If i's Good For The Island ‘The Guardian Is For It ii ina SA agin Mbp pA ag te! Pa Meat bless ality laggards Ss Ur r MURDER TRIAL CONTINUES Statement By Accused Is pe! In Evidence the. MacDonalds and Ever-|the answer made him mad and | oe and room and board. The | ‘he’ got only $25 and| F that did not get any the MacDoaslds in the Eemets down to CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1965. ucl “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” i 2H iA hg Aa madris 0G Avni WEATHER Sunny and warmer; winds increasing te southerly 15. Low-high 32 and 57. Satur day: cloudy, showers late in day. Nor Mos® SEVEN CENTS he went to the door of the barn j where MacDonald was and wait- | ed at the door with a stick and) jwhen he came out ‘‘T hit him on) 'the chin and knocked him out} back. He then hit her on the! tneck with the stick. Later he} |placed her in the trunk of her ‘field where he left -her. when he fens husband's car and drove to a) [TWINS BORN ABOARD BUS MEX®CO (Reuters) — A bus driver in Pachuca, % miles north of Mexico: City, found his passengers had in- creased by two between stops Thursday, when Mrs. Marta Perez Hernandez gave birth to twins with nothing more than mora) support from fellow passen- gers. The driver diverged from _ his route to carry the new arrivals to hospital. Satellite Put In Orbit 18 PAGES ear Arm pped By Britain Some Support Claimed In U.S. By LOUIS NEVIN LONDON (AIP) — The British government, in a policy switch, | now believes that a proposed At lantic alliance nuclear force | should be scrapped, and that re- newed efforts should be made to halt the spread of nuclear ‘weapons. |change when he told a New 'York press conference Oct. 7| |that the various proposals for | ‘a nuclear force under the ban- | ner of the North Atlantic Treaty | | British - basic problem is how to satisfy | West German demands for a | voice in NATO nuclear planning and _ targeting This could be done by other means than the U.S. backed multidateral force of mixed- manned surface ships or the proposed Atlantic nu The statement said on the day cold. I then decided to do the| : oe clear force grouping all NATO of the eats a jatine thing to Evelyn as she was, lore, xtra fares were teen eres pecs g Hare strategic and tactical nuclear ¢ for always nagging at me.’ eee we s. ee ee ~ me ey | Whites chet cole cat teaeyidis:| “a the U.S. government, | (Gove sdk ate said she wo Everett when|other barn he struck her with) ge seis gaere ¥-| prime Minister Wilson now he came. a, the field. | the stick in the vicinity of the Odd-Looki Foreign Secretary Michael) pecic that the achievement of a When ° the was in hig forehead. She - yelled —and--fell: ng +§-t-e-w-a-r-t-—first—indiceated— the | naclear Heh 2 CTO treaty. between. the East. and West is the most urgent and im- portant single task facing the Western alliance. 5 read |p be Pri Mac- | BODY FOUND Organization should be weighed | WEIGH VALUE d defence | nanald wae ie ae bere and he| Cpl. Robert E. Williams of a) _. against the possibility of obtain-| He was said to believe that argued its admissibility, | asked shed Sars if she Charlottetown detachment RCMP , SANTA .BARBARA- Cali! ing an agreement with the So- the political and military value the jury out of the court- on any money. carer him: She|said when he arrived back in °F )—A Strange looking sate) | viet Union to prevent the spread | of any proposed nuclear force E i : said no, that Everett didn't have the Province, with the accused, }4'¢ billed as the most versatile of nuclear weapons. for NATO must be weighed “es any ea? unmanned spacecraft yet was | | against the possibility of it mak- CHARLES BONNEY of slot. after winning the Can- p the Qetement, said | ‘who had been arrested in ea fired into polar orbit Thursday (Continued on page 3, col. 1 (CALLED FOR, REVIEW | ing: ahy agreement on non-dis- ast ead Totento. % wos the ‘From Vandenberg Air sare eee Ni ec have laid | semination impossible to reach second time B-year-old Base. is ‘ore e Secretary Princeton, Ont., weers a happy aie a eae best: cetiie: -farenar - hed wea Pe gpia whic looks The ay’ |Dean "Beth | during ~ tales tw] neue Sat eee emile ts he holds his trophy at Milliken, Ont., the trophy. (CP Wirephote) jing coffin with a jumble of fish _ Washington Monday. He was re- | out thoroughly at the December Ont. Beef ¢ Cattle Farmer enbaker Promises § Faction Aid + ‘ing poles protruding from ‘it | was designed to conduct 20 deli- coe eer. analysing the | lspace events and evaluate haz- {ported to have called for a fail | ‘review of NATO nuclear policy | in this light. | His press conferetice state- ;ment was widely interpreted at ithe time to mean Britain, was | | opposed to providing NATO | with a nuclear arm. A foreign office spokesman ] reaction to ministerial council NATO in Paris: The British expect a violent this policy shift from Chancellor Er- meeting of British feel it is time for Ex- hard to state exactly what he Is Plowing Title le Winner day f MacLEOD hours after a Wednesday night | ards of manned space flight. ' meeting. | ‘The Orbiting Geophysical Ov- I }said Thursday this interpreta- | Many im his audience wer2 servatory (OGO) etched, a bril- } tion went “too far.” He said the | MILLIKEN, Ont, (CP)— erecta faigtel Giett & : i gp hihiie ie a NEW SPHERE OPENED UP ‘Three Scientists From France. Three . French scientists have won the Nobel Prize for Medi- | eine for discoveries that- may lead to. an eventual cancer cure. Professors Jacques Monod, 55, iho Jacob, 45; and Andre 63, all of the Pasteur In-titute in Paris, share the 282,- 000 crowns (about $59,000) prize awarded Thursday by the Swed- ish Caroline Institute. Professor Sven Gard of the Caroline “Institute said ped discoveries in the field of etics opened up “a Chote sow aphere in the Sule of medical be mage “It can™ for example tell us how the cancer virus acts in the enzyme. It can eg give us wn cure for tubercu-, “Their discovery has stimn- lated molecular research all over the world.” SEES MANY CURES Another Stockholm expert said the discoveries of the three prize-winners could oo ibe sear medical | ~ ‘Nobel Medicine Prize virus syntheses.” It added three in body cells. ~igeaiethahan. eae adept One possible use of the dis- our knowledge of the fundamen- {°°VTY maybe that in the case tal “processes in li matter |Of persons suffering from na- which form. the bate hie sons, |Ceer radiation, doctors might be able to change the chemical prevent a mutation—a Their work included the dts | ties covery_of a previousty-unknown | Class of genes whose function regulates the activity of other genes. Genes are the tiny units tm "Schentiola all _over_ the world have worked for years on -the |; synthesis of viruses, the sim," plest forms of living organisma,' and enzymes. Viruses are “‘liv- ing’? only in the sense ay cas re themselves. the three Frenchmen for co-op- erating so closely in the fi of genetics, microbiology biochemistry. Jacob heads cell genetics re search at the College de France, we teaches microbiology * Sorbonne and Monod is specialist in chemical nbtabe lism at the Faculty des Sciences | LEARN ENZYME. SOURCE Gard said the discoveries will }enable scientists to. know how the enzymes, protein substances INSIDE TODAY |* | structure of the body cells. This | would change in inherited char: val The Caroline Institute praised | ‘The Kverneinnas which oper- \ates hydraulically .are _manu- factured in Norway and have |been used with great success ia STOCKHOLM (Reuter s)— jeenetie control of enmyme and jin the body. are formed ahd to {international plowing see a virus when it is growing | Ts year there were seven Kvernelands entered in the Ca- nadian matches. Although skies were clear and | temperatures in the 60s, soit conditions were ideal after ses - eral days of rain. “Both the stubble and ~ sod were great,’ said Barry. “The real challenge ‘though was the: crop condition. in the sod. We |don’t have’ any: alfalfa © dow home and # was tough break- through the, roots. this year is completing his Grade 12 at Prince of Wales College in Charlottetown, re- turning. there after four years of driving a truck. He was married recently and feels that while there are many pleasant; memories in plowing * he has nq real interest in farm- ing and that.more education will mean a brighter future for him and his bride: Leaders On Classified ............ 16.17 jin Paris Births ..... revterne King Gustaf Adolf of Sweden| Doathe. i. 0c cecvees . 5 will present this year's re Nobel | Hustings a Comics eaereeretoeee’ +e Prizes at a formal Sport Mes teseeree toes. 3, 18 here Dec. 10. erry | PRIDAY Women’s ......... Sressss & | The Swedish Academy will} Pearson—Ottawa. Finance, markets <-->... 14 | announce the winner of this) Dieferbaker — Prince George Editorials ... - year’s Nobel Literature Prize | and Victoria, B.C. - Summerside ......... today. . | ‘Deuglas—Toronto and Peter- Prince County .......... 2 | AMred Nobel, the. inventor of Thompson-—Edmonton. dynamite “f.) —_ 83rd Birthday DUBLIN (AP)—President Fa- | 83 Thutscay and friends re- ported the veteran leader. plans to seek re-election for another |i a eee A | gathering of the family at the! presidential palace near Dublin. | Goodwill messages and birth- day greetings came from well- wishers all over the world. | ‘De Valera Marks’ mon De Valera of Ireland: was | There was the usual annual | Minister Pearson | ‘tiament, the. Fulton - Favreau formula for amending the con- would have been ap- Canada would have | her destiny. atone. criticized from and afl sides,”’ he | at send both sides said: In a brief reference to a lack | ee he | — students. He told them liant orange trail against a dack | iS Prime he overcast sky as it wes boosted | panels: j “and soricentauister booms folded out as planned and | its stabilizing sensor-had tocked | on the sun. Kewtver: the spokesman said, * |a slight malfunction ir primary guidance causéd a slightly dif- ferent orbit. than planned. Ogo’s experiments are not ex- pected to be affected, the spokesman said, but their opera- tion will not definitely be con- firmed until later in the week when instruments are due to start returning data. The 1,150 - pound spacecraft was the largest space vehicle ‘launched from. Vandenbe:g rocket test centre and the first ‘major space agency shot there “Rivard and al that other | galaxy—one after the a : | ATTACK THOMPSON Mr. Diefenbaker attacked So- cial Credit Leader Thompson | for voting with the government: | lin the last session of Parlia- [ment tax free—és not something to he | | Voted away.” “TL can say that because 1 | Opposed it (the increase in MPs’ |imcome) I have returned eyery | ‘cent tothe federal erent a w pow Thure- in his election train par- lor car at Fort Macleod is “But after all, $18,000 a year— | Smith Silent After Talks SALISBURY. eee a |Prime Minister Ian Smith met \for 80 minutes Thursday with a Education Views OTTAWA (OP)—Prime Minis-| Pearson said his goverriment ter Pearson said Thursday he! accepts the Bladen report's esti- hopes his proposed federal-pro- | mate of the increase of univer. vincial conference to discuss fi- | sity students to 461,000 ia 1975-76 nancing of higher education can | with total government spending be held early next year. | at $1,704,000,000. * After a 3 - minute meeting’) He said the expenditures with representatives of the As-| would be large but the govern- sociation of Universities and, ment agrees “an expandi Colleges of Canada, Mr. Pear- | country car afford them nde son said invitations for the con-| indeed, that they are an invest ‘|ference have yet to be sent out.’ ment which will yield good re- But he repeated an earlier turns in the progress of our the start of the next academe dorsed most points made by the) KEY WEST, Fila. (AP)—Four statement that he hoped a pro-| economy.’ gram of additional federal. . Refugees Face year. A-brief submitted to-the- prime Bladen report on highér educa-|refugee-laden small craft rolled tion published last week, and |and pitched toward Florida cial help canbe in effect Raging Seas minister by the delegafion en made four new recommenda- | Thursday in surging seas that tions as well. It called for. more generous federal tax equalization’ pay- |six-man group representing Rho- | |ments ,to the four Atlantic prov- |\desia’s industrialists, business- | linces, |men and farmers in connection with the independence crisis. with a special ltil the new equalization pay- | Smith said “we had a useful | |ments are arranged. lenchanae of views,” but de- | \clined to comment when asked |WANTS BIGGER GRANTS |Whether they discussed the ques- | ttion of economic sanctions. It said supplementary federal | i grants to all _universities should | be based on the number-—of-non-+ resident students, and that fed- eral research grants should be increased even more than the Bladen report suggested. _In a prepared statement, Mr. Jobless Tot federal | delayed other sailings from {cube s showcase gateway to ex- ile. Another boat carrying five re- | porters put into. Key West and embarkation port, Camarioca, jas ‘‘gay- restive and carnival- | like.” “Everything is 30 friendly # makes you wonder,” said Tony Tarracina, 4, bearded captain Lof-the 61-foot Greyhound fil. _ - The four boats that braved the squally weather, Mistral, Sea Esta Topeka and Shark V, carried a total of 83 refugees, ‘according to Cuban officials al Lowest , Since Summer 01956 OTTAWA (CP) — Unemploy- ment fell last month to 2% per cent of the labor force, the low- est it has been since the sum- mer of 1956. “There were 176,000 \men and women unemployed in the labor force of 7,159,000. according to a mid-September survey of 35,- | 000 homes conducted by the Dominion Bureau of Statistic- and analysed by the labor de- partment. In August there were 211.000 unemployed in a labor force ‘f 7,490,000 — an unemployment rate of 2.8 per cent. In Septem- ber last year there were 217000 unemployed, 4.6 per cent of the labor force. of 6,985,000 then Anything lower than three per cent usually is regarded by. Most economists as ‘‘full ployment." But they judge un- employment rates over a longer | term than one or two months The labor departmm - DBS em- | | justed for month-to-month flues tuations, the new Septembet figures represented an unem- ployment rate of 3.6 per cent, The Economic Council of Can- ada shays three per cent is “‘a | realistic medium-term _oal ee {the Canadian economy.’ The labor force, survey for the week ended Sept. 18 found that over half the drop in unemploy- ‘ment was the result of teen- agers with summer jobs leay- ing the labor force to go back ta school. BAD FARMING WEATHER Another factor in lowering the numbers employed .was bad weather for farmers. Agricul- ture accounted for almost twu- fiiths of the decline in emplov- jment between August and Sep- | tember, The previous low point in the |percentage of the labor forces ‘unemployed was in July and August of 1956, when alt but twe per ent of the then labor force (CP Wirephote)’ | report said that seasonally ad-! ry 6,000,000. had jobs. -_