_ ward Island government offici-| been obtained by committees on | “ae Association Robert Thompson Retains “conciliation and If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It a ; “Cavers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 278 FIVE DIE IN HOME Moncton Man Will Assis: |. InSummerside Fire Probe |. A member of the Fire ee | Lovestigation Beez Dead are William Allen, 51, fa- no serious injuries but three of Bureau (ther of nine, and four of his vhil- the children, Gaye, 17; Sandra, dren: Joan Anne, 13; William (15, and Myra, 10, were taken to) nn tee oan ie 1: Nancy Faye, 5; and Ke- members nite te | hie Mrs. Allen, other iors a along with five mily. : the other children, escaped with vith TH = MOOY N1G¥3y aaynas ¢ epee agp ' CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1965. » ;“aunching Of ardian WEATHER... Ovencatt: Cae Sa tent southeasterly 20. Low-high 30 "Gnd 35 Sunday: rain, mild. MORE SEVEN CENTS 22 PAGES TUAN Satellite Is Hailed By De Gaulle pr = Youth At Southport Is Killed By Shotgun An inquest, set for Monday. | property property of William Wood of en Br pangs “~ 6, at eppoch where the youth had | Faimily as been Dec. at 8.30 p.m, i en working wp in Su erside and all four parents,-he is- sur- rtered banks in the town and C, A. Coady, coroner, into the vived by two saneare, Welling- | Linkletter Motel have agreed to death of 15-year-old Gordon Alex- ton, 16 and Norman 1 accept donations for the family. | ander Gay of Southport who has| A jury, 9 ceenaa ‘of which (Continued on page 5 Col. 5) accidentally killed by a blast) is George Red, Hillsboro Street, from a shot gun yesterday. | . was sworn in at The youth, son of Mr. and Mrs. | the MacLean Funeral Home last John Gordon Gay, was reported- | night where they, along with the ly looking at some guns with | coroner, viewed the remains.’ an acquantiance when an un-| Other jury members are: Pres- Soma Placed knowingly loaded 16 gauge shot- | ton MacDoald, Spring Park Lane, : : = = Brel pg: lage: | | Parkdale; Vincent Shea, Bel- e. on the si the vederé Ave., Sherwood: John M. | d | face and the neck. He was tak-| MacLaren, St. Peter's Road, | (Un er Ru es en to the P.E.1. Hospital by am. Sherwood; James Lee, Centen-| bulance where he was pro- nial Drive, Sherwood; Findlay OTTAWA (OP) — The health nounced dead on arrival by Dr. | Fraser, Mt. Edward Road, Sher- department is moving to stop M. J. Putnam. The accident oc-| wood and Ralph Stewart, Roch- | the open sale of the tranquilizer cured around 3.25 p.m. on the | ford Street, Charlottetown. Soma following complaints that Island Gov't Officials Aid Pte ns ua c — ae yn placing the-drug on the prescrip- KENTVILLE, N.S. (CP) — A! The association was-about one tion list. recent meeting with Prince Ed-| year old and some success had | Tranquilizer als made for closer co-operation | Ray perv Layton said ring rot had been’ drinks reported Friday to; the Vourtable and aes a. betta year gad it was im-| a| portant that a clean-up job be. spokesma | Earle out by the provers la tale dew bet ‘whem ceaen Mr. Sim said his committee had met with officials of the Is- land government to discuss mu-. Digging Slowed nuicuarbe| By Tough Oak ike: s opera | PM Foresees { Market Problems OTTAWA (CP) — It would be Bit father abet Dunfield Sr. |.omme difficult” for any single y day. but thick | TeziO" of Canada to enter into a | , | trade agreement with a foreign | of old oak, perhaps left! country, Prime Minister Pear- island's surface, kept pr whatever lies yonnin at an inch-by-inch ek ( . son said Friday. He was commenting a‘ a press i iveral rumors surrounding grown up in: an of he Atlantic. t t! miers mtic provinces | the leak week. including one that | the mest recent operation | is being — financed are discussing a possible com- by - cartoonist ing prices stable in the Annapo- a mon market trade arrangement with the New England states. lis Valley area and assured the| “I've never heard of anything Pictou growers of cope nn ie” Dunfield Sr. said : 7 z treasure that Rob- Jr- is convinced is/ 4 f on this aegis ett a Prince Edward Island said ear- lier this week such an arrange- ment. could. be of great benefit | j to the eastern provinces. Premier Walter Shaw of | in this } problem. Social Credit Leadership EDMONTON (CP) — Robert |ga™ Thompson of Red Deer retained | the national Social Credit party 4 leadership Friday, defeating two) 2 contenders on .the first ballot at/) the party’s convention. ie is The challengers were Bert 4 Leboe and H. A. (Bud) Olson, two of five members the party has an Parliament. Mr. Thompson, 51, has been leader since 1961, and has repre. sented Red Deer in the Com- Mons since 1962. ; The number of votes polled be | each!leadership candidate was) not revealed, but to win on the! first ~ ballot Mr. Them--on needed” the support “of 50 per cent of those voting. Mr. Thompson was confident | of victory before the votirz by 283 delegates, an aide said. i "In the last 24 hours the Sup | port for Leboe and Olson has waned,” the aide said. Each leadership . candidate | spoke for five minutes ae the voting, with’ Mr. Olson, 40- year-old Medicine Hat MP win- ning the draw to speak first. Mr. Olson, a farmer touted as & possible choice as agriculture : Mr. Thompson, who received , la brief standing ovation from | |the majority of delegates when | | he concluded his pre-vote pitch, | | pledged himself ‘to our nation: |of Canada, to the principles of | Social Credit, to the Sorial pa together as we have before.” | He said unity is important in| ples of Social Credit are * | only basis on’ which unity can | be built in Canada.” Noting that he and his two challengers all are of Norwegian parentage. he said: “You can put three Norwegians together and they'll scrap like aa ae about something that must done, but attack the thing ier | ROBERT THOMPSON provinces, not just Quebec. - Mr. Leboe, MP for Caribou, told the convention that ‘‘one of jthe qualities of leadership is that you are not so far out in front of your followers that you lose them or too far back that was announced that any sugges- | tion of bitterness between him and Mr. is “a fig- ment of the imagination.” Mr. Leboe has been in farm- | ing, mining and most recently | rat aie i fig fe be tH Akg i 2 VEHICLES MEETING _ straight stretch of highway. The |Ireland House of opposi lision occurred. ee aa te vel} ¥ | iele, driven ona oe *\ Credit organization and to eg | McGrath of ater River, ,executives that we might work | tained what appeared to be ay | minor damage. (7 the Social Credit party and in| side of the McGrath | Canada and added “‘the princi-| struck the rear side portion of the | the Dunphy car. stand for together and you’ see that would paralyze trucking in them fight together to the end.” | Ontario th begin about . | Mr. Olson told a reporter be- | 1 fore the outcome of the vote the Toronto local of the Tater. | national (Ind.), |the union’s demands for drop-| senting vote a resolution calling | ping of CAR IN wan MISS MUNROE WAS A PASSENGER wine = “Glace Bay Girt Is Killed In Prince County Accident SUMMERSIDE BUREAU, Davison’s Funeral Home in Ken-|held. A jury has been empan- OF THE GUARDIAN is __ lm charge of ‘the investigation this morning. a Const. Walter Pin- yAN INJURED assisted by Constables Cox, [at 11.30 last night a accidents . ___| éar occupied by four young men lest hight, .| went gut of control on South Munroe, 17, of 12% | Coroner Dr. C.A. Coady. of Drive in St. Eleanors, crossing Glace Bay, Nova Charlottetown ordered ‘an auto- a lawn, snapping a hydro pole | He 2 a & 4" Eg e jl a@ passenger nounced that an —_ will be vehicle came to rest on its roof a | mean rad | in . ee pa | cate: Unionists slerred to Princ -Re-Elected Perry. was transferred to Prince | BELFAST County. Hospital. by an ambul- | ance from Rooney'’s- Funeral | Home. He is being attended by | | Dr. W.E. Callaghan who stated | ,Pro-British Unionist party which man’s condition was: satisfactory of Kensing- thas ruled Northern Ireland _ but that further examination and dead at the {Since 1921 has emerged from a x-rays-will be given him this jgeneral election with its big-| morning to determine the full | jer majority since 1949. extent of his’ injuries. Led by Prime Minister Capt. It is believed the injured man The accident occurred at ap- Terence O'Neill, it won 36 of is from Miscouche. The names tely 8.15 p.m. on althe 52 seats in the 3 a infil 3 ; out of The girl w af > : F é. R ce * her Commons. weren't available at press time vehicle was proceeding | gives had not determined who the dri- the | 2 majority of 20 over all other ver of the vehicle was at the - cal eccident. Investiga- | \ ion will continue this morning. Russia eis 97th Cosmos ite direction when the col-; POWER LINES BROKEN The investigation last night} was hampered by live power, wires snapped when the pole The front end on the driver’ s| was broken. Employees from oar | Union launched its 97th Cosmos town electric department were | satellite ae iday,. Tass an- called to the scene to put off the; The body was taken from the nounced. The. Cosmes program, powér going through the broken | scene by an ambulance from / begun in. 1962, is designed to lines. (Ontario May Face ‘Truckers Strike ‘further Jspace exploration. The. RCMP Constable Don Bartlet | newest. satellite was. described. investigated. this. accident, as- as functioning normally. sisted by Const. James Cox. | U.S. Reverses Position | On Underground Test Ban UNITED NATIONS (CP) — said ena The United Nations General As- sembly’s politica! commit- He said the strike will back) tee Friday passed without a dis- TORONTO (CP) — A strike Ken McDougall. president of Semyon K._ Tsarapkin, Union tiator, said the soviet but, ment containing provisions he added. that until agree- | reprisals is reached on a treaty | against em- for the suspension of all nuclear who took part in an | weapons tests. including under- minister in the. Liberal cabinet oa *| your being “pushed.” lumbering. He has lived t. illegal work stoppage last| ground explosions. site inspéctions it will continue | ls te aoet tow seal P think _, The Sé-year-old B.C. member, Prince —— for 47 years since | month. The resolution was introduced underground’ tests. we have made some mistakes — only iff the 1958 gen- aael ue Alte. his = | by 35 non-aligned nations and =. TREATY ' eral election since winning his ae was adopted a %%-to-0 vote, resolution is aimed af re- and we must change \direction Cormons seat in 1953, said he, _ Mr. Olson first was ate to Sete fe o° <i *0) with 13 souiiiee abstaining. It inforcing the Moscow nuclear! in some areas. : "If the pattern that has been set is going to continue the fu- the Commons in 1957. oo rae but ad ve ” “Whoever is chosen leader to. re-election since. Born in’ Al- ae tt Set Dey ole. |day, I will try to stay as close | berta, the operates a farm and CITES DECLINE |to that ‘leader as I possibly | ranch supply company in Medi- Dis. Choon onta OR Gite auky eum” be ould. | cine Ha “realistic” conclusion that can He said his personal view is; Mr. rt farms in the be drawn from Social « Credit's| that ‘ ‘there is no way the Credi-| Red Deer area. Prior to becom- steady decline in ‘Commons tiste movement (the breakaway ing national Social Credit presi- strength from 30 in 1962 to five|Quebec wing of the party) as|dent in 1960, he spent 15 years after voting Nov: 8. such can be brought back into | in Africa, largely as an adviser He said there is a need for | the party. But I do believe these on air force training and edu- compromise” ‘ean be brought one by one| cation to the has great sympathy for any po litical leader. now foes before the 117-nation test-ban treaty to add the pro- ONLY 24 Killed when the car psy this morning and also an- in two and overturning. The | (Reuters) — The late last night that the ae Northern of the other three occupants | jcompared with %4 in the last and police investigating officers | | west in the general direction of | House and 37 in 1949. Summerside, while the second | a | vehicle, was travelling in the) MOSCOW (AP) — The Sowiet both Maritime Electric and the! the | , chief Soviet disarmament nego- © Union| could not support the resolution |* for on-| Crew Rescued From: Freighter SEATTLE (AP) — The US. | Coast Guard rescued ‘th® crew of the 10,000-ton freighter Oduna | by breeches buoy late Friday, | several hours’ after’ the vessel went aground on Unimak Is- land A k Al ; nelled and will view the remains | | Senn Aas uae oe i A spokesman for the steam- 1956 model ship company said its agent in| son. Kodiak, Alaska, had advised | }that~all-37 men aboard the” | stricken vessel were removed. Smith Sees _ Power Break Due To Reds SALISBURY (AP) — Prime | Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia said Friday night that Commun- ists may have been behind the destruction of a power line! | tower that disrupted an electric | circuit «in neighboring Zambia early Friday. . “T wonder,’’ Smith said in a statement issuéd through the information ministry, ‘‘whether this has not been instigated by the Communists — Chinese or otherwise — who have moved | into Zambia in recent months.” | j Zambia came under African control after the breakup of the British-run Central African Fed- | | eration, in which it was a part. \mer with white-ruled Rhodesia. | Zambians are among critics of the Rhodesian declaration of in- dependence Nov. 11. mz lucky ones got bread and then K only one loaf a customer under § t =| } } Rhodesian Sugar, Fiof shops even |) stores. ~ | were orderly France Is Member Of Exclusive Club PARIS (AP)—France sent its| stage of the rocket, also solid- first satellite into orbit Friday fuelled, took over See from a launching station deep in) The A-1 was traveliing at 26,- the Algerian Sahara. 400 feet a second when it began The successful space shot its orbit. gave France membership in a An announcement rom the club reserved until now for the launching station at Hammaguir ‘super-powers, the United States| said “everything is functioning and the Soviet Union. President ‘ormally.” de Gaulle promptly hailed it as The government, which has “an important accomplishment made all preparations for the of which the entire country | shot in tight secrecy, waited un- should be happy and proud.” til the satellite had completed Launched as a 2,5-pound, an orbit successfully before it satellite which is to tran-~-it| made its announcement. The radio signals for two weeks: The A-1 takes an hour and 48 min- defence ministry said the princi-, utes to circle the globe. pal purpose of the shot was not, Its flight path takes it 1,100 to gather scientific data. but to miles from earth at its farthest test its three-stage diamond point and brings it to within 330 (Diaman)- rocket, four years in) Miles of earth at. its -nearest development. point. France which also boasts a| De Gaulle, in the midst of @ small plane - carried atomic campaign for re-election. tcld strike force, plans to produce. his Sa “the placing is its first generation of nuclear- orbit of the first French satel- tipped ballistic missiles in the| lite launched by a next decade. pes i . eee accom The satellite, called the A-1,| Plishmen ae entire was fired from its pad at Ham. | rent should be happy and — "it aus eae | In-a letter to Defence Minister ward_Lebanon_atop the. 62-foot Pierre Messmer, de Gaulle alse rocket. said the satellite “attests to the | thigh value of , French science FIRED ON TIME _- | and technique.’ After a minute and 35 seconds| Friday’s ateite launching the liquid-fuelled first stage cut) was the most dramatic example out’ and separated from the ve-| of French technological deyelop- hicle. The solid-fuelled second! ment since the French exploded stage fired for 44 seconds and their first A-bomb in the Sahara dropped off. Then the third| Feb. 13, 1960. : Wee Tobacco Banned OTTAWA (CP) —A ban on the| volved im this because it does mport of sugar and tobacco! not send oil or petroleum prod- taean Rhodesia was announced) ucts there. | Friday by Prime Minister Pear-| However, Canadians are hold- It is effective immediate-| ing discussions with nations that do supply oil to Rhodesia to find tly. Last year Canada bought $2,- | 500,000 worth of sugar from | Rhodesia, representing about half of this country’s total pur- chases of $1,200,000 from: the Af-| rican nation. Mr. Pearson said no Rhode. sian tobacco is normally sold here but the ban is designed to, block any possible efforts to be- gin making smu sales ee or shipping eco to Canadian) Canadian teachers who were points for re-export. working on external aid pro- He announced the decision at} jects. ress conference following a Later in the press conference, cabinet meeting. | Mr. Pearson said the question Mr. Pearson said the cabinet | of increased Canadian sugar pur- | also has banned the approval: of| chases in Jamaica will undoubt- | federal insurance on exports to| ¢dly arise during his talks with | | Rhodesia. | Jamaican government officials | mext week. | om NOT INVOLVED | The prime minister plans te He said there has been a call! spend two days in Jamaica on a for world oil sanctions against | formal visit before starting a | Rhodesia but Canada is not in-| Caribbean vacation. Breadless Days Due For Millions In Britain By JAMES F. KING The Bakers Union has been LONDON (AP)—Millions of waging a series of strikes but Britons have resigned them- the call-out of 10,000 members se es to a breadless weekend was the most serious. so far. ~ after a wave of hysterical buy- : ling set off by a bakers’ strike, | Hope for a ees Housewives lined up in front ee — bef thes reached grew after the interven- but oa an tion of Economics Minister ; George - Brown. He met with union leaders, one of whom said there was ‘‘a gleam of hope” of reaching at least a tempo- rary agreement. There was some minor black- marketing loaves that nor- matly’ sell for about 20 cents were going for about ¥ cents. The strikers will return to rwork Sunday, so supplies will ibe back to normal next week. INSIDE TODAY to do about sanctions. Mr. Pearson listed a number | of economic and other steps taken previously by Canada against the illegal government of Rhodesia. These have in- cluded an embargo on arms withdrawal of pre- ferential tariffs and the -Cana- | dian trade commissioner in Sal- and the removal of nine opened Friday, rationing imposed by most In sharp contrast to Thurs- iday’s frantic bickering and jos- fling, women in queues Friday and even joking ; ;@bout what has become known jas ‘the bread hunt." The shops \/thet had bread sold out in most cases before noon One bread robbery was re- ported. Thieves snatcned eight | loaves from a small cafe just off Fleet Street. ’ @| General Assembly where ap- hibition of underground tests to ee | Many stotes ran -out of sup- Classified _........ 14, 3 SHOPPING @ | Proval virtually is assured the agreement. The Moscow HEADS ARMY \plies quickly. Only the independ- Bb ' | United States indicated treaty now prohibits tests in the vent bakeries were operating and ses seeee tee eweneees ° DAYS TILL | Thursday that it would not sup-; atmosphere and under ater 8 3 they stepped up production but ee ‘3 port the resolution but, when{but does not touch on under-| _ Commissioner Samuel Hep- |eouia nat meet the demand. ben iwiserbscenseses s the vote was taken, joined such | ground tests. | turn, 64, of Chicago, has been | | Spett eaeveseeseweenes ML countries as Canada and Britain The resolution called on the named National Commander of (LONDON AFFECTED GMCRS ..-.-. +2405 see. 6 jin backing the proposal. :18-nation disarmament commit. the Salvation Army, it was an-| The Bakers Union called a 4¢.| Finance. markets -- | -Among the countries to a of which Canada is a mem-| nounced Friday in New York. jhour strike in the area, includ- Editorials - ....... cone | stain were France and the So-|ber to continue “with a sense| He succeeds Commissioner jing London, affecting 20,000,000 Summerside . reves 8, “viet bioe, with the exception of of urgency” heir efforts to Holland French, 71, whe re- persens.to_press-their-demands—_Mings, Queens, City .... 5 ! for. 2 30-per-cent wage increase Prince County i. rect ~pupported tae cone up with a “comprehensive | test-ban treaty.” ts 4 tires Jan, 14. ‘ (AP Wirephoto) ito £15 (#45) a week. out what these countries intend ~~ a -ogtb