5-Year Economic Plan Island News Page |’ Western and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Sept. 17, 1965. British Gov't Unveils 3 By HAROLD MORRISON entails nationalization of stee) LONDON (CP) — The Labor, Brown told reporters he government has unveiled a five- | would not reply to political at- year economic plan which |tacks. As for stee) nationaliza- seems to entai] a shrinking role |tion, the plan dealt only with, for Britain in world affairs by |meansof achieving targets—not curtailing foreign aid and keep- | with the political aspects of in- ing defence spending under con- | dustrial control. c OLDEST RUSSIAN | Economics Minister George) Brown hastily made clear at a press conference Thursday that | any unforseen event, such as | TIRED OF CITY war, could force’ changes in the | . plan. MOSCOW ‘Reulers) -— But he and his associate en- Russia’s oldest man, 160 - visaged that by squeezing - year - old Shirali Mislmov, ASTRONAUTS GREETED BY GREEK ROYALTY greater efficiency out of man-| jg tired of big city noise power, by increasing invest- | and eager to get back to his 4 ment and relocating workers, . mountain home, the Soviet Queen Anne Marie and King wives in’ the Royal Palace in don Cooper and Gordon Cooper, (AP Wirephete by eable from Britain's national production news agency Tass reported. Constantine of Greece, center, Athens last night before a state and at right are Mrs. Charles Athens). : = may increase by about 25 per Mislimov, an Azerbaijan pea~.» greet U.S. astronauts and their dinner; At. left are Mrs. Gor- Conrad and Charles Conrad. cent over the five-year period | Lending 1970. sant, left home for a month's stay in the city of Baku, but the noise and ‘too many. im- |.$1,293,060,000 for a gain of 22.6 'per cent over the same period | } NOT.A SOUL IN SIGHT strike of the American News- paper Guild. The Times shut down and, at 6 p.m., the six other morning and evening newspapers of the New Yorg Publishers Association announc- The New York Times editor- {al room,. where normally re- (@ porters and copy boys-man the typewriters and_ telephones, was a calm and peaceful sight last night after an 8 a.m. Snow And Rai n On Prairies Cutting Into Crop Quality OTTAWA ‘(CP)--Bad weather 4s causing some deterioration in the quality of the Prairie grain crop, but vield prospects gen- erally remain ‘favorable, the bureau of statrstics has report- el . _ In its last telegraphic crop report of the year, the. federal agency said wet weather is de- laying the’ Prairie grain har- vest. Little threshing has been done for the past two weeks - Psychiatrists Are Meeting At Dalvay | Maritime Psychiatrie Associa- tion is being held today and Sat- urday at Dalvay Some 4 psychiatrists from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island will be attending the meetings. Dr. T. E. Dancey of Montre al, the chief of psychiatric ser- vices for the department of vet- erans affairs, will be the guest speaker at the mectings A dance is scheduled for to- night. WESTERN j Alberta is particularly hard hit The crop survey was based on reports up to Tuesday from field correspondents. Warm, dry weather is needed to complete the harvest, Grade losses are being re- ported from .all Prairie areas, | the bureau said, but the deter- oration is more severe in Al- berta than in Saskatchewan and | Manitoba Widespread Prairie frosts |have damaged some late-matur- {ing crops. ' A severe jh as caused moderate yield, losses to bread wheat. in -the West. An accurate estimate of jloss is impossible because of \varying conditions, but loss areas TENDER CROPS HURT Elsewhere in Canada, early September frost caused some damage to tender crops in many parts of the Mari-* times. The Prince Edward Is-| land grain harvest is well-ad- vanced- with yields 70 per cent of last year’s. Island potatoes jare doing well with no evidence (of late blight. | Seeding of winter. cereal! grains. has begun in Western Nova Scotia and potatoes in that area are good, but pastures poor. In the province's Truro) idistrict, rains have improved Temal pastures and a grain crop of excellent quality is being har- vested. Conditions are generally leaf-rust epidemic | predicting the results with con- MUST WORK HARD This would be sufficient to pay off Britain's rising foreign ., ‘debts and to increase spending jon national _ welfare, housing, ‘schools and roads. But Brown emphasized that Britons will have to push hard to make this dream come true. The .gpvern- ening sanctions or punishment ment would help, not by threat- jening sanctions or punishment for those who fail, but through persuasion pressure and incen tives. Brown maintained ed they were closing . their piants, Only the afternoon tab- loid Post, not a member of the ‘association, wil! publish. (AP Wirephoto) BLUNT (Continued from page 1) election outcome in stituencies. The hard-cover book has 176 pages and is chock-full of tabu- lated election results and opin-. ion surveys. Mr. _ Regenstreif, eity con- that this plan but one developed through unions and ‘universities. But a bilingual ‘native’ of ~ Montreal, holds a - PhD from Cornell University and. is assistant professor of political science and Canadian studies at the University of Rochester, N.Y. INTERVIEWED VOTERS He interviewed voters across Canada in the 1957, 1958, 1962 and __1963_.. election campaigns and wrote newspaper articles Barn Fire Damage Is $5,500 sistent accuracy. He is at it again this election. The peripatetic pollster also lectures in political science at pressions’’ have tired the old man, Tass said, He wag reported in -excellent health Arabs Agree On To Reach Full Highway Proposal Criticized LOUP, QUE RIVIERE DU (CP) jcommittee on transport ~— Alphee Levesque of Ed- was not merely a. government ,Mundston, N.B., president of ‘ an co-operation with management, ‘highways, says —econstruction—of a highway by-passing the regu- | CASABLANCA (| Reuters )- Arab heads of state have \“unanimously agreed upon all steps_to_realize Arab solidarity aa! present and to safeguard. it for the future.’ a summit con- ference communique says, The agreement was reached at a two-hour closed meeting Tuesday of the 12 Arab states- men on the first full day of con- ference activities Conference sources Arab leaders agreed the to said also -Jar--Trans-Canada route to the Stop radio and press campaigns Maritimes would be a danger ious obstacle to trade. a proposed corridor through Maine Brunswick is ‘‘not’’ logical. Highway is the University of Montreal and sion on bilingualism and bisiF a loss of some $5,500. turalism. The results will re- pub- approximately 6:30. The call was lished, likely late next year. answered by the Kensington . oe Fire Department. ~ i Mr. « Regenstreif found that ‘tne barn was on the farm ot - Canadian voters are highly Mr. Paynter located on the Mal- volatile and becoming e€VeN' peque Road one mile north of more so. They switched parties Kensington. in staggering numbers and only The farm has been vacant for about one-quarter of the 265 the past couple of days. Mr. seats in the Commons could be Payrter is believed to be out of regarded as “safe” for any the province and there was no. party. This led to instability in. one living on the farm at: the politics and in government. | time of the fire. ane ial The barn was valu Few voters or social groups ¢4 99 and it contained approxi- | ned loyal to a particular mately $1,500 worth of baled| party because of its policies in hay. The loss is believed to be their favor. Instead, they were partially insured. : swayed by momentary issues. even before it was unveiled, | mission's final report is ed at about | among town and villages. is route.” He said the. proposed route A barn owned by Brenton) through Maine would have a ten- an main confidential until the com- Paynter burned last evening al dency to disunite the provinces. Mr. Levesque told a chamber of commerce meeting here. that highway to Fredericton and cutting off northwestern New “It-is urgent that we improve and use the regular highway. be- tween Riviere Du Loup and Fre- dericton. The Trans - Canada an economic re- source which must serve all pro- vinces. If there is as much co- operation among provinces as we probably ranges from one to recently completed an opinion KENSINGTON — A fire near Could have prosperous traffic on The 11th annual meeting of the [ve bushels an acre in affected survey for the royal” commig. Kensington last evening caused th . against each. other esident’ Gama! Abdel Nas- “‘'ser of Egypt, conference. chair- jman, said his country did not jimitiate these campaigns but |was. replying to attacks on it |by others, the sources said They’ said chairman Ahmad |Shukairy-of the Palestine Liber- ation Organization gave-a lengthy account of his. contacts with the Arab countries, but re- Gov't Policy On Park Use Is Supported HALIFAX (CP)—Support for the federal government's policy controlling commercial interests in Canadian national parks, was voiced in letters sent Wednes- day to Prime Minister .Pear- |Son and Opposition Leader Dief- he shown and Mr. enbaker. The letters were from e The Arab foreign ministers, this week are Dalhousie in oe bi ef anlar last Thursday, issued an urgent | Halifax and. Acadia in Wolf- ment ~of Palestinian troops’ appeal to both countries to stop ville, N.S. = and other requests he had made fighting and _ withdraw ~ their OL Se oops to. previous: positions, ° ° |. Attemptsby the conference to Building In. Bibl So ° ‘display Arab unity have been AES. ee ipie clety somewhat undermined by Tu-. Municipalities nisia’s decision to boycott the : Rall Planned gathering. Tunisian President Has Increase { y. a Bourguiba said he ae OTTAWA . (CP) _—Municipall- jcided" on the boycott because of ties -issued $383,273,000 worth of In Alberton jwhat he called plots by Nasser building permits in May, an in- |to-enforce his policies through- oreace of almost 39 per cent ALBERTON — Rev. David M. | Quigg will be in Alberton Pre- | Sbyterian Church this evening jto conduct a rally for West |Prince County on behalf of the |Canadian Bible Society. Mr. Quigg is the society's district secretary for Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, with headquarters in Saint John “Cornerstone of a nation,” the 60th anniversary film, will Quigg will speak concerning the challenge AllSteps Frashmen i ari -_ , = = Farm $520 By Shines St. Dunstan's University fresh- So to strengthen his anti-Isfael organization, Shukairy and Arab League General Secretary _Abdel._Kha- lek Hassouna told the leaders they would continue their con- tacts in an attempt to persuade Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya Morocco and Saudi Arabia to respond to the Palestine Libera- tion Organization's requests. ASK FOR TAXES |Fibrosis Foundation in yester- day's ‘‘Shinerama’’ campaign. The sources said Shukairy, in As part of initiation activities, his report on the organization's 35 teams of freshmen and first year, called. on the Arab ‘freshettes set up shoeshine states to help by allowing ‘ Stands on the streets of Sum- Palestinian refugees.to he given merside; _y Charlottetown and military training. in their coun. | Summnes side RCAF sper ar tries, taxes to be raised for the | on eo sia cab pier Fin ae Palestine campaign and Arab | he students conduct ay- ' __ long blitz to raise funds which troops to ‘be allowed to Move | will go to help children afflict- from one country to another. : ed with cystic fibrosis. Meanwhile, both Indian and Sichect aancuat eatiad by a Pbhkistani representatives were | single team was $43.95. : telling their sides of the Kash-" Other Maritime umiversities mir war in the corridors here. conducting similar campaigns ‘out the Arab world. from May of 1964, with most of the gain occurring in non-resi- ‘dential work. Unemployment | The bureau of. statistics has e ' reported that. permits for Hits New Low mon - residential construction i : , |jJumped .53 per cent at $200,- OTTAWA (CP) — _ Canada’s 539.900. Residential construction unemployment rate fell to 2.8 per cent in August. It was the _ first'time since July of 1957 that the rate fell belo cent. : The monthly employment re- port, issued jointly by the bu- was up 26 per cent at $182,743,- ’ Permits issued in the first, w.three per give months of 1965. totalled | | of 1964. Non - residential value was 34 per cent higher; resi- dential 11.6 per cent. All provinces. except Prince Edward Island and New Bruns- wick showed higher figures in May a a | | Crew Exchange Is Space Aim ATHENS(AP)—A_ Soviet coe monaut who “walked’’ in space men earned $520 for the Cystic- Said Thursday his country plans to try an exchange of crews on permanent earth satellites be fore landing a man on the moon The. disclasure by onov indi:ated that the Soviet Union is. attaching a different priority from the United States in putting a man on the moon. It also opened the possibility | that the Russians are thinking of sending a much bigger ship | to the moon than the Americ three-man Apollo, which will be -launched—_from—earth-_to__the- moon. SOMETHING To Think About... If your furnace is over 10 years | eld, you may he money ahead | to give it a good.- close look! HERE'S WHY: The usual “life expectancy” ordinary furnaces about Alexel La- a 10 is years. lei - BUT EVEN MORE . IMPORTANT of There have heen ‘so many wom derful improvements in the lagt 10 years you have a right to be discontented if you don’t have a modern. LENNOX heating sys- tem! If you do not have a LENNOX heating system call ae TODAY. Palmer Electric Dial 894-8543 - Ch’town the personalities of party lead-) Conservative Leader Edward the Conservation and Outdoor that faces the Canadian Bible | good in Eaastern Nova Scotia. | ; ers and local candidates and Heath described. it as, the. gov- Recreation Association of -NoVa. -Society=today==~ | The New Brunswick. grain 4 reau of statistics and the labor : SHERWOOD MOTEL. 4 sss , ey teenies pdt ae ; ; pecs et. ne . department; said Thursday —an-f— -..pharvest_is.well under way..with the prevalent ‘view in their par ernment's b ig gest publicity | Scotia with headquarters, jn Hal-In.addition.ta.the Jarge_num. : : : = vod Iravorable weather conditions. A |Hcular area." OS gimmick and challenged Brown lifax. her of copies. of the Bericcare ener wore Femi kaa i 8 : Brackley Point Re a . dL near-average--potate.-vield1e: ex=/::, Public interest. in.federal- poll-to.. say. -whether-=the--blueprint;.<.The Jetter:to-the -prime=minisc7in many languages “made avail pie of 9 400 OOO Speen te eet re ee eae = ties -had-risen-steadily-since=1o6—— + ter-expressed—concern—over the -able—through—the=-soclety: op —phiejomlése Tgure W —=<3-miles from Charl Grain yields are generally largely because of Mr. Diefen- |: : report of strong opposition to ies of the New Testament are fairly good in Quebec, although baker's personal appeal and the pe the government's tough park presentedto. members of the 33,000 from July and 35,000 from the level’ of August, 1964. Noted Fa a { HOSPITAL PATIENT Welcomts the public to their fine choice of howe | Po . eavy rains h the ‘colorful battles he had engaged : . . ; armed forces and s cg Mrs. Wallace Graham, Green fee saan tke ‘in A S M ° [aaa ae applied to private (oda faceive at ee On a percentage basis it was | cooked meals. Breakfast and lunches. mount, is a patient in O'Leary 3 4 . a acSwain oe olders in Banff and Jas- Scriptures in their ow |the lowest mate of--unémploy- : : Community Hospital. north. It is fairly well advanced | ' : per. - p eirs own lan- | : Charcoal barbecue steaks and-full course dinners, : jin the south. The excess, moist- |ENRAGED BIG BUSINESS Di At Home “In the association's opinion,” 8U28e- a oe Open from 7 a.m 9:30 p.m. IN WESTERN Hosp. ure and frost havé caused seme |The author says:the Diefen; WI@S | says:--the---letter,!'.the govern-ic Jt, i anticipated that “9 |when it stood at 25 per ‘cent. < a tca 6 ute si : nse The last monthly rate to go be- low_three per cent was the 2.9 in July, 1957. baker government etiftaged “‘big : business” by’ pushing ‘“‘welfare| A. Sterling MacSwain,~awell- |Ment's proposal to remove from state” programs, running up a known farmer andthe founder the parks all permanent resi- ‘string of six big budgetary defi-\of A. S. MacSwain and Sons, |dents except those whose pres- “Wagge number of people will be present this evening Mr. Quigg. © Allie. Powers, Alberton South, grain damage. But the rains is a patient-in the Western Hos- have helped aftermath hay pital growth . Fully Licensed Dining Room hear WILLIAMS — At the Charlott town Hospital, Sept. 16, 1965, Mrs. Bertha Williams of 24 Chestnut Street in her 78th year. Her remains are resting at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home.. Funeral notice later. O'BRIEN —- In Toronto, Sept. | "15, 196, Mrs. William O'Brien, formerly Margaret Sinnott. Rest- ing Saturday at the Hennessey | Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held Monday morning at 9 o'clock to St. Dun- stan's Basilica for Requiem High Mass at 9.15. Interment in the ' Catholic cemetery. - MacPHAIL — The death occur- *d at the Prince Edward Island. losnital. Sept. 14, 1965, of Dun- can MacPhail of Cornwall in his f0th year. Resting at the Mac- Lean Funeral Home until noon today, Sept. 17, then to the Cornwa!l United Church for fu- neral service commencing at two. p.m. Interment in the Cornwall cemetery. MacSWAIN — The death occur- red Wednesday. Sept. 16, 1965, at his residence in Morell of | A. Sterling MacSwain in his 66th’ year. Resting at the MacLean! Funeral Home until 10 a.m. Sat-) urday, Sept. 18, then to the | Morell United Church for funeral } service commencing at one p.m. otte- | Interment in Dundas __ United Church cemetery. ELLIS — At Moncton General Hospital, Wednesday. September | 15, 1965, William G. .Ellis of 286 | Beaver Street, Summerside in| his 70th year. Resting, at the, Compton Funeral —Home until noon Saturday, September 18 | then to United Baptist Church. Summerside for service ai 3.00 pm. Interment in People’s cemetery. Visiting hours today @4 and 7-0 p.m. | « | leits and displaying indecision in \the face of economic disloca- Revival Planned Of Mass.-N.S. | : ri Sch R a nat. own lawyer— jerner, 5 3 coner Races ‘automatically made him suspect LUNENBURG, N.S. (CP) -— to thé upper levels of Canadian The Massachusetts Department society. whose origins. are heav- of Commerce and Development ily British and either Anglican is attempting to revive the in- or United Church, and whose ternational” schooner races” be- orientations are central Cana- tween Nova Scotia and Glouces- dian and metropolitan.” ter. : , He says the Liberals do not Donald Lowe, a Gloicester enjoy the support -of a majority city councillor, said in an inter-, of the electorate but between view here Thursday the depart- 1945 and 1963 they had _ pro- ment has recommended con- jected an image as the only struction of a replica of the party that could form a govern- schooner Columbia to: challenge ment with managerial compet- Bluenose [I in .a* revival of the ethnic, West- ence. race last held in 1938. 1 for the The original Columbia and the Soong = original Bluenose each won a race when they fast met in 1923 but a dispute arose in the third “The Liberals were- seriously handicapped by Pearson's . failure to generate ‘a leadership race. i t tched Diefen- Both vessels were later lost it oa oe Liberals (on on reefs. sieht jumbia). had become the party lef the rich and the well-born.” Traffic Court “Diefenbaker's background —| * where tie farmed for a few years ‘Mary, Mrs. L. S. Cox of Char- ‘the Prairies and in British Col- + ¢ Convictes Four _ | GRAVE Four persons were each fined’, © ‘Continued from page 1) $10 and costs for traffic offences |.ajjeq on yesterday by Justice of the «. Peace Albert Dinnis. | Fines of $10 and costs or four days were imposed upon the following :. Raymond B. Mac- | Callum of Marshfield, ineffici- India’s millions to cheerfully undergo hardships.” In Rawalpindi, the: Pakistan ‘government radio “®laimed ;Thursday that about 7,000 In- troops have been killed so far ent equipment: Doreen Estelle |i" the conflict. The broadcast MacEachern, Mt. Stewart. lsaid 6,889 dead’ ‘Indian .soldiers sign; Gerald FE. Somers, ae had been counted and that esti- | died early yesterday at his home @Mce is necessary is most com- |in Morell. He had been in poor /Mendable and _ soundly sup- health for the past two years. | Ported.” Mr. MacSwain was’ born at| The group adds that if a pre | Mount Hope, northeast of Dun- |cedent is created in this case das, at the turn of the century |‘“then we in Nova Scotia can and farmed there until joining |look forward to a flood of ap- |the. air force at the outbreak of | Plications for leases in our own World War Two. iCape Breton Highlands Park” After the conflict Mr. “Public parks,”’ concludes the Swain returned to Mount Hope letter, are parts-of- our na- +tional—heritage—and—are—in-fact 'before moving to Morell where |the Property of the nation as he continwed farming and also | whole and should in no way | he went into the farm machin.| P¢ Allowed to be given to a ery business. ' | small minority. It is hoped that He“is survied: by his wife, the you een reaffirm the govern- former Marjorie Robbins, t wo dees conumiar™ = yield to sons Sterling and Norman ‘both 4 ae of Morell, a brother Sheldon of a similar. letter “was_sent_to |Mount Hope and three sisters: r. Diefenbaker pointing out, |that when he was in office his ae |government had taken steps to lottetown; Florence, Mrs. W. W. protest the. parks from uncon- Anderson of St. Peter’s and ano- t : i ; a * rolled me ther sister is living in Western ee TRADE-IN _ YOUR OLD FOR.A NEW EASY-TO-USE ONE AT =u. ep VY seweicers LTD THE CAMERA EXPERTS Canada, | Mr. MacSwain was predeceas- | ed by a daughter who died at age two and one sister Margar- et, the late Mrs. Ewen Ander- | son of. Charlottetown. R. C. BARWISE Phone 4-4316 ;of Lahore, West Pakistan's jond largest city, the Indian de- |fence ministry said. | Units crossed the Ichhogil. Ca- | nal at two or three places with- out encountering any major op- | 'position, ‘but returned to _the | eastern bank rather than try to! establish a firm beachhead, the ministry’ said. ‘ Pakistani forces blew a vital |bridge, seriously hampering any jattempt by Indian armor to jeross the 15-foot deep channel, to SHELL Houses Warm Up > Ze \\ TMIN\ NZ SS apni ® ae Stove Oil 2-Way . ton Siding, crossing a solid Mates of casualties on the Sial- |¢ white line: and Thomas Wel- kot front, where a severé tank /it was reported. lington Keenan. Southport, no ‘battle raged for three days, are + Other—fighting—fronts-appeared-———_— 1965 registration. being made and will be known quiet, but Pakistan claimed it! Wéndell MacLeod Drake © of later. : ad inflicted a heavy defeat-) “Millview, charged with driving | On the fighting fronts Thurs- Wednesday on the _ Indians| without due care and attention,'day. Indian army patrols around Sialkot, on the northern | pleaded not guilty and had his crossed~ a 100-foot cana! that front, and to the’east of. Sialkot case adjourned to Sept. 17. [serves as the inner defence line jin southwest Kashmir, t PHONE TODAY FOR Radio YOUR FALL FILL-UP -- R. C. BARWISE Dial 4-3316 nt ag A. Eo AMORA, co4-2 Charlottetown s my, Crockett & Storey’s 4 7. NOWINFULLSWI f ) Open Nights ‘Til 9 ! "Dedicated to Home Improv ~ Kent Street ~ Y/, COLOSSAL SEPTEMBER NG ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT P.M. Crockett & Storey Lid. \\ ement™ Charlottetown ~~