i WEATHER Rain Before noon, tapering off to showers in evening; winds southeast 25. Low-high 40 and 50. Sunday: cloudy. If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It ) Guardian ers. Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” wane oniees® CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1965, Nov MORE SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES T p " } t r Province Potatoes 5} | Quality Called estln Memory . By NEIL MATHESON | are 40 acres of Netted Gems. | A P.E.1. potato ctop of ‘‘sup- The rest are mainly Sebagoes. erior quality’ will bring an Chessel (Chet) Irving, Mur- estimated premium of 530 cents ray Harbor told The Guardian this week that he’s getting pro- 1 Best Winter Ferry Service ils Scheduled At Borden MONCTON — Prince Edward at night when traffic peaks de- leave Borden and Cape Tormen- | Island will have its best winter {mae yr se tine at 8 a.m., 9.25 a.m., 11 a.im. | ferry service over this year! Under new schedule com- 12.25 p.m., 1.50 p.m., 3.15 p.m, thanks to a new an- ‘ing into effect Oct. 31, ships will and 9.30 p.m. A.S.T. r } schedule nounced Friday by J.G. Davis, | os : x é countries began melding their |Johnson signed the bill Friday, vehicle. production facilities to lauding it as a measure to pro- serve and capitalize on the |tect U.S. auto production. North American common mar-| Mr. Pearson said in a state ket pool, 170 Canadian ‘eon-|ment issued here before he flew Tourist Trade. — Seen Best Ever OTTAWA ‘CP) — What ap-| budget this year, largest at the pears to have been the best (national level among 100 coun- year ever for the Canadian |tries that have organized travel tourist industry may have | promotion. , : brought more than $700,000,000 | The bureau was planning to into the country, Dan Wallace, |send personal invitations to director of the Canadian govern- | 2,000,000 well-todo Americans ment travel bureau, said Fri- |late next year to come to Can- day- jada ‘in 1967. It expected to “By all accounts, it's been the |reach 7,000,000 potential tour biggest year yet,’ Mr. Wallace | ists this way. _ said in an interview. | Travel by Canadians in Caan- Last year, non - Canadian ada had been spectacular this parts : dealers. . of the same models in 1965, be- 3 ional frills being built into next way cars now on the market. auto trade pact was signed by Mr. Pearson and the he Ranch in new law takes effect in 60 days | but is made rétroactive to Jan. 16 when Canadian tariffs were abolished. The net effect of this is to open the border to free trade between the two countries in automobiles and original-equip- ment. parts. Savings would re- sult from higher volume produc- tion of specific lines in either country to serve the markets of both countries But tariffs re- travellers spent $661,000,000 in | year, he added, the country and the figure has | There ws a 35-per-cent in- been rising annually by about |crease in Ontario cars going to cha-ed across the border by in- | | Vancouver Island, which was dividuals, and on replacement | ° 10 per cent. Mr. Wallace: said he hopes the | ‘‘sensational.”” |pa $80,000,000 mark may be! There were more visitors than | passed in 1966 as a pretude-of | Nova Scotians in that province a $1,000,000,000 year in 1967. —some 800,000 all told. | SPEND $2,567,000 | “It was a fabulous year for He said the bureau has athe Atlantic provinces, a long, | $2,567,000 travel advertising| good year.” British Murder Hunt Uncovers Second Body MANCHESTER, England ports that children had been (Reuters) — A weeping mother |lured to their deaths after wihe | “das identified a shoe found in a |Parties and sex orgies. . | moorland grave as belonging to; Last Saturday, a policeman | her missing. 12-year-old son. (taking part in the search on | The boy, John Kilbride, van- |Saddleworth moor, a desolate ished without a clue two years expanse of stunted grass and) ago from the streets- of his rocky outcrops, noticed a bone | home town, Ashton-under-Lyne, Showing above the peat, appar- | in northern England. ently exposed by erosion. The town is near Soca Careful digging revealed it | moor, where police have wun- |Was the forearm of the body of | covered the graves of two chil- 10-year-old Lesley Ann Downey, dren and are digging: for more. {missing since she visited a fair- Detectives believed they may |#Tound the day after last Christ- | find seven more. bodies on the /™&s- moor. Pty sen: wi >, story of the John's mother, Mrs, Sheila discovery at an inquest in up- Kilbride, was called Friday to |Dermill, Yorkshire, F rid ay. the desolate scene of one of |Then the coroner adjourned the Britain's —big-zest murder *ufts hearing fortwo months in view and immediately recognized the Of the fact that two persons shoe The human remains them- |have already been charged with selves were unrecognizable. | Lesley’s murder. “Tt did not really believe would be alive after all he| The two, Ian Brady, 27-year- this Old clerk, and Myra’ Hindley time,” she said, “but as a 23. will appear in court again mother I” always went on hop- |next Thursday. They were ing: Now I am glad it is all Charged last Thursday when over.” they appeared to answer earlier . . ‘charges accusing Brady of mur- LURED TO DEATHS \dering a 17-year-old youth and The murder hunt, now more Lone Hindley! of helping him af- than a week old, followed re- 'terwards i ® main in effect on cars pur- “This event demonstrates again the capacity of our two (Continued on page 5 Col. 2) Leaders On Hustings - CANADIAN PRESS adding the cost of addi- | Dunstan's University, as a mem- 4_her--of-the--Canadian—Union--of Students, will participate with other member institutions in the National Student Day, Oct. 27, it was announced last night by Tom MacMillan in the ‘absence of student union president Dave Morton: : Mr. MacMillan said, “SDU Stnudents’ Union has not an- nounced it’s program of activi- ties for the National Student Day, furthermore, press reports regarding a student protest upon the provincial legislature and a submission of a brief to the provincial government are com- pletely without authority.” He stated ‘‘the general ‘pro- gra madopted by the students’ union is one of educating the general and student public con- cerning the problems facing higher education. Nevertheless, | the students’ union disassociates | itself entirely from any state- ment made in the press regard- j.ing its plans, and until such | time as the plans are announced | formally to the government and | the press any statements made | | on the union's behalf will be considered erroneous."’ Thursday in a story which or- | iginated in Halifax, Bill Curry, | president of the Association of “The students’ union of St. i ‘labide by the decision of the jury.” Barbara Johnson, president of} SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP)—AlL the P.W.C. student council stated \though no official ceremonies rday: We will not take part are planned, citizens of this as P.W.C. is not a member of town will pause today to re- the Canadian University of Stud-| member 75 men who died in the Seti ttle tan ee is fom | 1958 mine disaster. this march and we had) is date that the been ‘oftici ally approached It was on this da at tl e part ‘ onstration. | poor — | We were aware that the march! ..4eq ree gpotincd Tae was being planned, however, and | major coal producer. this was the extent of our MROW") ier 4 week of ledge on the matter. \through rubble rescue workers Eartier in the day Premier (found 12 men alive. They told WR. Shaw said if students of heroism, hunger and thirst. march and wish to see the gov- |And a week later another seven ernment “we'll be happy to see men were rescued from the tiem.” jtomb 13,000 feet underground. Once Is Enough, Is View Of Ride Miss Myhon, an electronic re- pair technician, were determin- ed to-continue. (We cooked out all the way,” | HALIFAX (CP) — Two mount- jed women clopped across the Angus L. Macdonald bridge into |this port city Friday to end a clawing | |5,000-mile trek they vow they will never untertake again — at ‘No By THE ‘ SATURDAY | Atlantic Students told of plans | a Pearson—Halifax and Ottawa. for the presentation of briefs rag a ~ — t Ab speeches scheduled. -| and holding of rallies and march- |, Helen Alwood, 29, of Port ! Diefenbaker — In Napanee; es in the Maritimes. He said on. eihae aie a “ad toh eG liford, Hasti x ope George, B.C., pusiise. Campbe ite cesta’ fase Se ol hep en Reiner Mat emgey Vancouver April 21 on an adven- h, Ont. to icipate, and Peterboroug | were expected to participate ture that proved too rugged for Douglas — In Burnaby - Co caer (B.C.) riding. : | NO PWC MARCH |a pair of horsemen they met ‘800 Thompson—iIn Winkler; Man.,| The. students of Prince of |miles from their starting point arene mane goae have anaecmeed |. “Girls, we eae: | oP Cc: tte—In Winkler, Man., they will not participate in the |hausted men t »m, but Miss — on . ‘proposed march of Island college Alwood, a lumber grader at & they said and slept in the open except for 13 nights. They faced cold, rain and lightning during their six-month trip, but the big- ,gest problem was “learning to ride. 1 “Neither of us had ridden be- fore we left on the trip,” said Helen. “That first night we felt like turning around and heading back right away. But so many of our friends had laughed at us and told us we'd never do it that we just had to show them.” Caouetie—In Lac St. Jean ,Studente-on the P.E.I. legislature plywood | veneer factory, and (Que.) riding. 1 Pearson oN awed xo DRAMATIC SCENES speeches scheduled. Diefenbaker—In Toronto. speeches scheduled. Douglas — In Burnaby - Co- | quitlam (B.C.). riding. | Thompson—In Toronto. Nom) waging political speech. | = TON. ; Caouetie — In Lapointe and |mer Ku Klux Kian chaplain told | eS a. pee Oe. Seer ee! ae i io questions by top \a thinly-disguised threat against lklan leoders, lating imperial INSIDE TOD AY ‘his life after he quit the white-|Wizard Robert M. Shelton. +supremacistkian_and-—appeared the eh a plain, Rev. Roy on a national ‘television pro- |Woodle, a one-time bricklayer gram. ely Lexington, N.C.. was i kl _ Jo- |29ked whether he was threat- | Sarlier. sacther eee Sea ste body hhew after be iseph G. Dubois, of Goldsboro, " INC., resigned from the klian | Wit the klan five weeks ago. |while he sat in the witness chair |yge opp PHRASE before the House of Representa-/ “1 don't know if it is bodily ‘tives committee on un-American harm,” Woodle said. “But he lactivities. He said he places said he had‘ the authority to God and country above kian away with me.” vows. Nervous laughter swept the | The two dramatic scenes'room, in whieh committee : (AP)—A_ for-;brought the committee’s klan hearings to life after three days of listening to monotonous refu- 7 "He's ~ Klan Probe Comes To Life chairman Edwin £E, Willis (Dem. La.) joined. Then the minister was asked who did the threatening. He said it was Boyd Hamby and, turning to the audience, added: the _“ella__-sitting__ back. there with the moustache.” Hamby told a_ reporter: have no comment.” He was then called to the witness box \./and declined to answer all ques- ‘tions about whether he knows Woodle, had telephoned him or, had anything to do with the burning of a cross on the cler- gyman’s lawn the night after ‘the preacher appeared on a CBS television program about the klan. and the train began to move. Mr. .Diefenbaker stood his ground instead of running. for the train and continued shaking hands. His aides waived fran- tically to the crew. The train stopped for about half a minute and then started ragain. Again Mr: Diefenbaker’s” aides got it stopped. Mr. ODiefenbaker was. still shaking hands when the train started up a third time. Again it came to a stop. This” time Mr. Diefenbaker got aboard. TI Missing oe |Bump—an upheavel in the mine | e e In Sinking NEW YORK (AP)—A _ Libe- rian freighter foundered in the Atlantic Friday and the U.S. Coast Guard reported that 22 of the 33 persons aboard had been rescued. yy | he manager of Canadian Nationals | feet, Qubce potatoce, ES. WE Soe eeieciabameete eae a) Maritime area. | . | and shipper predicted enthus-)| ing in Glen William, Abney and The new schedule, which) iastically yesterday afternoon in | in his own home district. comes into effect Oct. 31 replac- § Ven interview with this paper. | Mr. Irving told The Guardian es the time table already pub- | : Ke " 3. | that production is generally good lished. Under the old time table, | I have never seen such qual- bianca arem-chefe Saikine sient ; it was planned to reduce the fre- | : r . pay of potehces ip -all’ may: YONED be eatege len: iain: Bene quency of _ crossings - between | ' » | Ot association with te, pital? | ages. In Guernsey Cove and : Borden, P.E.I. and Cape Tor- om industry,” said the genial Kings- | Go, canis for e they EX-BOY FRIEND OF PRINCESS WEDS mentine, N.B., from 20 # day to, ton man, who operaien a ship. Weite Sands, for example, they 10 a day. Dec. 1. e , MISSING ping business in Oharlottetown basdiaia ‘wer stiea ie eal i. Billy Wallace, 37, one-time The 3tyear-old bride is the ville Courier-Journal. His fa- | Says Mr. Davis: “Under_ the | . and a ss in| Mr. Willis has been sizing up boy friend of Princess Mar- daughter of Lord and Lady ther, her first husband, was (new schediles we will continue | HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP)—A (haired Collie Wilkins, Sr., held | 5,4 ‘ ween, 08 acres of potatoes fe | a ciied siteuien ie. seat —- : ; for Inchyra. Wallace's mother is the late Capt. Euan Wallace, a {the present frequency of 20 sch-} young Ku Klux Klansman was {a hat in front of. his face to sone Ye ey - ee San ee Core week and suggests garet and his bride, the forms yar.” Herbert Agar, wife of former British minister of |¢duled crossings a day through- | acquitted Friday of the slaying |keep from being photographed. Sopartnent ot external af | Rene Oe Bowie. | will run perhaps 15 per cent er Elizabeth Hoyer Millar, are American historian’. Herbert transport. out the winter, In order to ac-|of a white civil rights worker. fairs at Ottawa, is one of Island potatoes have com- helow last year—1964 was an shown after their wedding in Agar, a Pulitzer Prize winner (AP Wirephoto via ¢ able |complish this improvement, it-Is.|The jury reported after deliber-' APPLAUD VERDICT pew canadien? missing on & | manded ~ a ‘in past | unusually good year—and per- Lavington, England, Friday, and former editor of the Louis- frem London) necessary to change the times of | ating for one hour and 45 min-| The courtroom crowd ap-|- flight in Viet Nam. The plane, | years, but it was in the range haps 10 per cent, or maybe eves - - the crossings from those. in ef- | utes. | pimeeed noisily when the jury's ree Lae ie tke eaeeeiteer | Of 25 to 30 cents per bag; not | less below the. average crop. PRESIDENT JOHNSON SIGNS we ate introducing this new | The Klansman, Collie: Leroy |crew-eut Kisnsman ofa first | al Control Commission | Mr. Willis predicts for this year, | ,rroauction ia, generat is sur- schedule at the same time as | Wilkins, Jr., 21-year-old Fair. |aeeras murder: clarae In the! “| And he makes this prediction | good in the province, clocks are returned to standard (field, Ala., auto mechanic, left | Kitling of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, 39 : folowi trip wees avn seusidurs She appenens fh ime : the courtroom without conr | a Die Almost ~~ : _ | outlook a month ago, he ob- a a 8 time. wheats on 1the’ verdict. \He {of Detroit last March 25, was | = few days ago, which took him | served a. y eheaerice deen ynd iticonaly and puffed ears hy. Sie: sisonit clerk, Mrs. | Mi T e as far as Quebec.) | tba diciocs seeaau winter, ON) will continue to op- {*#Pidly om a cigarette. ‘Attorney - General Richmona | #WUISSES FFCNN | starcn covrent miGH ‘Both men used irrigation this : erate two ships. In past years it; Ou the orca ray he | Flowers, who prosecuted Wil: | BELLEVILLE, Ont, (CP—)| rhe starch content this year | year and both are high on its 8 has been the practice to operate | Climbed oe pe we ie |kins, said two other klan mem- |The CNR’s Montreal - Toronto ot at high, and that is true | valine. Mr. Willis said yester- one ship during the off-peak — td ttes a | bers, also indicted for the Liuzzo|train almost left Opposition | © ae ere I have tested | day his heavy investment—it Ps |winter season. a dozen 8 » | slaying, will be tried despite the Leader Diefenbaker behind | ©#ch one of them by baking, and | ran to $20,000 for the 250 acres ads | Says a. wee lig im- ee ers tevaen ce jaequittal of the first defendant. | three times during a brief stop oe and the eee te he irrigated—will have paid fof | prov the hood : siti’ | i every respect”, < eC | fimade to meet expected increas: | windshield and the side windows |, THe Klsnsimen wil, awaiting (M° Cor about m0 was |S#Ht enthusiastically.” | sent price tronie bok up el By JAMES NELSON cerns have expanded or made to Halifax to continue bis gen- (es in traffic and provide a bet- | to keep photographers from get- |p, er Ala.. steel company | 2athered at the station to see | The volume of production’ is | the end of December. He means OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- {definite plans to establish new | eral election campaign that the ter passenger service.” ting ne, eeture. Lemployee, and William Orville |Mr. Diefenbaker, whose cam | also good. He's getting up to | that the increased yield on the ter Pearson hailed President /or expanded facilities. benefits of the agreement ‘will | In addition to the scheduled | His parents also were in the paton 41, a retired steel |Paign car was attached to the | 500 bushels per acre from his | irrigation. portion would pay Johnson's final signature.on the| Announcement of many of |continue to increase as its oper- |‘tips, CN ships will continue to|car. ‘His father, wiry, grey- | worker, aiso of Bessemer. end of the regular passenger | 65 acres of Lasoda spuds, a new | for the cost of the installation. U,S.Canada automobile trade these projects by firms in- |ation gains momentum.” | Ree ee Set | Thomas and Eaton were both |train. __ | variety here which were - He described the current out- pact Friday with confidence |volved has been held up pending in the courtroom. Mr. Diefenbaker. got off to | veloped in North Dakota: There | (Continued on page 3, col. 1) that the expanding Canadian |presidential approval of the new PRICES DOWN Fl told reporters: “W | shake hands with his supporters | uto ind ill gai ‘US. Automotive Products, Already, he said, it has meant | saute beet, we could, | 284 had been doing this for only | ton. ee Trade Act, enacted by Congress 2 reduction in prices for 1966 | nhegercBlle Ag, obe — about two minutes.when the | Fisherman Leaves H ital. “He ‘said .that. since the twe jearlier this. moith President model cars. Base prices of the} Cate. was. oat eit 4g conductor shouted “al abeard,’™'- " _ - - osp - tore |Recovering From Exposure | SHELBURNE, NS. (CP)— One of two fishermen who sur- vived 22 hours in the Atlantic after their vessel was rammed early Tuesday----was— released- Friday from hospital here. i Officials said Cleverley Smith, 23,. was sent home after three days of treatment. They _ said the other survivor, Harold Cof- fin, 28, is in improved condition. Both were taken to the hos- pital in fair condition Wednes- day suffering from extreme shock, exposure, cuts and bruises. . The two were aboard the! 42- | foot longliner ‘ Maureen Reve | rammed early Tuesday about 35 miles southeast of here by an unknown. vessel which they described as ‘‘a steamer.” The skipper of the Maureen sane papas as Rose, Smith's ; 21, clung with the other two to the wreckage of the longliner but drowned before the other -two--were--rescued --Wednesday by Captain Harley Dedrick in the boat Sheila and Kathy. Meanwhile, RCMP are con- tinuing their efforts te identify the--vessel- that--rammed. -the |Mavreen Rose. Officials ques tioned the two survivors Thurs- day and other vessels known te have been in the area at the time are being examined. The longliner Sandra and Di- anne Friday located the wreck- age of the Maureen Rose and carried out a search for the body of the missing captain. The skipper and both surviv ors were residents of Baccaro, about 15 miles southwest of here, ; WE Pe: brother Almon, . TWO BRITISH Columbia wo- ride. across Canada at Hali- men urge their horses down the ramp of the Angus L. Macdon- ald bridge to end a 5,000-mile Joyce Myhon, 33, of Prince >_—s, Z3 George left the west coast fax Friday. Helen Alwood, 29, Pe pig ~- = ; a of Port Alberni, left. and the return trip. (CP Wirephate) .