a ica ibis fick io fd ellnbm ‘ if It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It @ Che Guardian ters Prince Edward Selond Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1965. Scattered showers ending west winds 20. Low-high SC and WEATHER this Sunday: sunny, cloudy in afternoon. Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS ONE OF BODYGUARD LED COUP Sukarno Backers Down Uprising In Indonesia From Reuters-AP forces are believed to have} included the army chief “of staff, 14 PAGES ‘ 324 Prince Fishermen Seek Government Help Most Catches Fail Lobster fisherman from Vic. toria to North Cape asked the Provincial government to de- - To Give Expenses Wall vice-president; Walter Som ier second vice-president and Adelard Gallant secretary - trea. KUALA LUMPUR (CP) —/erushed the coup led by Lt.-Col.|Maj.-Gen. Ahmad Yani. ‘ate | President Sukarno is still head|Untong, one of the president's | There was no confirmation by ng Aaeoe ian ee ben eee of state in Indonesia, according bodyguards, also went on the|the Jakarta radio of earlier re- senied to Hon, Leo F. Rossiter, ! - 'to a broadcast over Jakarta Ra-| air to say that the president and| jports that Gen. Yani and minister of fisheries. Pedestrian idio monitored in this Malaysian|the defence minister, Lt-Gen./ another senior officer, Gen. The brief was presented by “ Abdul Haris Nasution, are safe) | Panjaitan, are dead. and in good health. He said Col. Untong and two! y other officers have been honorably discharged from: the | army and strict disciplinary ac- tion will be taken against them. In a separate broadcast, Rear- | Admiral -R, M. Martiadinata said the navy is co-operating with ‘the army against the coup, leaders. capital today. The broadcast was made -by Brig.-Gen. Mohammed Sabur,; a senior officer of the guard at Sukarno’s palace. Brig. Gen. Suharto, whose Seal Killing Report Issued gunfire. 13 Persons Die From Bad Flour | Other reports have said Gen. asution and his daughter were both wounded in exchanges of Continued on page 3 Col. 17 “IS HONORED Col Edwin A. Baker, #2, co-founded of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, | was honored at a juncheon in Lt. - fast Prince Fishermen's sociation who said that 324 ae ae ine - poet owners in strict No. $ suffe a serious decline in income as a bent On Highway of an unprecedented lobster production. A pedestrian was, killed last In their brief the Association evening on the St. Peter’s High- said they feel the presént, un- way at Marshfield when he was foreseen status of the lobster struck by a car. and inshore fishery in general,| The accident occurred about warrants assistance from govern- 3%:30. It was raining heavily at ment sources, “federal and-or/the time. ‘Is Killed STOLEN CAR mae ARBOR MONTREAL (CP)—There is| No mention was made of the! paNAMA (AP)—Medical au-|Toronto. Luncheon chairman | ‘ iN H room for greater improvement | air force. * |thorities said Friday at least 13| Judge F. G. J. McDonagh provincial. Pecewrad ht oe eee ae 7 A 1959 Meteor, owned by truck from Murphy's Service Kingdoc, which is tied up at |! methods of killing seals in’ Gen. Suharto, in his broad-' persons in the border area be-| described Col. Baker as “one of | ‘he brief stated that the aver- | fis Robert } . 13 Spring Park Station. The owned did not the wharf, saw the car being the Gulf of St. Lawrence, a re- cast, said the organizers of the tween Panama and Costa Rica| Canada’s immortals. Col. |age production per boat for the! rhe driver of the car stopped Rest, te ween tele betes =“ his’ car was stolen until run into the water at approxi. Port to the Canadian Federation | coup had kidnapped six officers | have died this week from con-| Baker was presented with the |five year period 1960-64 was 7,- - Ind reported the accident. : ne told by City Police it was in mately 3.05 Friday morning. |0f Humane Societies said Fri-| |taminated pancake flour. They | boox ‘'No Compromise” by |900 pounds, approximately 26! Other sources said the victim from the water yesterday at the harbor. Harold Harrington, Two persons are believed in. | 42Y. es forced them to make oven | S2id the flour became contami-| Marjorie Wilkins Campbell, the times the anticipated 1965 per was an elderly gentleman and the Railway wharf by a tow- quartermaster on the freighter volved. (See story on page 5.) | New _seal-hunting regulations, nouncements and to take over /nated by a toxic chemical fer-| life story of Col. Baker and |boat production. that there was no identification Approximate landings 1er boat! on the body. He was found in the imposed this year by the. fed-| the telecommunication -facilities. | tilizer while in the-hold of a the CNIB. eral fisheries department have kidnapped atficers Costa Rica. | (CP Wirephoto) |up until Sept. 25 were given for ditch on the north side of the |brought some: improvement but > vabuarnaathoge: ae - | seven areas as; Howard's Cove-|St. Peter's Road. No one in the Ibs., Skinners Pond — 3,- knew the victim. not enough, the report said. |4,000 area Pénding other and better 500, Ebbsfleet — 3,400, Egmont| The body was taken to the Final Okay On Auto Pact 222% as eae Seen Probable Next Week the report recommended. The} ohn - By ARCH MacKENZIE jmajor but the joint session’ 10: [ale new! stipulated in the agree- | Sees enior High School Contract’ sze=="= Tessa te. SS mt Tas sews [at By Board At Summerside operator to cover expenses; | the majority of fishermen con- cerned will fall below this beste men estimate a 3, Delayed |method of killing baby seals. | production is needed for ts aa ae MONTREAL (CP)—Two con con jonal approval for the ‘tacked on by the Senate, and The conference’ versions per- autoproduction pact between | gave back to President Johnson | mits the president to make rec sageersryy Ss les adult vest, i Carat a the brief, lob-| \vieted murders sentenced to be Canada ait Se United States more authority for future action ommendations to Congress. in eat i oor pe jena ht for tice wi iM Algo. at the nese |p ocording - te is the primary |Pansed Oct. 22 “have been ** week following agreement. ~ ‘ abs or. Should ; pend hae : ‘Councillor prod Quebec o sealletiess of Representa- akreement “left the eae its slice of North ‘amert. | be’ used: ioe el $508,422 by highs eon take town Francis MacNeill, super. C288 crop for these fishermen. |Sranted » a ceil r se ioe iP je oa rae was. pregaied. by ome 3 junior niz.k ne ae SUpEE Though some have been able to|Perior Court until Apri - tives confe Friday. his original powers to ex-/can auto and parts production | report me iw Murphy and MacLeod |ing grades 9 and 10.. | visor’ of schools; Alfred J, Hem-' exploit the cod, herring, oyster |" appeal can be heard. jJacques Vallee, executive sec- Ltd. of Summerside and Char-| School board members at the retary of the Canadian SPCA of! iottetown for ‘general construc-|meeting were William M:;. Jay, Montreal. and Brian Davies of tion of the new, Summerside: se-|the chairman; Dr. J.A. Doiron; )the SPCA in Fredericton. ‘nior high school was accépted| Dr. James L. ‘saunders; and Da- The federation, at its annual!jast night by the Summerside | vid E. Morrison. *+ meeting Friday, received the re-| school board. ~ port and adopted its recommen- nessey, the architect; and Glen fishery and Irish moss, for the | te et and Ed- Cow. most part this additional income |m uenette, were sefn- a =~ — Meee | a5 been negligible. |tenced to death May 21 for their ‘ew up the plumbing, rns brief urged the cabinet to part in an Aug. 29, 1964, raid heating, and electrical plans. _plare this item on its agenda for|on a Montreal arms store in ithe Oct. 5 meeting and asked| j which two employees were ithis be followed up with a meet-'killed. One of the employees “The two chambers worked out |tend the agreement's provisions beyond, the stipulated levels. oon in pla Maceies to other pig eg i fit pe iu on 0 app! a - Office Clerk Arraigned A by the Sena had written in congres | The comindniel were wit Ieohet roles in such extensions. | | The second amendment _adopted Thursday would have ; | The school board held a Leaders On (eves cere oceree t| ee — or ihe ew high schoo ss K hi Alt d a yb ett es ba (CP) — Andre |for new hi | Hustin Mold rears Of General Charbonneau, 20, a Montreal of- Two Killed lis to be: built on the MacKelvie| a rac ere nT, brief wan signed by Dosit-jbetwees police and the five gs ay Motors to booke theit (pet clerk, was arraigned here lestate property on Central) Poirier, president: Reuben | raiders. ; : lay on a charge of capital | Street. By THE CANADIAN Canadipu;predection beyond lev. | ‘marder in the death of Richard d | The only other bidder for gen-| For i di Al d \, SATURDAY White, 24, a Moncton laborer, In Acci ent ‘eral construction was Schurman | Nn ian I | ‘Bargaining Promised cS ound in an” east-end Montreal hotel Sunday. , Aik'Mail Stamp | Diefenbaker—In Windsor and | Brings $13,500 | cos#-toor cormer's court Chatham, Ont. tawa. : |ble for the death Thursd | LONDON (Retters)—A US. oak Thompeon—In amon air mail stamp bearing the: pie. Judge Armand Sylvestre sent Caouette—In Quebee ture of an aircraft printed up- | Charbonneau to preliminary SUNDAY |side ‘down brought £4,500 ($13,./hearing Oct. 7. Pearson—In a '500) at an auction here Friday, Diefenbaker—In Toronto. |The 24-cent stamp. issued in|with his hands and feet tied to Douglas—In Ottawa. \1918, formed part -of a sale of his hotel bed. He “heeal Thompsen—1 lair mail stamps and letters by | strangled * arid several ithe dealers, Harmer Rookes. Caouette Expects ‘Control’ In Next Govt At Ottawa By REMY @ANJOU province's 75 Commons seats. |proviince by car, visiting 60 con- QUEBEC (CP) — Creditiste After having visited, Quebec stituencies. r Leader Real Caouette predicted Mayor’ Wilfred Hamel and ‘‘Le Ralliement. des Credit- Friday that no party will get a signed the city's Golden Book, istes has no election fund and clear-cut majority in the Nov. 8 |the Creditiste chief began . firing doesn't need one, as we can ' federal election and that his ;omments at accompanying fe- jequmt on volunteer workers,” party will hold the balance of | porters. Mr. Caouette said. - power. | He described the entry «| But he said the Liberal elec- Mr. Caouette told a press con- Jean Marchand; Gerard Pelle- tion fund “is financed by the ference that because of this bal- tier and P’ e Elliott-Trudeau jinternational and Canadian um ance of power the Creditistes —three Quebec intellectuals— derworld” and the Conservative . will be able to. impose their will into the ranks of the Liberal /fund is made up of grants from 4 fon the aspiring Canadian party as “a flagrant infiltration big business. prime’ minister... ™ jof socialism and communism| Mr. Caouetie, who said he be--+ «He who wants to become into that party.” \lieves “Diefenbaker is no more prime minister will have to sign) Mr. Caouette the three poisonous to French-Canadians an agreement with us to the ef- should have joi the New than Pearson,” added tat Que- fect that, in the first speech Democratic Party, which he.bec Premier Jean Lesage's tour from the Throne, he will an- [called a “step toward ommu: of Western Canada is a political nounce an increase in family al- nism.” test “which will allow him to lowance—according to the cost | The Liberals allowed the see “whether he would be ac of living in¢c-x—a ‘reduction in three to join their party because ‘cepted as Mr-.Pearson’s succes taxes, an increase in old age (Of “intellectual nonchalance” | aor as head of the federal Lib- pensions to $100 a month with |and because they were ready eral party.” ~ a later objective of $125 and the | ‘to do anything to retain He said he remains convinced, irastiog of interest-free loans ipower.” despite Mr. Pearson's denial, to municipalities and prow | Between now and Nov. 7 the that the federal election was inces.” Creditiste leader is to tour the called to make that Can- ie Cheeccte wah ik nee ada will be able to jend 100,000 City to atiend-a day-long: closed | isoldiers to Viet Nam. <“T have learned from a defi- meeting of his party's orzaniz- ‘ ers. Aim of the meeting is tol: ‘nitive source that preparations n Red Deer. Caouette—In Quebec City. times. INSIDE TODAY Classified one 12, 13. have been made so that a first i i. — aes ray oo eee eescess 13" contingent will leave Canada : URN sv sicecesss 3 jaround Nov. 15 or 20." 4 paign This first group of 50,000 men PREDICTS SWEEP jwould be followed by a second Describing himself as being group of the same size. Coyle 53;-of-nearby —New-Mary- + White was found unclothed| Construction Ltd., Summerside, man M. Colford. shout %, of Kensington and Charlottetown, By REUTERS Blissfield, NJB. and Frederick Whose tender was $548,548. All street lights were turned | The low tender of Powers _blacked jand were killed and a Moncton |Brothers Ltd., Lunenburg, No. | ean ee sehr A a couple injured Friday in a two- |va Scotia, $77,000, was accepted |' ae= car collison at Island View, |for plumbing, heating, and. ven-|ing reports of renewed fighting | about 10 miles, from here. itilaition, onan tenders were | between Indian and — Pakistani roix |Inman . P) and Heating, | forces. ee eae tee pre re ——— and Douglas Bro- | A Pakistani defence ministry satisfactory condition in fhos-|thers and Jones Inc., Charlotte- | | Spokesman in Rawalpindi, Pak- pital here with multiple injuries. | town, $92,088. istan’s new capital, said Indian The two vctims were driving} The electrical contract went | | troops have launched a strong tier in a small foregn car which col- |to Acadia Electric Ltd., Mone- jattack on Pakistani positions in Yided head-on with the Lacroix jton, which submitted the | ow | the Chamb sector of Kashmir. vehicle in heavy rain, The ac- |tender,,of $48,688. Inman Plumb-| He said the fighting may spread | cident occurred on a’ straight ah and Heating submitted the. to-other oe stretch of Trans-Canada High- | other tender, $49,834. The i caheast tal cin | way. " FREDERICTON (OP) - Sher- The new school will be a sen-' sion e In good health, “dangerously “To send these men,- it will food for the ," the |be necessary to conscript the rr Creditiste leader and member City 3 iyeuth of 18 to 2% years of age. : es ¥ the last ‘Parliament ‘for Vil: | Dime coon” fe 5 [Even if they. are sent to Viet) Mrs ohn de fedora was in need of replace friend Mrs. W.R. Brunt, she wneuve said his party will take ad 3 Pn ae cided her husband’s “Ment and set out im. Torontn looks over the new model. Getween 3% ani 80 of Quebet | againet it.’ a old grag Friday to buy a new ome. With .- (CP Wirephoto) _- ‘United Nations Sept. ,terrupted a regular Radio Pak- [istan program, announced i partial blackout and | the possibility of Indian air t- | tacks. An official Lahore said civil: defence exer- i\cises will be held there today. | Lahore, Pakisatn’s second larg- est city, after Karachi, is only | Ber miles. from the “Indian fron- Mai: ~Gen. Bruce Ma¢donald, | Canadian chief of the new United Nations observer mission 5° whose job is to-keep the scrap- If Dief Gov't Is ~TORONTO— t€P)~ _ Opposition; Leader Diefenbaker Friday a Conservative government .on/| collective bargaining for the fed- eral civil service but indicated | it shoulc not include the right to strike, - At a press conference held a few. hours: before his largest rally of the election campaign ar, Mr. Diefenbaker said ac- tion would be taken ‘just as ping armies apart, reported the — as we assume office.” in-| situation along the UN; céasefire line is. tense and tricky, * TO JOIN FORCES Macdonald's 100 UN observers and the long - established UN Kashmir team will link forces im trying to make the ceasefire effective. Officials in Rawalpind! claimed Indian troops violated| the ceasefire arranged by the | 23 «and attacked Pakistani positions) Thursday night. They said a fighting was sti! going on a: Aa = OTTAWA ‘CP)—For all the Texas cloud wringers, Manitoba tanker trucks, Sudan - sorghum seed and government subsidies, farmers in the Ottawa Valley face a skinny winter. The worst dry spell since rec- ords were kept in 1891 has Many on the ,Topes economi cally. It began then, has been 45 inches. This has left wells low and vi- tal ground moisture lower in a region where thousands of dairy , in 1962 ‘and-since watered. son that began in than one inch of r fell, stunt- ing hay crops and leaving pas- jtures scrubby. the accumulated deficit” and beef cattle must be kept / The late-season rains, he added: ws would think that accept- ance of the principle (of collec- “tive bargaining) with the right of appeal being provided would deny the right to strike.” He expressed hope civil serv- ants would “accept the need for protecting the public interest." The Toronto rally—featuring a Dixieland band, a Calypso singer and three provincial pre- miers—marks a departure from the 1963 election when Mr. Diefenbaker held no mass meet- ings in the downtown area. The premiers are John Ro- Beef farmers in Renfrew |County began trimming herds ibeyond the normal limits \July, putting the money into | fodder to keep the rest going, Ontario. brought in Texas |rainmakers in early July and the federal government ordered fleet of irrigation trucks from |Manitoba. HAY HARVEST DOWN But the first hay harvest was | down to 10 per cent of normal lin places and seldom _ better than 50 -per cent. which were above average, jley.are using it for silage. Meanwhile, e \farmers helped | In the sin-week growing sea-jcreate a record-breaking corn \years for most of them to re May, less |crop. Farmers all over the val-|cover but they will do it,” the federal-pro- | eres subsidy program pro ‘ended tgs : Elected barts of Ontario, Duff; Roblin- of — Manitoba and Robert Stanfield Andrew announcement™ in Promised immediate action by of Nova Scotia. Hon. MacRae, acting premier of Prince Edward Island, also is attending. The opposition leader at his press conference again criti- cized the Liberal _ government for failing ot protect consumers when it negotiated the United States-Canada auto trade agree- ment. Asked how he would protect consumers, Mr. Diefenbaker rée- plied» “A prime minister is listened to when he plates his view be- fore the country. “I am sure the automobile manufacturers would be the first to listen to the need for fairness being done to consum- ers.”" To Industry Minister Drury’s charge that this would involve price controls and a first step towards socialism, he said “there is no socialism in ensur- ing the .benefifs should be passed to the Canadian people.” (Ottawa Valley Farmers. Facing Skinny Winter | vides $30 a ton for concentrates and $15 a ton for hay. But even with subsidies, throughort the valley are reported seeking part-time jobs to help meet the financial burden. ; The irony of it all is that ram fall in the June-September pe- riod was two inches above nor- mal. It jae “Even with. 4ll the raintail, the water table is still down,” said Latry Taylor in Renfrew. “It will take at least three all came -at sad W. D. Black of Ottawa. That's if the dry spell has the wrong . nga