‘ @ff-year balloting today by cap- ota caine ee tiie if It's Good For The Island “The Guardian Is For tt ” VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 256 t \ q a) He is a hemophilia victim and has evident internal bleeding. His condition Monday night was reported slightly improved but still serious. No decision was made whether to operate. (OP Wirephote) "Island Farmers Dominate In Dual Shorthorn Rin at | minor sensation last November , et E Fee F rite z z + : HE ge j i 5 3 z sf AD fl | 3 z Z i hs : i a: 5 i [ i iz ; HI | | s : e = "| é i z F 3; 8 5 3 zi 3 } \ i ze 8 g Some ee] 3$ i ei i showed the reserve grand female, champion Monday in the dual class with Chestnut Roval Sally. The reserve grand champion bull was shown by Waldron Mac- Phee, Elmwood and this bull ts a two-time grand champion at Charlottetown though judge Ar- old Peacock put the Wood bull Limewood Verdun Lad, ahea of him Monday. Keith Barrett; Belmont, Lot 16 was the other Islander who showed strongly in this breed. The Wood cattle topped. the dual purpose show and took both (Continued on Page 3 Col. 6) Republicans Seeking Comeback In Off-Year U.S. Voting Today eae (AP) —. Re. poblicans hope to launch a U;S.-wide electoral comeback in turing the. New York City. may- oralty contest and governorships in New Jersey and Virginia. U-S. representative pe Lindsay's effort to end two ades of Democratic domination im’ New York City appears to attord: the Republican. party its best chance of . demonstrating renewed after last year’s disastfous national-elec- tion defeat at the hands of Pres- ident’ Johnson. Lindsay, who has the support of the beral party, aaa with Demoer: éomprolier Abraham D. 4 Algo running is author and lisher William F. Buckley the Conservative party nominee. Besides New York, municipal élections in Cleveland, Philadel- phia, Louisville and Akron seem | to offer the Republicans hope of | making inroads in Democratic big-city strength. DEMOCRATS FAVORED Democrats, however, are) strongly favored to win the New Jersey and Virginia governor's races. In New Jersey, Demo-~ cratic Governor Richard J. Hughes, 56, seeks a second four- year-term against Republican state Senatér: Wayne - Dumont Jr., 51; in Virginia, . Governor Mills jrace, Republican Clarence J. rate a tight | greeing. city | agreed that the 39 - year - old | Harrison against a strong Re- publican challenge from A. Lindood Holton, 42. Legislatures are being elected also in New Jersey, Virginia and New York. Kentucky is filling some seats. In the only U.S. Congressional Brown Jy. is favored to. win the seat of his late father in Ohio's strongly-Republican 7th district against Democrat James A- Berry. In New York City, about | 2,500,000 eligible voters are ex- pected to cast ballots. News- paper straw polls, while disa- on the Olitcome, are Buckley, may poll more ‘than 300,000 votes. BACKED BY JOHNSON Beame, 59, received Johnson's INSIDE TODAY Classified ........++ 16, 1% Births ..... errr cone Dee. -ccpcoccce. ceceses 3 Camas -.oicie.. cat icews. 18 ey eee we 20 28 a markets ....--.. 4 Women’s ......... feskeey 6 Summerside .......... cose 8 Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 Prineg County Pre 2 benefit of a 3to-l Deocratic registration advantage. He de- feated Paul R. ow retir- ing Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s choice, in 9 bitter Demiocratic primary. Lindsay, 4, is rated a_possi- ble Republican presidential cam didate of the future if he wins or makes a close race. He has relied heavily on vigorous street- corner campaigning and has charged that the -city has de teriorated under Wagner's ad- ministration. The polls indicate the vote-getter may be trict Attorney Frank D. 0’Con- nor, Beame’s running mate for president of the New York City council and a potential Demo- cratic governorship candidate next year against New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller. In the New-York state legisla- tive race, Democrats - are . fa- vored to retain control of assembly while the Republican party has a good chance of Te. capturing the Senate. In only state-wide race, former ceo lican Senator Kenneth B. Keat- ing is running for the Court of Appeals against. Democrat-Lib- - peral Owen McGivern. In New Jersey, Democrats hape for a Hughes landslide that will give them undisputed legis- lative control for the first time in half a century. Republicans contend, however, that Dumont Lieutenant- E. Godwin Jr., retiring , seeks te succeed could spring an upset paige v 1 S yee tigated iar mowalQey ay gang Apna is > Grew nl ee Sovers Prince Edward Island Like ‘The Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1965. ” \ ™, Ore Find Sark: | izzy Trading The company said another test hole 700 feet away had no By DENNIS ORCHARD VANCOUVER (GP) — The Vancouver Stock Exchange shot dizzily to record trading vol- i Monday in speculation ore in it- - Crowds lined up at Vancouver a ‘Northwest Territories i op ages “Trading of 4,202,400 shares Brokers they opened Monday. To pro vide an orderly market the ex- eft in the dust the exchange’s change holdup. trading in Py- existing record of 3,121,519 shares and substantially ex- ramid, Ace’ Mining, New Cro- | ge ga tage amd WEATHER Snowflurries, clearing by ; winds evening; northwest 25, diminishing to 15. Low- high 25 and 38. Wednesday: cloudy. cr wor wont SEVEN CENTS age Seen Britain | LONDON (Reuters) — Gales buffeted Britain, northern France and Scandinavia Mon- day, causing death, injury. ; flooding and widespread dam- , | age Canadian and British aircraft a British survey ship Ships, Docks. Given Beating ) were unable to put to sea fer |48 hours and 55-mile-an-hour }winds damaged houses. In Scandinavia, winds and rain brought flooding to south- western Sweden and a flood jthreat to low-lying areas of Denmark's west coast. Gales' swept Norway's south- s searched off Northern Ireland ‘ for five Norwegian sailors lost ern coast’ Monday and storm nin, Babine, Silver Ridge and ceeded volumes on the Toronto Bate’ Mises, and Montreal exchanges. the Pine Point mine. Pyramid is a - long, narrow claim lying adija- cent to Pine Point property for more than 15 miles. WALLET FOUND AFTER 2 YEARS and the stocks et The sailors were flung off the * |deck of the frigate Bergen by 60-mile-an-bour winds Monday morning as the ship was mak- ing for Londonderry with her : © ship Stavanger and the arine Kinn. Jn Belfast, the 34,000-ton liner Caronia was torn from. her | }moorings and swept across the channel, where she damaged gangways and wharves. In northern England, nine- ‘ in central Jakarta also |inch cables mooring an oil rig ag rt — aaa siectia] law. |SMapped and the rig careered | dava where | law was ; 1. ; ; Army officials said that the down the River Tees, tore down | declare Monday President ‘Siegkarta and Jogjakerta | Power cables and smashed into | Sukarno, according to Jak- sreas (underlined) of the |a” oil tanker. arta Radio. “Y Sukarno’s act- Djatinon and Manisranggo jon im. affect, a form 1 of central Java are eee veer. DOWN Three 35-foot-high water-cool- In Liberal-Held Ridings BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP)—,swing through southwestern On- Conservative Leader Diefen- tario in the Nov. 8 federal elec- baker, seeking votes in Liberal 'tion campaign. territory, said here Monday CONTINUE ATTACK there is fear in Prime Minister, He chose the Brantford meet- ‘Pearson's. heart. ling to continue his attack on Mir. Diefenbaker said this be- Mr. Pearson for suggesting an- came evident when Mr. Pear- other election would be inewi- son said~ he wants a~ parlia- table: if- a_ minority government mentary majority. He said it}was installed. Mr. Diefenbaker was further revealed when Mf. |said it was a threat to the peo- Pearson said another -mi ple. government would inevi | Mr. Diefenbaker said once lead to another election. jthe words of a prime minister Mr. Diefenbaker spoke to 450| were accepted as entirely fac-, in a Brantford hall, |tual the past beca of _flooding....... , Dunfield, 39,-3aid he had no idea how lohg he will continue. “We thought at first it «would | fe Se co Orderly Relugee row ; ‘but we make discoveries every St \day that make us change our | :. MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—The U.S.) Gardner said all refugees government pledged Monday |would be brought to Miami and N.Y. Actor “an orderly ‘and controlled flow | after clearing -immigration Found Dead ‘‘The president and federal de- of refugees” from Cuba and |‘‘those who can be resettled will swift resettlement in all parts of |be on their. way in 48 hours.” NEW YORK (AP)—Emmett Rogers, 49, actor, producer and we US: Of - 180;000~ registered-— since director, was found dead in his New York apartment Sunday. it was réported Monday. ‘Sons 4 | Sharing the platform with him; “We're in another age now,”"| His body in a chair were the Conservative candi- jhe added. we : daies in Brantford riding andWith--histalk-ofanother_elec-.) in neighboring Brand - Haldi-|tion, Mr. Diefenbaker said panic mand. ‘has struck the “heart and soul" | Cause of death has_not been de- termined. was-“discovered by a friend. | has boon narrowing St gmp end | Both were held in the last and the prime minister has <et Parliament by Liberals. lout to scare the people of Can- The crowd filled all available ada. 7 seats in the smal] hall and, Mr. Diefenbaker denied many stood along the walls and ‘claims that he had said he ex- jat the back. After the meeting, | pected to head a minority gov- ‘Mr. Diefenbaker drove tojernment. He invited Liberals \gearby Hamilton for a night /}and New Democrats to vote for irally. He is making his final|the Progressive Conservatives. : ‘ t IN what the polis say is any- Wil- wage ater Yak Gos Re a New A . publican-Liberal John V. Lind- When the say, left, Democrat Abraham at the Rogeré was co-producer of the Broadway plays No Time For Sergeants, Dial M for Murder, Tall Story and The Riot Act. He directed the London pro- duction of No Time For Ser- geants, and also directed Maur- ice Evans in the touring Devil's Disciple. partments are particularly eon- cerned that the whole country take up this problem,” John partment of - health, education and welfare, told a press. con- | ference. : | “The citizens of Florida have | ‘made tremendous - contributions land Florida must not be asked to carry the burden alone.” Small boats, shuttling between Cuba and Key West, already have brought in more than 1,400 refugees. Gardner and Buford Ellington, representing President Johnson met in Miami during the day including congressmen, . Mayors Lj children. The conference will re- aT ,|sume in. Washington today. PLAN MOVEMENT .. Gardner said plans__call _for bringing in 3,000 to 4,000 refu- gees a month once agreement is Castro's government for orderly removal: John Crimmins, co-ordinator #\of Cuban affairs for the U.S. polls tonight, their decisions may be the closest thing to an election dead. heat the city has seen, political observers say. (AP Wirephoto) va state department, declined to agreement _but said ‘‘discussions are ‘going very well’? through the Swiss ambassador who rep- resents the U.S. in dealings with the Castro government. Ledders On Hustinas TUESDAY Pearson—In Winnipeg, Wake- head and Montreal. Diefenbaker' — Whistle - stop- ing Owen Sound to Sarnia. Ont.; Right. rally Wallaceburg, Ont. Douglas—In Regina and Win- mipeg area. 7 In Peace River district and Edmonton area ; Caouette — In Shawinigan, Que. j 4 1961, Gardner said, 92,000 have been successfully resettled in 3,000 communities throughout Rico. } , |overboard in mountainous seas. warnings. went out for the west eoast as a cyclone centre moved in from Scotland and the Shet- land Islands. Firein Brush ‘Threatens Homes | DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) — A wind-whipped brush fire dam- |aged_ several homes in this Bos |ton suburb Monday, driving at least 100- residents to the streets. The wind and dryness result- ing from a_ two-year drought ‘kept firemen busy battling hun- ‘dreds of woodland fires through- \out the weekend. | And early Monday a blaze in ja dormitory at Harvard Univer- Pyramid, hurtiedly lised by| signTAGUE — Two years «| of niartial ‘set _up by a still under communist control. | ing towers collapsed at Ferry-\gity drove 400 students to the ee ae es ago Chartie Kemp, Sturgeos. military qrder last week. The (AP Wirephote) | case, Yorkshire. A crane fel street ° emergency » while . picking potatoes i . on ar: - | There were teports of in- closed at $9.25 on volume of). 4. farm of Harvey Rog; ea ® Tar taeieas "were Donte in |furies in any of the dl Prides chan unlisted stock at, LONer Montague, | lost. af’ | London when sheets of roofing | ; Hi yee bright new shiny a) | oney f ex iron were blown onto persons | . one for bull csives. The Island|” >< - : was about 18 at the time, ely mt a y : waiting. fr a bus. , Que Changes took all the co eae FOLLOW LEADER ih ae 4 ot ae ae , Coen eros hetwees ° , q Pine Point-area x 2 ‘ ‘ : a Robert, | - Other oe ee * Last’ week Cecil Nicholson, . plow throug megs | Seen k le both eo and femaries. His ier Waar » day wan while helping to harvest this | In [ land Hunt soeeiiiniions - | see lping fai. charan ts Dai, X|age Monge wih Sohn caren, | ewe cone zeatem Mend | oT wa ine | gaatie Mace tne cm | Wage gta Got prod roanet. Se o $1. Le ae . us 2 “2 vester. It was ; welt | “OAK. 464 IND, -aheory : ri ies how hiteree ; oe oa salesten! Shin | - oe nity aro sppeean of ne Nae Wee cas ipinsa TR cow 00. cnt iat Naber al See TE ne icky aie “Gf Pea ran eee ime SAPARD (CSc Min of the Sherine et 1046 500 | ai ts on 535,000 shares en bt a a Mpatlice neste te (ene Cae MO” Mahond Bey |atesré wes blown ashore, SBF |aedt “Munday “tint an .Guebee ini } withstood , 2 Crop t t shore, rowly mi at : Le & < i prenactios record of the year |and Sliver Ridse man | @- ats heat gears polller on. this small Nova|the object of more’ than 1.000 | seaside supatl of Bearuemneth, ae cor at Coeds On eee If it's mot the top, Mr. ‘Stolx| emis. Sp oat on volume | winter and the planting \and ind to begin ex- /treasure hunting ventures since| On the French side of the |o5 Shen ee ee said, it will be among the very se Sate eiaces| growing of the new potato ate treasure be-|1795 when three youths discov-| Channel, a 62 - year - old man He told a meeting. of the. Ca- en ae. genes © Cam ene Se, the| cp this -year. L here. ered a depression in the ground | cycling near Dunkirk was blown | nadisn Club of Toronto that. the. Daisy @ chainplen bere two tty controlled by Charlie is reported to have Tie 70-foot high crane has/13 feet across at the foot of a/into the path of a truck and net result of the changes now. years ago, was dethroned -last|Consolidated Mining and Smelt- | ee wr —" ‘aha on Bone ae knife- marked ony tee. killed instantly. Many fishermen |taking place in Quebec will be year by her stablemate Pauline|ing Co., disclosed a core aver-| A wah a or 900-foot-long, | a greater Canadian unity not Wave who was the grand cham-/aging 5.37 per cent lead and | | 38. tout Nee ah Bias 4 a fe ‘ known since Confederation. | pion of the Atlantic Winter Fair : eon cat Uline re ee The problem. Quebec is facing sae th to tae this | . f k k V . water tunnels that ‘hove, faleed V CS : ole Pik come a : place c year. | be See as : : was ish i Danie] Jewell. East Wiltshire | Die en er $ otes jtreasure hunting operations in| wei” ; few. years polasmagy- 67 atau parts of Canada started in 1945, Mr. Kierans, who was moved to the health portfolio recently from revenue, said the rapid so- cial. and economic changes in Quebec have. created potentially dangerous unrest because 50 many established institutions and ways of life were changing. That could cause an emotional vacuum unless new aims and standards. of living were. made available for the people. : He repeated: that Quebec wel comes any kind of investment, including foreign, because it needs so much : capital to pay Gardner, secretary of the de-|the United States and Puerto |for new roads, schools, hospitals land other institutions. meached between the U.S. and | Bay. what was holding up the, ‘Continued | OTTAWA (CP) — Continued | Monday’ by the bufeau of sta- | tisties: PR se | They said: ‘ —Retail sales, which were up 5.4 per cent in fhe first half of this year over last, climbed seven, per cent above year- earlier figures in August. Credit; outstanding in nine lines~ of consumer and com- mercial financing at the end of July amounted to $6.181.- 000,000, up 18 per cent from a year earlier. These indicated that the con- sumer—the miost important fac- }tor in over-all economic activity —is spending more and jis will- ing to commit himself to pay ~~ -| sometime in the future for even heavier expenditures, mainly’ on |durable goods. | Retail sales are generally re- | garded as a barometer. of busi- | mess activity in consumer goods | {running in steps with the gen- | eral level of the economy. Credit statistics indicate the mood of the consumer—his confidence in the future and willingness to \take on additional spending | commitments. | BUY MORE CARS Retail sales in August were jestimated at $1,732,131,000, ¢om- ; pared with $1,618,422,000 in\ Au- | gust last year. This brought Buoyancy foreseen In Economy with political and civic Jeaders, | cumulative sales for this year and a representative of Florida | buoyancy in the economy, at |to $13,706,955,000, compared with :| Governor Haydon Burns, to dis- least in the near future, was | $12,922,058,000 in the first eight _|euss' hospital treatment for the | indicated in two reports issued | months of last ‘year. ‘lgefugees and schools for their Sales in the first half of this’ | year were-up 5.4 per cent from first-half 1964 at $10,119,422.000- Then they’ jumped nine per cent j higher in July and were seven ; per cent. higher -in August Features of August sales were increases of 18.2 per cent in motor vehicles, 16.7 per cent in |lumber and building materials, and 13.6 per cent in jewelry— | ind cating consumer readiness to make major investments. If consumers are fearful of the future they ‘tend to cut back | their spending on durable goods and keep money on hand for food -and clothing essentials The July credit statistics also indicated buyer confidence. There were major increase: in |eredit balances at the month- end for instalment credit. fully- secured chartered bank Joans, ;and department store accoun‘s The $6,181,000,000 in credit balances at the end of July rep- resents only part of tota! con- ;sumer and commercial credit outstanding. Statistics are gath- |ered only every three months on oil company credit ‘card bal- |a@mces outstanding and the mf range of retail dealers’ char | accounts. Amounts owing [0 credit unions and caisses popu- laires are reported only once 8 = . > ie aie camer stay