston-Marine Train Crash lniures 26 man was flown to ( CLiArsrs Sakari S. Tuomioja of Fin- land. chief UN mediator in the Clypms 'cl'isis. collapses in Geneva Sunday after suffer- ing a mild stroke. His illness came a few hours before his scheduled departure for talks in Greece. Turkey and Cyprus. Officials said his condition was not critical. (AP Wirephoto) i Makarios to Fly in By GEORGE McARTHUB i NICOSIA (AP) -— Greek—Cyp-i .riots greeted joyfully Sunday a] I Soviet offer to help in the event r iof an invasion of Cyprus and? [President Makarios was under1 ‘r pressure to H immediately to start negotiations. Makarios, a Greek Orthodox ‘archbishop, is still bitterly op- ’posed to Western mediation ef- forts to solve the eight-month crisis. . United Nations mediation cf- forts were dealt a blow. In Ge- ;neva, the chief UN mediator. .Sakari S. Tuomioja of Finland. ‘collapsed and was taken to hos- ipital after suffering a mi [stroke just before his sched- .u departure for talks -in .Greece. Turkey and Cyprus. Greek ri t newspapers hailed the Soviet aid offer that came rom Moscow Saturday. "Joyful news has come." sai the anti-Makarios right - wing E WINCHESTER. Mass. (APll At least 26 persons were re- rported injured Sunday in ihead-on collision of two Boston land Maine single-car trains in this suburb north of Boston. . . o the injured. one a .seven-year-old boy. were listed {in serious condition at Massa- chusetts General Hospital in i i Boston. i r Winchester Hospital treated I r12 persons a awrence tMemorial Hospital in nearby1 ‘Medford reported 12 were ; treated there with two admitted; for observation. l One of the cars was north-r Ibound from Boston. The other! lwas southbound from Woburnl for Boston. r Both trains were on the same! track although there are two! tracks at the scene of the 2 crash. Both cars were knocked from the rails by the impact. Fire Levels Large Born At Cornwall Fire destroyed a large barn at Cornwall yesterday. killing six farm animals and destroy- ing a quantity of farm mach- Tshombe Seeks Spotter Planes LEOPOLDV'ILLF. (APr—Pre- mier Moise Tshombe asked the United States Sunday to send long-range spotter planes to en- able The Congo government to keep tabs on Communist- backed rebels in the eastern n o. The request came during a two-hour meeting of Tshombe ennen Williams. U.S. assistant secretary for Afri- can affairs. newspaper Ma One weekly paper suggested that Makarios broaden his cab- inet to bring in Communists, Pepe Preys For Solution VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Po Paul has sent telegrams ito the governments of Cyprus. eece and Turkey expressing r“the trepidation and anguis r with which he has followed the {events in Cyprus, and praying lfor a peaceful solution. it was announced Saturday night. to Moscow im-r‘ rpublic bf Cyprus to defend her Girl's Su' SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP)—A nine-year-old girl was rescued from a fog-shrouded sandbar in the St. Joseph iver before dawn Sunday where she had been tossed. bound and gagged. from a bridge by an abductor. described as a former convict. Neighbors attracted by child's screams found her shiv- ering in chin-deep water crying: he y “Please be p me. - , She told of a terrifying night The bummg hemmed to in which her abductor had Fred Stretch. Lost in the blaze were five pigs and one calf. The New Glasgow Fire De- partment arrived on the scene about half-hour after the blaze broke out at around 1:30 pm. Cause of the fire was un- known. No estimate of damage cost could be learned. eral stores in the Harlem sec- tion were damaged. Fire Chief E. E. Moody said a fireman. W. D. Wells. was hit on the back by .a bottle and taken to hospital for observa- tion. The two arrested. a white per- son and a Negro. were charged with refusing to obey an offi- r. FIRED AT NEGROES Police Chief Laurie Pritchett said the slain Negro, Willmon Jones. 30. was e at r be fired at several Negroes and appeared to be drawing a gun on a policeman. Scores of fiery crosses, sym- bol of the white-supremacist Ku Klux Klan, were with almost military precision at to p.m. Saturday acrou Lou- isiana. Dozens were burned in the capital city of Baton Rouge. e others were reported in Monroe. Lake Charles. Alex- andria and many smaller towns. At McComb. Miss. police in- vestigated an explosion which s E grocery store and nearby resi- dences. No one was injured. It was the fifth racial bombing in McComb in recent months. I "90 Singer Missing In Calif. Lake LAKEPORT. Calif. .(APi—Po- ice dragged northern Califor- nia‘s Clear Lake during the head 1 ch for rock ‘n' roll singer Johnny Burnette. who apparently was dro in a boating accident Friday. Burnetie. . of Pacolma. Calif.. was returning to shore in gathering darkness aboard a small craft with two fishing companions when a power ves- sel hit his boat. ,The singer's comp-lion aur- vived but mimetic was seen again. blew windows out of a Negro -' Harry Huffaker, 14. a Unl~ versity of diigan dental student. is comforted by 8.- listaniis in In eoeort vessel after he wr- reacued &rndl!. He was puled um LOSES ENGLISH CHANNEL BATTLE. from the channel dime mile. off the Englidl Coast neat Dover In hh attenmt to make the swim from France to England. Hoffaker. from Whitmore Lake. Mich. blacked out I 1-8 hours after starting bl swim. He was taken to a hospital for observation and on said he a was ex- haulted III! but ehmld recover. (AP Wire- photo vi bio from London) R ad B of here raped her twice and forced her to lie in the tr nk of his car for 12 hours. said police Capt. Orson Harmon A man fitting the description provided the child was seiud by police who stopped his car after a brief chase in the downtown area. e was des« cribed as a 33-year-old self-em- ployed tree-trimmer With a rec- ord of child molestings who had served a term in the Indiana State Prison for larceny. He w s held on preliminary charges of kidnapping and rape. but Harmon declined to release his identity, pending investiga- tion Harmon said it was a miracle the girl survived the ordeal. Her ridge. seven miles north just beyond the lndiana~ Michigan state line. 5. Vial Nam Has New President SA-IGON (AP) — Maj.~Gen. Nguyen Khanh took over the presidency of South iet Nam unday but supreme powers were placed in the hands of a dZ-member revolutionary noun-r cll. Khanh promulgated a new constitution and vowed to cms opposition political parties. ' om premier, replaced Maj. sen. ong Van (Big) Min‘h. who had held the presidency only as a figurehead chief of state. The new powers given to K'ianh re- stored a powerful presidential system similar to that abolished with the overthrow of the NI! I[grub Diem regime in Novem- INSIDE TODAY Births. death I. H Clueified 14. 15 Comics 18 Sport ................. 10.11 Women's . . . . . . .. I Editorials . 4 Kings. Queen» City ..-.. a rvival ’ «Called ‘Miracle' l She had been gagged with a: lman's sleeveless undershirt. but: lmanaged to work it free and shout for help. A neighbor, attracted by the} screams. found the girl, whimp- ' biog for help. as t her chin. a e She was still tied hand and foot with heavy rope and strips from a man's red shirt condition. He confirmed sexually assault The search for the girl began Saturday afternoon when her new bicycle was found aband- oned a block from her home. A family physician said she. was cut and bruised but in fair she had beenl ed. 16 PAGES - Pressed Moscow The key to the Soviet offer appeared to be in the final paragraph of the Kremlin state- ment: “If a foreign armed lnva-_ sion of the territory of the Re public of Cyprus takes place the Soviet Union will help the Re- reedom and independence from foreign invasion and is prepared to begin negotiations on ' i matter immeiately.” Although the Greek - Cypriot government has made no offl- cial response to the Soviet offer. officials privately.interpret it, perhaps optimistically. as a full offer of arms aid and material support in the battle for self- determination. which would in ‘effect mean union with Greece. While Greek - Cypriots were gleeful. Turkish-Cypriots gave the appearance of taking the So- viet message calmly. From the headquarters of the Turkish sec- .tor of the divided capital city; in Turkish - Cypriot spokesman‘ (sai "We are. inclined to be- lieve that Russia will not into!- vene." ' WELCOMES EFFORTS . d that he welcomes Soviet efforts "to bring about a peaceful settlement of the Cyo prus problem." I In Ankara. the Turkish glow Jernment had no comment. ‘ At about the same time as the Soviet offer of aid was be-l ing given to the Makarios gov. V ernment. the Soviet ambassador iin Nicosia. Pavel Emoshln, tdrove to a conference with the (Turkish - Cypriot leader. Dr. .Fazil Kuchulr. A spokesman would give no details of the talks. A cease-fire imposed by the UN after the violent outbreak of fighting early this month has been in effect a week with rela- tive success, with only minor incidents reported by he quarters in Nicosia. r The UN commander. Gen. X. S. Thimayya of India. is tak- ‘ing advantage of (Nb at ‘rtermed "breather" to rstrengt‘ien his buffer force! and regroup some units. Khrushchev Threatens Intervention » MOSCOW (Apr—Soviet Pre- ‘mier Khrushchev warned Tut. key Sunday further air attack; Ion Cyprus might boomerang. ‘ He _ air strikes earlier this month it Double Funeral Planned For Two Teachers NEWCASTLE. NE. A double funeral will be held here Tuesday for two New- castle school teachers killed Thursday in a highway mishap at Browning. Montana. The bodies of Coleen Kelly. 23. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly. and Anna Fogan. 25. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Fogan. were to be flown here today. Requiem Mass will be cele- brated Tuesday morning with burial in the church cemetery. (The girls were teachers at the school at Slemon Park. Summerside airport last year.) (CF) l JOHANNESBURG (AP)——Vic i Oliver. British stage and televi- lsion performer w c was once iSir Winston Churchill's son-tn- llaw. collapsed and died Satur- v'da'y night during the final per. :fo r m a n cc of Distinguished i Gathering. He was M. l Oliver failed to make his en- ) trance for theI second act of the ,play and a callhoy found hlm .oo the floor of his dressing room The cause of death was not known. r was formerly married to Churchill's daughter. Sarah. from whom he was divorced in 1945, e was a comedian and a se- rious musician. Although clown- aaid Oliver remained at heart ‘a musician. He pas conductor I d thelmtish Cm Orhcestra British Actor Vic Oliver Dies Suddenly During Play{ ing made him wealthy. friends , against the easrern Mediterran- ean republic were plotted in Washington and London and called on Britain to get it troops out of Cyprus. The version published hero (I Khrushchcv's speech. in the central Asian city of Enron did nor mention Saturday's So- viet pledge of military aid to . However. it left no doubt the Kremlin was threat- ening intervention in the event of further Turkish actions. “We would like to warn the Turkish government their bombers cannot drop bombs on 1 Cyprus. destroy the population * of Cyprus—including old people, . women and children —— with im- 5 punity." Khrushchev said. “When doing harm to some- body. it is advisable to remem- ber that the damage which you wanted to inflict on 8 may act as a boomerang." Born Viktor Oliver son of Baron Samek. in Vienna in 1898. liver was a violin prodigy at the age of six. ‘ » He became a comedian al- most by accident. At a recital of serious music he fell off the piano stool. His apologies were so funny. he recalled. that his manager advised him be- come a comedian. Oliver's marriage to Sarah Churchill in 1930 caused a sea- nation. She left a stage revue in which she was appearing in Britain to join Oliver's stage show in the United States. was 21 and Oliver 38. His fir'at marriage had ended in divorce event years earlier. ‘3 Oliver‘s third marriage was in 1946 to Natalie Frances C. “u, by gm he had «3 g er_ e became a In“ (and Bolton I M ’