If It’s Good For The Island The Guardi an Is For lt » Hrurarclian WEATHER Cloudy and colder with a few snow- flurries; winds-west 20, light by evening, Low-high 28 and 35. 3s - . . iw “ince Edward Island Like The Dew” | VOL. LXXVIIL. No. 285 datncaed ss Send Case tal QZ woos aa 8TOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1965. nor man SEVEN CENTS ts PAGES Sermons tn By JOHN BARBOUR HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — laxed and cheerful, Gemini In their first major medical! Re-| examination since Saturday's fairly comfortable,” Borman 7 | launching, lots Frank Borman and James | flight surgeon, Dr. Charles I thought they told the hief Astronauts On Gemini 7° § Have Leisurely Day Aloft “Yes, I think we're both said. “It's a little warmer than it would be. we're ae % ~! Je G ails In Bid For First Vote Victory Another Vote Due lo Decide Outcome By PETER BUCKLEY PARIS (OP)—France's voters turned their backs at least tem- |rand 5,145,344 for 32 per cent; Jean Lecanuet 2,648,815 for 1¢ per cent; Jean - Louis Tixier- vell sped Sunday through the | Berry, that they got four to six running ‘the cooling system) om | 7 second of their world record 14|hours sleep their first night in full cold, and we're just com- | days in orbit and received news | space. | fortable.” of an air crash on earth. | Berry asked Borman—who is Among the news reports Mis- “Looks like its safer up here | wired with small electrodes to! sion Control beamed {o the as- than down there,’ commented | sense: how deeply he sleeps—jtronauts were newspaper head- Borman, an air force lieuten- | about the sleep period. limes about their flight and the ant-colonel and. command pilot! ‘Frank, we'd like to get some ‘‘very nice pictures" of the as- idea on the depth of that sleep,” tronauts’ wives on front pages. Vignancour 905,085 for 5 per de Gaulle Suunday by giving him cent; Pierre Marchilhacy 2, | substantially less than the ab-| 488 for 2 per cent and Marce’ solute majority he needed to be | Barbu 186,708 for 1 per cent: ireturned to office in one ballot. RUNOFF LIKELY Mt ith more than half the es- : s | Wi Everything pointed to a sec- { |timated 25,000,000 votes counted pre ‘lot bei: id a poratily on President Charles TAIL SECTION of Eastern Airlines Constellation that col- lided in air with TWA jet liner stands in field near North Sa- lem, N.Y., where it crash ground. Main part of fuselage landed Saturday night. Mang- r : led. tection ef. ene of the was found jin same field. plane’s four engines is in fore- (AP Wirephote) ‘FANTASTIC’ OFFICIAL SAYS of Gemini 7. Borman and Lovell blasted into space at 2:30 p.m. EST Sa- turday from Cape Kennedy, Fila. | their second day in space—and heard that around-the-clock ef- forts to prepare another Gemini | space ship for launching were} They gave a glowing report of the time .. . Berry said. ‘It appeared to us on the ground that you were sort of in and out most all of “Affirmative, Borman an- swered- “It was rather a light sleep.” EAT EVERYTHING early today, de Gaulle had 44 iper cent of the ballots, left-wing ‘eandidate Francois Mitterrand ‘had 32 per cent and middle-of- \the - road candidate Jean Le | canuet 16. | The rest were divided among lthree other candidates trailing \far behind. They were told that everyone | om the recovery aircraft car- | rier Wasp in the Atlantic was lappy with the launch. “Their theme song is ‘I'll be jhome for Christmas,’ Mission |Control -said. The Wasp is to ipick up the Gemini 7 and its FRENCH VOTERS handed President Charles de Gaulle a humiliating rebuff in Sun- day's presidential election. Although he led the field of: six candidates, the showing was.a stunning blow to the as required by the constitution, with only the two leading can- didates on the ballot—de Gaulle and Mitterrand. There had been widespread speculation before Sunday's lelection that de Gaulle might withdraw or resign in dignity if he failed to get the running four h head ; : ° ° « scundule. Ore eee Onin Meebaring. Wok: thet maagl |*We pilots Doe. 18 austere, aloof de Gaulle who | Counting continued today, but ‘frank and massive i ots r At 1:55 p.m., Mission Control | in space, had eaten almost ev-| The astronauts may have | had asked his countrymen for it was regarded be wit? ee had sought from the elector+ fa ise reported that Gemini 7 had been erything on the menu im earlier come up with the answer to a ‘‘massive’’ support. likely that de Gaulle could get ate. : g given a go-ahead for another | meals. “puzzler” that hit them late the 50 per cent of the ae While few political observers ° ee day in orbit. | Berry asked whether the new Saturday. Something like a [peas ae, Which the ee ‘ate discounting the possibility n a ee Air ( O lision The spacecraft began its I6th.| Hight w e i ht spacesuits were wanna — oP struck : ieee far. VCWET OF noe meen orbit at 2:31 p.m. A Lovell’'s window ring a man- ‘ ‘ | t a p.m comfortable {ee € Il las | At 1 a.m. (7 p.m. EST), of- from - res a we NORTH SALEM, N.Y. (ARr done a} Haas ficial returns for 16,288,442 vot- | appea' likely tha’ |The pilot must have ajhaps 1,000 miles an hour on Sunday, the astronauts saw ae ut of a total of 28,848, allow his name to stand. 4 |crossing paths of crowded | metropolitan air lanes which handle 2,200 flights a day. Flight investigators examined Shaken survivors and seasoned | wonderful job-" crash investigators credited two! The last time two commercial hero pilots for the low death toll aircraft oilided os the metro- of four in a Saturday night col-|politan area—on Dec. 16, 1960, | African States Give Britain 10 Days To Act In Rhodesia | some things streaming from be- hind their spacecraft and iden- tified them as calking or explo- sive cord ‘used to separate the 1889 registered voters, gave: Charles de Gaulle 7,223,002 for 44 per cent; Francois Mitter- | Im that case, he was regarded | as almost certain of victory. | (Continued on page 3 Col. 6) Kills Thre — oo po inary high over jis. aviation’s worst disaster—|wreckage and survivors seek. | spacecraft from the second- , suburbs, | 134 persons on the planes or on jing to learn how it could hap-| A as ” | stage rocket. It poses no prob- | . ; | , DDIS; ABABA (AP)—The Af-|attack on ‘Britain itself, rs fouas mis aa ae life as he the ground in Brooklyn and |pen. feat slated Seve apresd talinen Gerard ian a ig lems.° Mission Control had de-| JoLIETTE, Que. (CP)--Three eeget |) a yab’ . foat-we- |Staten Island were killed. The transcontinental TWA | principle to declare war on Rho-} Top. officials in London re. | Wed that was what the mys- members of one family were ruise C ooner sined Coustiiation, wih 4 Dats) is Luge flight was supposed to, be, ait \desia “it Britain does not put |garded this threat as serious (‘TN ern was. Houston, Killed Sunday when two private : 7 ; ’ down that white-ruled colony’s | said it should not ovell’s home in Houston, airplanes collided in the air near crash against a hillside here,| The only injured persom|a¢ 10,000. revolt, in 10 days. A gvocomm ie the final word They helaied his wife Marilyn went to church here. On Reef near the Connecticut state line | aboard Capt. Thomas H. Car- 50 miles north of New York /roll’s non-stop Trans World -Air- City lines jet flight from San Fran- The other pilot guided , his ;cisco to New York was a Stew- crippled Boeing 707 jetliner, | ardess whose nose was bloodied with 58 persons aboard. to an when she was slammed to the emergency landing - at collision, two mites Airport with 30 feet of left wing-|up in a dusky sky. } TELLS PASSENGERS Passeners aboard the Ea 2 have to crash-land. not: controb. the-eraft:-and-wonld” try action committee has been | icharged with the military plas ining, ft was reported in . this) |Ethiopian capital Sunday. - | Nigeri’s foreign minister, | jtion of war would come wotil | after Dec. 15. A weekend con- | »Bemalj, said no. declare. ta economic aid and trade leges Britain grants the African | Commonwealth members. These | would be ahead-wi monwea and equipment training from if the OAU = plans. i os ¥ countries —re-} tothe Manned Spacecraft” Cen- ceive almost all their military! tre here from Cape Kennedy Sunday. She is expecting her fourth child soon, perhaps while her husband is spaceborne. ' Borman’s wife, Susan, and their two sons were returning The planes, a Cessna 140 and | Ends U p a Piper super cruiser, crashed | \together 1,200 feet above a pri- | vate airport. ; FSOUMINAC, NB. (OP) — A _ The Piper lost its right Wing | pilot boat rescued eight persons on- impact and went into | snd two Siamese cats from a spinning whirl which ended only in cold, wind-swept Mira- where they watched the Jaunch- when it smashed to the ground. | michi Bay Sunday after they | rescue and said they suffered np il_effects, although eold and wet, The Golden Glow, owned Pletcher and. Moore, struck by the i issing. “I think i i With tail : ae oe ted and 3A persons | the Satie’ coca te SP wee. oats ie. fae (feces poe hte Co and | Britain. So did Rhodesia. ling. bine ig dead were in the were forced to abandon their | reef raf ig ari otha , sat 1 mt ecided that | ; iper. y were owner-pilot truck - | 10 p.m. ( ) urday. Listing flow in. hospital were aboard nificent job of landing the plane |Wotld Wer bomber pilot, ma-| 1... pritain. crushes the re- | | Gerard Roy, of Joliette, his wife | at a tah tn | dane sly to starboard, she Capt. Charies J. White’s East- ern Airlines shuttle flight from | Boston to Newark, N.J. \ | Standing in a soft snowfall | beside the charred wreckage, Oscar Bakke, regional director | }with {that much wing gone,” said another federal investiga- tor, George A. Van Epps of the Civil Aeronautics Bureau, fer nipulated his engines to keep the plane level in its-tight, flat spin out of the sky. A passen- ger estimated the Constellation ferring to the TWA pilot. ‘‘It was excellent pilotage.”’ stayed aloft two to four min- utes; a stewardess guessed five of the Federal Aviation Agency,| Passengers echoed these sen- to 10. remarked: | “All I can say it is is fan- timents. | The planes came together Carroll, 45. a veteran of 2 years with TWA, nursed the big tastic that people walked -away. with a;combined speed of per- 707 jet to a landing at Kennedy. Sharp Sees No Serious Effect From U.S. Financial Measures. By BEN ‘WARD OTTAWA (CP)—Acting Fi- mance Minister Sharp says new United States measures to im- prove its balance of payments “should not cause injury to the Canadian economy.” He said a Washington deci- sion to ask U.S. corporations to reduce their’ 1966 investment in Canadian plants and equipment will help the Canadian govern- ment in it. efforts to relieve some of the pressures being caused by the wnprecedented economic boom. “We believe too much 1s be- ing attempted through invest- ment now,” Mr. Sharp told a press conference. He recalled Ottawa this year cut back parts of its own building program to ease some of the pressures on the construction industry. aANADA PLEASED Mr. Sharp, trade minister who has been “acting in the finance” portfolio since the resignation last month of Walter Gordon, said Canada is particularly pleared the U.S. will not re strict long-term Canadian bor- rowings in the U.S. money mar- said. .UTO PACT EXEMPTED Mr. ‘Sharp emphasized the 35 per cent above. the 1962-64 | more votes in a judicial recount | call for a cut in-direct Cana- dian investment by U.S. firms will not affect present heavy commitments here. Atso, ex- pansion of the Canadian auto industry, under terms of the U.S.-Canada agreement on auto tariffs was specifically exempt from the restraints. In return for the assurance of access to the U.S. money mar- ket, Canada has agreed to lower its reserves of gold and U.S. dollars to a level of about $2,- ,600,000,000, or $100,000,000 below ithe level agreed upon in 1968 when Canada won exemption from the U.S. interest equaliza- tion tax. This tax, imposed against most other foreign countries, would greatly hamper Canadian borrowings in the U.S. Present” Canadian ~ reserves, jincluding credits in the Inter- national Monetary .Fund, total $2,907,000,000. The object would be to cut this to the agreed level gradually during 1966. WOULD USE RESERVES important to réduce this. Direct investment in Canada by U.S. firms daring 1965 was average Mr. Sharp admitted it is jyet clear what will happen to U.S. investment here under the new program, but said it will Inot likely have a serious effect on Canadian economic expan sion. : “Canada recognizes the im- portance both to the United States and the world system of trade and payments of a strong U.S. dollar." The U.S. ‘recognizes the um- que. economic and financial re- jlationships which exist between our two countries,’ he added. Rush To Sea Almost Over By THE CANADIAN PRESS The yearly rush by ocean-go- ling’ vessels to clear the St. [Lawrence Seaway before it \freezes over has just about lended. et bellion by then, all 36 members | of the Organization of African Unity, including nine members of the Commonwealth, will sever diplomatic relations with Lon- don. = The nine Commonwealth members are Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Ghana Zambia, Malawi, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania }and Gambia. : “If Britain has not responded | to our resolutions by then, ‘we | feel it will have abdicated its responsibility and we can attack Rhodesia without this being an Liberal Wins _ ‘Ont. Recount — |doubtedly increase sharply, he |in the last two years and it was | | | SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. | (CP) — Liberal incumbent George Nixon picked up nine | ‘of ballots cast in Algoma West giving him 120 more than Pro gressive Conservative Russ) Farm Build Two farm buildings, one a barn at Newton and the other a -piggery at -Burlington, were destroyed by fire Saturday even- ing. ‘ In the fire at Newton, not far from Kinkora, Clayton McCabe lost 18 animals, along with the barn. Lost were a milk cow, two pigs and a number of 27-year-old and yearling cattle. Mr. McCabe was not at home when the fire was discovered when already well underway. Mrs. McCabe anda son were able to save a milking machine not {in the Nov. 8 federal election, and 15 of the 33 animals in the barn. The Kinkora fire department did an excellent job in pre Ramsay Jr. st ‘McCabe home, which | fire. ngs Burned In Two Fires Saturday ing the spread of the fire to the is very close to the barn. { The los: was partially covered \by insurance. At Burlington two sows, a lit- | ter of pigs and some poultry were-included.in_the:-loss_of the piggery. Total amount of loss | was unofficially. placed at' from $1,500 to $2,000. There was no insurance on the: building. The Kensington Fire Depart- ment, several miles away, re- ceived a call about 6.30 and prevented fire from spreading to the Paynter dwelling and to other buildings on the property. | There was no estimate of the | amount of loss in the Newton and their son Yvon, 25. Mr. Roy was co-owner of a soft drink bottling plant in this community 40 miles north of Montreal. The owner and pilot of the second plane, Renaud Des roches, 24, also of Joliette, was injured in a crash landing but his condition was not judged serious. Safe Stolen At: Dartmouth DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP) Thieves broke into an automo- | bile. showroom-—here —Saturday,-| loaded a half-ton. safe into a! Escuminac, The eight—two Chatham, N.B. faenilies— had left Chatham Fri- day’ aboard the converted 9% foot schooner Golden Glow on the first lap of a cruise whict? was to have taken them to the Caribbean. The vessel was head- ed for Alberton, P.E.I., where her hull was to be painted be- fore the start of the Caribbean trip. The trim craft was driven onto the reef by a high southwest- ern gale which brought with it rain and snow. Rescued after being spotted by _a Search and Rescue_heli- copter from Chatham RCAF was abandoned six hours later. |.* The two men were rowing the | dory in the direction they be- lieved was Prince Edward Is- land when Escuminac Point lighthousekeeper Bliss. McLenne sighted the schooner on the |.reef in mid-morning Sunday. | An ROAF Search and Rescue | helicopter’ was called into the | search after a pilot boat from | Chatham found no life aboard | the schooner. The helicopter spotted the dory about 10 miles | from here at noon and directed the pilot boat to the ecene. | The Golden Glow was _ pur- | chased in. Newfoundland and sailed-to- Chatham this fall for a ‘refit and overhaul. Fletcher and 1966 showroom model car and | ation were two ex-RCAF per- (Moore planned to put the craft drove off. “| The safe was estima , sonnel and their families, Mr. | in service as a Miramichi River to | and Mrs. Dudley Fletcher and | excursion boat after their re- have contained $12,000' in ‘cash Mr-_and Mrs. George Moore, | turn trip from the Caribbean and cheques, -Police found the safe in @ northend Section of the city Sun- day. It had been blown open and | its contents removed. | The car stolen from the show- room was recovered a few hours | Sadn. Idir. K. Lilly examined er could be salvaged and | the eight persons following their | paired. later. the Fletchers’ eight-year-old son Scott and the Moores’ two child- ren, Creighton, 2, and Lynn, 10. Also on board was Mrs. Moire's brother, Art Champagne. Air Force Medical Officer mext summer. “We have no plans now,” Flet- cher said Sunday night. ‘We've lost everything.” However, an ROMP spokes- man said he believed the schoon- re- q ; } } | | } By THE CANADIAN PRESS Strong westerly ad © north- westerly gales in the wake of a severe storm moving into Lab- rador were forecast for the Gulf of St. Lawrence for Sunday night | and early today, adding to the problems-af shipping attempting to clear the St. Lawrence sea- way system. The same storm brought heavy snow {to northern New Bruns- 10 Inches Snow Falls At Campbellton, N.B. | about f) miles to the East ceived less than a halif-inch. In Charlottetown .29 inches of rain fell between 6 o'clock Sat- | urday.night..and..6..0'clockSun- day morning. The velocity of the wind reached its peak at midnight Saturday when it was gusting to 40 miles per hour In Cape Breton, where winds reached 75 miles an hour in gusts and more than an inch of rai. fell, police were run ragged re: | wick Saturday night and torren- tial rain to parts of Nova Scotia ket If natural forces are not! Sunday night there were only | with reports of missing rabbit It is “of the very greatest im- enough, Canada had accepted a/| 2 ‘‘salties”’ still to pass through h Ab — that Canadians have |new mechanism for adjusting the St. Lambert Lock at Mont- | and southern New Brunswick reper meng ee reed unlimited aécess to U.S. bor- ji ; rs ae eal jits reserves to the agreed level. real, the eastern terminus. Campbellton, N.B... received up safely. rovings and th | > | i i vings an is has been as- If reserves are too high, the Ca | A seaway authority spokes- 10.1 inches of snow during the Several power failures result- sured. inadian government will use re-|man said all the ocean-going | Po Wihout ‘ ‘serve dollars to redeem its own ships had cleared both the Wel- | night to add. to the 14 inches ed from the high winds but two ithout such access, interest bonds held by US. buyers. Head Canal and Lane Ontario already on the ground. Central smali blackouts in Halifax Coun- fates in Canada would un- | If reserves drop below the land waee. ia. the seaway system | : ~~ age ee Brunewic® ty were attributed 6 bullet-shat- ‘target, the Canadian govern- between the Iroquois Locks and | i in oe tare ase ae Jeu oo ss | ixture vandals. Coat 80 SHE 0° alg sey Sonis in the US to obtain the ‘The spoke res rain afd snow. - a t ONLY 17 . |U.S. dollars required. | wei Saar ‘veuite. waa Saim John, N.B.. reported a . Mr. Sharp said Canadian gov- pass through the St. Lambert | | rainfall of .1.47 inches ‘in the INSIDE TODAY SHOPPING 2 ernment bonds now held in the Lock into the St. Lawrence Ri- | %-hour period ending at 8 a.m. U.S. are worth about $780,000,- ver during the night, leaving | | AST Sunday. Classified 14, 15 t DAYS TILL Fou ‘the remainder to clear today ee WANDA 4 o5iii gaa: 15 Cc This “looks like enough" to al- and possibly as late as Tues-| il = ae pattern was @f- | Deaths ........-csesee2s 3 ; HRISTM \low the new mechanism te \day morning. t : | Chay a ase ie on on COS isis is 13 j iWork, he said. | He said the water tempera- ’ iN “ 1 Wet 8 ee, 9, 10 , ; The minister said Canada had |tore at the St. Lambert Lock— SUMMERSIDE MAN HEADS TEACHERS’ FEDERATION soe ap aes Gis tek cae | ee sees ein % sought an exemption from. the.|uswally the first to freeze each ea miles away, had 1.22 = Editorials --.......060+++- 4 > ey Vlluntary restraint on new in- |yeat—was 35.4 degrees and that | J. Weeks Murphy of Sum- day at the annual meetinc of Campbell, left, of Morell and = question, Canada Pension Plan | inches, _ Summerside Ris ces tur Oe = | vestment. However, the U.S. jnone of the remaining ships, merside was elected president the Board of Governors. Here first vice-president Francis and consolidation of elemen Yarmouth on the province's Kings, Queens, City .... 3 : view was that investment in-|would have any trouble getting of the Prince Edward Island Mr- Murphy, centre, chats Blanchard of Sherwood. The tary scfiools. (See story on | southwestern tip received 1.13in. Prince County .......... 2 aaiCanada has increased sharply jout af the avstem Teachers’ Federation Satur- eet ey with past president, Charies page 5.) ches of rain while Liverpool ==