~ For Eight- if It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 203 THIS IS the Robert Restall family formerly of Hamilton, ~~ {s son Robert, rate treasure. Others are Mr3. Mildred Restall and son Ric- who with his father, centre, lost his life in Ont, and in recent years of a gas-filled pit on the small ise ky. This picture was taken Goh inand. Sasa Seslin 14h jn Whe wees See eel ee ee DOCTORS SAYS ‘FIT AND READY’ Astronauts Get Green Light- . (AP) vastro- CAPE KENNEDY, Fla Doctors examined U.S nauts Gordon Cooper and Charles Conrad Tuesday and pronounced them>*‘fit and ready to go'’ for the eight-day orbital flight of the Gemini 5 spaceship, beginning Thursday For 442 hours, Cooper, Con- rad and the backup pilots-civil- ians Neil Armstrong .and. Elliott and Armstrong have recovered: Beatles: Hidden In Paddy Wagon TORONTO (CP)--The Beatle’ dropped into Toronto Tuesday to Day Orbital Flight See by ists . Afterwards, Dr. Charles A. Bérry, director of Gemini .medi- cal operations, reported: ‘Both completely from a_ flu-like con- dition each suffered early this month. The condition had not been revealed previously-"~ The illness was not serious, and was cleared up when the underwent careful scrutiny flight surgeons’ and special- crews are in condition to fly astronauts stayed close to their eight days They are fit and quarters for a couple of days, — ready to go.” Berry said. . Berry said Conrad, Cooper After the examination,) Cooper; a veteran of 34 hours in space, and the fledgling Con- rad attended a review meeting with flight controllers and other space agency officials: | i'MAY BE LONGEST Data assembled on their phys- ical conditions was to be used as a yardstick in judging their ‘reactions during the flight. If les were smuggled . inside @/space longer than any previous rear door in a police paddy astronauts—Russian or Ameri- Che. Guardian rince Edward Island Like The Dew” OTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1965. ‘all goes well, they will be in! ' quai? awnas —_ a Treasure Hunte WEATHER winds light increasing to south Thursday; Sunny: 15. Low-high 60 and 75, sunny arid warm, , . ~~ SEVEN CENTS 22 PAGES ‘s Die THAN In Pit On Oak Island Top Quality Animals Are Seen In Holstein, Ayrshire Rings 4 Top quality animals paraded | serve female champion was Rae- Ida and the reserve champion before the judges Tuesday in the by Andrew B. and Fred T. Mac- » | Holstein and Ayrshire rings in dale Fancy Lollipop, exhibited Grantlyn Eslie. Reserve champion bull was the Coliseum at the Exhibition Rae who made a strong show- pjamond Hill Retainer shown by {| Grounds here. The herd of Al- mon Wood and Sons, Marshfield were top money winners in the Ayrshire ring with something in excess of $500 for their day's work. The premier breeders’ award went to A. MacRae and Sons one of the top claimants for | Ayrshire honors over a long per- iod of years. With $70 available for first prize under the Harry Hays’ for- ‘mula, $60 for second, $50 for |third and sizable awards all the way down to, tenth prize, the money earnings added up rapid- ily in the dairy ring. The beef Lprizes---heef—eattleshow —Thurs- |day--are slightly less; with a top jof $50 for first and graded down from that to 10th placing. The Wood herd supplied the champion male and the cham- pion female. The bull was Don- holme Victory’s Woody and the champion cow East River Fancy Girl. A. MacRae and Sons’ Fairvue Royal \icfor was the reserve Scholarships yarded By Legion . Marilyn” “ae Weeks of Hun ter River al. Gerard White of West have been ‘selected to scholarships: ion Command ofthe Royal Can- champroy Ayrshire male. The re-, pick—up—about—$100,000-1n—two; wagon, “about —$,000 i+ oe enough to go" tothe “agian Legion, i brief appearances for 36,000 Jéaflets showered the crowd out- , explore its surface and jn Qharl : ast night. wildly cheering teen - agers. side from a nearby apartment return to earth. The plete a was ‘made They move on this morning to window. The Beatles are not During the first day, the Gem- by the educaté : : “ol ._ Atlanta, Ga. : Jewish ini 5 pilots are to make man's) the prince Edward Cam- The Liverpool four kept 700 The four, dressed in motley first attempt to rendezvous with enatnof ae ”” Officials well-behaved youngsters on pins attire hardly ..resembling —any-| another ‘satellite, a technique <3iq there had 1 61 applice- and needles at Toronto Interna- thing out of the latest men’s that must be developed before tions for the ; tional Airport for more than fashion magazines, stepped astronauts can venture to the ‘are worth $40D-éarél » Which two hours when their chartered amid cheers from their plane moon. . Names atthe e tel cok turboprop . Electra ...11..was_.de- and -were..whisked -quickly-inside -and. Conrad will: 1: hh} -aitatas would be eat Torun 4: layed by storms after leaving a nearby hangar. ~The’ teen-ag- the satellite from their sp@e-, ea De sini Rn 7 oe New York shortly after noon ers vented their disappointment, craft, back away from ‘~it: 52 baw Sued tie a ena Tuedsay but did not try to .storm the miles and then, usirig radar and tificates” tortie aad bi Thousands of other teen-agers fence i other electronic devices, will ciaks sifid : later, S interspersed with adults ringed Ringo, George, Payt and John Maple Leaf Gardens downtown were immediately, seated In a eagerly awaiting the arrival of black limousine while. officials their mop-haired, guitar-strum- with them climbed into another, ming -- darlings. 2 Escorted by 15 motorcycle po- Early Tuesday. afternoon, po- lice, the limousines sped to- lice seemed to outnumber fans wards downtown Toronto. at the airport. About 300 police- A)! four Beatles waved at the men, including RCMP, were de- girls and managed brief smiles ployed six feet apart facing the from otherwise bored expres- crowd barricaded, by a six-foot sions chain link fence topped by Somewhere between the — air- three strands of barbed wire port and the Gardens, the Bea- “While the hundreds waited at tls transferred from their Um- try to close te within a few feet ing throughout. HONORS TO N.S. The Nova Scotia firm of Dickie Brothers, Truro, won. top honors | in the Holstein ring. They had | the champion male and the champion and reserve champion | female. Their ‘Agro Acres Blond R. Sovereign’ was the top bull in_the show. Their show-topping female was Cobequid Snowball Oswald J. Newson and Son, . Kingston. Horace B. Willis, one of the newcomers to the Holstein ring, took two firsts with two of the young heifers he purchased ear- Her this year at the dispersal sale of the Glen Brae herd in Ontario: f John R. Thompson and Son, (Continued on page 3, col. 7) | EVENTS TODAY |AT THE FAIR Here are some of the top events today at the Provin- cial Exhibition and Old Home Week: 9 am. — judging in cattle and sheep classes. 1 pm. — vaudeville in Coliseum 2.30 p.m. — harness rac- ing, eight dashes. 7 p.m. —, vaudeville in Coliseum. 8.30 p.m. — harness rac- ing. eight dashes. 9 p.m. — Gold Cup and Saucer girle draw numbers of horses they will represent in Friday classic. After the races fire-" works in front of the grand- stand Thousands Hail Arrival Of Sailor-Editor In Eng. t FALMOUTH, England (AP)— Robert Manry, out of Cape Cod 78 days aboard a 13'4-foot sail- boat, came ashore Tuesday; night and knelt°to kiss the soil of England. Amid—a~storm -of- cheers. the lone sailor-editor from Cleve- land stepped from his tiny +Tinkerbelle- onto custom house quay and first kissed.his wife and two children. Then: he knelt jto greet England at the spot | where news of Admiral Nelson's jdeath was brought to this gea- 'faring mation 160 years ago. | The 47 - year - old new: spaper ./man had been 2% months at sea fighting hullucinations and exhaustion, in what is believed hege t@ be the smaliest boat to \maké “the 3,200-mile eastward \erossing non-stop. “was announced |_ Both man and boat Tooked| Manry scrambled) immaculate. on to the quay steps ; wife, Virginia, 46. Next came a kiss and, a hug for his 14-year-old daughter, | Robin, and his 11-year-old son, | Douglas. Mrs. Manry and the | children were as unruffled by \the occasion as_ they'd been | throughout the long weeks’ when |Manry was unsighted and ex- perienced sailors feared him | Mrs. Manry went out in a to bug his trawler Monday and had a 10- century ago, he accepted a tow minute reunion with her hus- on the .advice of the harbor- band on the Tinkerbelle, 55 master. miles off Cornwall. Thousands lined the cliffs. of Tinkerbell in tow, pulled in to CAUSE UNCERTAIN As the harbor launch, with the Cornish coast at every pos-'the quay, an uproar of cheers, sible vantage ‘point to” watch (Continued on page 5, col. 3) Manry sail in. Near Black Rock buoy, ‘the great” windjammers that packed this historic harbor...a Viet Cong Beaten Back From Air SAIGON (AP)—A small num-| —to— ; namese Communists, military spokesman reported. He said there were no U.S. cas- ualties like -tempted- ‘ air base late Tuesday night but chief were knocked back by U.S. ma- Cloutier. rines who killed two of the Viet- U.S. Gas Believed | Cause Of Death By HARRY CALNEK ' OAK ISLAND, N.S. (CP)— Four men perished Tuesday in a gas-filled pit they hoped would lead them to a fortune in pirate gold on thig little island off Nova Scotia's south shore. A fifth man was pulled un- conscious from the 27-foot-deep, hole and two others scrambled | to safety before being overcome. The deaths were the first) /_ known to have occurred since |— legends that infamous Captain | Kidd had buried treasure here began to lure treasure seekers to this island 45 miles from Halifax in 1795. Dead is Robert Restall, 59, of Hamilton, Ont., who has heen living and digging on the island since 1959 and was convinced he was within sight of $30,000,- 000 in treasure. His 24-year-old son, Robert Jr., also died: Karl Graeser,, about 40, a |Long Island, N.Y., mineralogist |who recently became interested in the venture, and Cyril Hiltz, £ bir _s as 2 SS MAP LOCATES Oak Island, Nova Scotia, legendary site of Captain Kidd's buried . pirate treasure, one mile off the coast_and_ about 45 miles from Halifax. (CP Wirephoto) when mother ran up, all excit- ed, and told me to get the camp : ai int, N:S., died .°TS: They went to the pit and ee of mud in 80 one’ fellow” out; then they it onthe island's east Chased me away.” oo Mrs. Mildred Restall had heen placed. under heavy sedation and remained in the trailer-like Just what killed the men was house she had made a home for not immediately “determined. her husband and ‘sons for five Rivard Friend Pleads Guilty , 38, friend of | MONTREAL (CP)_-Eddie Le- chasseur, Lacien Rivard, now awaiting “trial in gasoline engine for a pump in YJ. \Two United States teachers, | years. It-is built on a mound of Rich Barber and Peter Beam-| earth thrown up _from_ previous lish, Camping on the island with qiggings, A few stunted sweet= a group of teen-age students, | neas she had planted crawl up | said they believed the victims |g string trellis. | weme overcome by “swamp = «1 don't think ‘she realized gas.” even before the sedation just Another theory was that the what had happened,” said Rev. Finlay, Anglican priest 'Texas on narcotics trafficking stalled over the mouth of the from nearby Western Shore, ‘charges, pleaded guilty Tuesday (pit filled the hole with carbon \te plotting a $40,000 fraudulent monoxide. | bankruptcy. sessions Judge Armand 17. Sor He admitted defrauding cred- itors in the bankruptcy of The spokesman said 10 to 12° Montreal furniture store to the Viet Cong reached the barbed amount of $40,000. Lechasseur changed his. plea deaths the ber of Viet Comg guerrillas 3t-|to guilty when his trial was | still something contagious —to—proceed—before—acting leir— Thetwo—teachers>—fondled He is te be sentenced Sept. base, ~380- miles: ndérth: of Saigon, wire outer_perimeter at the big*_.jyage-Cloutier agreed: tora de- fence request that Lechasseur be allowed to remain free on |bail so that he might reimburse (some of the creditors. but were discovered: there and several clashes broke out. In- termittent -firing “went en for more than two hours. of it. Only the weather anda new power system in the spacecraft left some lingering doubts that Thursday's launch will go on schedule. If anything is to delay the flight, engineers say, it will be the power system. In a full-scale rehearsal July 23, the fuel cells developed a- leak and had to be replaced. Typhoons Lucy and Mary the airport, thousands planted themselves inside and outside Maple Leaf Gardens in %-degree temperatures and noisily awaited the singing group Five minutes before the Bea- lanta. “Polo Epidemic Hits In Lancashire Jown By PETER BUCKLEY LONDON (CP)—A ‘polio ept- demic in the Lancashire town of Blackburn has raised a authorities had hoped would never appear again. : “Let our misfortune be a warning to everyone,” Dr. John Ardley, medical Blackburn, said Tuesday in a telephone interview. : Latest count showed 19 con- firmed cases of polio in Black- burn, with a population of. 105,- 009. and 13 Cases suspected. One death has been recorded. The outbreak has been officially classed as an epidemic “We hadn't had any polio tor -a-few-years -ant- people had -he- come complacent,’ Dr. Ardicy said. ‘‘It's the same old story. We are always warning people that they should be immunized, but they do not respond unt’! they see the danger in. their midst.’ BEGAN 2 WEEKS AGO The national health ministry said less than one-half the Brit- ish population of 55,000,000 has been immunized, despite con- grams” of tree -vae- cine. Immunization in the cot- ton - manufacturing town of officer” at “17,500 persons were immunized Fah eth ee, ee ac a ee a Oe were raging in the Pacific. a moonsoon was reported in the Bay of Bengal,—-winter—storms! ousine to the police van. After their second perform- ance of the night, the quartet = were~reported™in™thesouthern a 2 spend, ine nies 2S ae hemisphere and _ barometers panes : were falling over the tropics, but the weather was not an item of major concern. Forecasters __said__ conditions. should be suitable in the launch- ing area, the main recovery | area 400 miles east of Cape | Kennedy in the Atlantic, and in| two _ofthree_other areas where | recovery. fleets are stationed. Blackburn was even below the Armed Peace national average before the epi- Rules In | demic began two weeks ago. © Only about 6ne-third of the peo- re BO a a Taigaal Dr. Ardley brought in emer- | gency supplies of oral vaccine LOS TT lca and began a crash program of Peace ruled in. eee immunization. In one day, some Los Angeles Negro section Tues- day. after six days of riot. Gov- | ernor Edmund Brown ‘of Cali- | fornia lifted a curfew that had | blacked out 46 square miles for | ‘three nights. | The National Guard relieved ! 2,500 troops from riot duty. a 12,500 combat troops remained. | Police will continue on 12-hour and an estimated total of 95,000 have, now been treated. Residents of Blackburn have been warned to stay at home as much as possible. Churches were nearly empty last Sunday and the town’s merchants have reported a sharp, drop in busi- *% a pt ti folléwed 4 These’ actions fo | cine disease pad been on tM ours. without «killing. 1t-war) seale immunization begas in the first such period since dep- | 1936 : uty sheriff Ernest Ludiow was “Betote that, polio took: an shot last Friday, the first fafal- enormous toll. In both 1947 and‘ity of the violence that erupted ¢ than 7,000 Britons last Wednesday. count i be ae ‘aeaas and. The riot toll stood at 33 dead, about one victim in 10 died from including 27. Negroex and 864) it. Other post-war years saw injured. : smaller outbreaks. Nearly 4,000 Fires set by Negro mobs burned 5% structures, destroy- died of polio in the 11 years before 1957. = Since then, the total steadily” declined until last year, when only 49 cases and five deaths were repofted. ‘ing 201 of them. Fire damage has was estimated af $175,000,000. | Losses from looting and wanton destruction added uncounted jmillions more. ' ; : i ¢ aa : j x 4 J J \ \ er od Ae | - AYRSHI Bx. ee lan. 28 Bae A™ Arthur MacRae, left holds the Premier Breeders banner won by.A. MacRae and_ Son, _ Sherwood in the Ayrshire ring Tuesday. Right is Wallace DEMIE ” 1 a sieeiil RES. j f TOP WINNERS IN AYRSHIRE CLASSES ° Wood with the Premier Exhi- bitor’s banner. won yesterday by) Almon Wood and Sons, oMarshfield in the same ring-— The exhibitors banner goes te | Lechasseur later appeared be- fore Judge Benoit Turmel on four counts which resulted from testimony he gave at the Dorion $ linquiry and at the preliminary | TELLS OF RESCUF —Ryen—a-few—hours——after=the- Mr. Barber, a-teacher at-Pbit- treasure fever was |Pip’s Academy at Exeter, N.H., in the | Said he was tn the camp. when | Ricky arrived out of breath. sty pices of iron they have We, blew our alarm whistle patie! i their own search. And and evVeryhody headed for the curly-headed Ricky Retall, 14, Pit.” He said, “when we got |youngest son of Robert, wander- there Andy DeMont wat “gasp- ed aimlessly about the death pit. | 1". his head just above the sur- “‘We were close. We were get- |face of the mud. ie iting very close,’ he said, his! Edward White, a fireman from lthroat tightening. __ Clarence, N.Y., vacationing im was Nova Scotia and visiting the !s- “The first thing I knew z ——- Jand _Tuesday,--was-lowered_inta a eat Te ders Asked lers and their students then pull- |ed White and DeMont to the mr- zs e At Summerside te. | | “White was pretty woozy OTTAWA (Special) — Tend-| when we got him up and we ers Have ben invited for twe | could smell the gas so we were projects on Queen’s Wharf at! afraid to send anyone else Summerside, it was ‘announced gown said Barber. ‘I jumped the pit on‘a rope” "The tivo teach * ! the people who have won the most points in the show. The | breeder's banner goes in the cattleman—who-has won the "eet points with animals he bred in his own herd ™ and {that type of plane. And a bomb —if there was one—might have |been secreted in baggage. i ‘hearing of Robert. Emilien Gignac, 38, another friend of Rivard, who faces a capital /murder charge. Lechasseur is accused of per- |jury and the obstruction of jus- | tice. here Tuesday by Mines Minis- ter J. Watson MacNaught. The project includes installa- tion of storm sewers, grading and gravelling. (Mr., MacNaught said the tend- ers on the two -projects close August 30. filling, | eS in a boat and headed for shore to get the doctor and the Moun- .Beamish and his . students spent about a half-hour reviving - . DeMont with -artificial ‘Continued on respira page 3, enol. 4) _30 PERSONS KILLED Before CHICAGO (AP) — Search boats fished bodies out-of Lake Michigan Tuesday while inves- tigators sought the reason for the crash of a United Air Lines jet that killed 30 persons. Seven bodies were recovered, jalong with pieces of wreckage lof a Boeing 727- ype of craft | The FBI, the Civil Aeronau- — Board and the company declined to speculate on the possibility a bomb had blasted the jet out of the sky minutes lfrom a routine touchdown Mon- | day night. | Witnesses on the shore re- jported a flash of light and an lexplosion before the plunge. Paul Driscoll, an Associated |Press reporter, was in a search |boat which received a radio message from the .U.S. Coast {Guard cutter Woodbine to ‘look ‘for seats or portions of seats and disregard other kinds of debris for the time being. Seats are over the luggage cargo compartments § in ‘RODE SWELLS was centred about 17. miles. northeast of | Fort Sheridan. a military base 25 miles north of Chicagn Coast guard cutters ‘and other small The hunt jeraft rode three-foot swells in, , = - 4 ‘ 14 | Explosion Is Reported Jetliner's Plunge Night rain while planes and heli- jlivered just 19 weeks agn Serv copters circled- above: tee—-with—these—_three engine Flight No. 389 made. only planes was. Started in Den- initial contact with approach ember, 1963. One hundred and control at’ O’Hare International sixty are in use by several air- Airport in Chicago as it headed ines: for the finish of its New York- WORKED: FOR SAFETY Chicago run. One of the 24 passengers yae Is contact is made_sev- Venaity : n Clarence L. (Clancy) Saven of j the F : chief controller for ironic. twist. Saen, who was yiati Agency <i Chicago. 5 Sat this dias mee was only President of the Air Line Pilots one, and Niles said there was Association from 1951 to 1962, no indication of trouble "was a tireless #orker for air The plane was over fhe lake, safety. ; just five to six minutes away The Lake County coroner, from its scheduled arrival. The Patrick Clavey, ruted no iden- tifications would be made until air -was calm. Visibility was good. And, apparently. Capt. they are positive Melville W. Towle, 42, of Wyck- Autopsies were planned off, N.J., was bringing in his Truman W. Finch headed a crew, and passengers for & team of 10 CAB. investigators routine landing. from Washington The Boeing 727 had been de- Material they will , @xamine was scooped up by boats mov- ing through waters up to 150 INSIDE TODAY feet deep. They -tretrieved a nine-foot piece from the top of CoS oo0 6c vices ‘0, 11 the “plane, a section of inside Births ......... ‘panelling ‘made of aluminum Deaths ........ covered with fabric and a float- COMMGS. oc cccces ing seal Sport eres ‘ A Spokesman for the C.AB., Finance, markets ........ commenting on speculation Women's about the possibility of a homh, Fditorials told a reporter “We bronght OUT OND ook. secu ess no salvaged wreckage ashore , Kings, Queens, City ...... Slant much too early in the Prince County ........°. investigation ta try to assese any cause.” —— \ ederal | Seattle. His life ended in an