if It's Good The Guardian Is For It For The Island noon; winds south- northwest. Low-high 48 and 55, ‘Th ay: sunny, cool. - e af // y ‘i - ye ea ‘Island Like The Dew” bf fea VOL, EXXEX NO. 233 sree Sees ‘ANADA, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 5, 1966, te OL A, — By JAMES NELSON in seriding up the price of food, the joint committee of the Sen- ate and Commons..on consumer prices was told esday. Me S. B. Williams, assistant dep- uty. minister of agriculture’ in charge of production and mar- keting, said this is one of t principal reasons food up in the supermarkets ner. grocery ‘stores, *: jeggs to producers, to re /Atakes level wholesalers and retailers” may be slow to reflect .the jn- |. Shows Dae Pal ot He“and Mr<“ Williams ‘said that when a“price increase first “place at” the” producer érease but once a higher pric m7 becomes established, Oe” ma} ups are tacked ‘on: Mr. Williams soni “that most | retailers charge the »consumers- that sugar prices, “on a feodices of meats, particu- f; are affected by. U.S. prices. All’ price quota- collected by the- depart- ent of agricujture are at pro- ducer and. wholesale markets. Retail prices are related, but do 7 not necessarily go hand-in-hand. “That-—may—be--true, but tell us what your \ wife tells. - you | Review Due Ao Begin. OTTAWA (CP)—Some doubts about. the conviction of a 14 year-old boy of a brutal sex- ada opens its. review’ of the Steven .Trusc case. The court has” >approved the calling—of-—-34-—-witnes: to--help it determine whether uscott was the victim of a miscarriage of justice’ when he was sen- the:. slaying. of saeee-cid ‘Lynne Harper in 1959. A main lak in contention at tenced. to life imprisonment for. ‘Bank Bil As First’ By RONALD LEBEL AOTTAWA (CP)—Members of Parliament return to their Com- come and welfare of millions: of Canadians, will _be debated in 10 hectic weeks before the Christ- mas_recess. Adding to the intense activity will be “the Liberals’ -first na- tional convention since 1961,. ning Monday; the Conserva- tives’ first convention — since early 1964, next Nov. 16-19; and a_major~federal-provincial _ con- | Seen Item dorsed by banks, has been ertts icized by opposition MPs and“ some Liberal dissidents as an OTTAWA (CP)' — ‘Percentage lets, and to-consumers generally:|markets now are /about two |Slaying in Clinton, Ont., sevei.tmons desks today’ to face, a |unwarranted slap at the aver. markups by: wholesalers and re- cents a at the mpared with |years_ago may be cleared today |swarm of crucial’ issues. age Canadian. tailers‘ have a pyramidal effect 1g cents atheiy’ peak. ‘Iwhen the Supreme Court of Can-| Legislation affecting’ ‘the in-| The: minority Pearson gover: ment will push: for quick ap- proval in principle,in the House, followed by extensive commit tee hearings to thrash out te tails. Other priority measures are 4 baby budget . containing a tay increase of undisclosed form medical care insurancé; a new minimum income program for. ~ the aged; unification of the farmer doesn’t sha a straight percentage markup !ahout> food prices,” Senator’|the Supreme Court hearings will pare ot an on tax- |armed forces and collective bat A ‘ F a 5 gaining machinery for federaj crease. ~ on. the retatLt outlet's cost,(David Croll (L—Ontario), co- |be the manner which the Crown | when the Commons meets’ at jemployees yeas. Mr.-Willia and a score of |charged by B. * wholesaler. chairman, told Mr. Williams. |¢Stablished time of death of the |o. 39 p.m. EDT, the first item| Fi mines Minister Sharp is en ’ agriculture norhomtl EFFECT “Well, prices of certain pro- |Victim. The Crown's evidence likely will be the massiverevi- |pected to present his interigs Sa cessed products in recent times |Placed Truscott with the gir! on troduced ee, for its first discus-| At ist that in turn. |have not followed 40 closely .as |°F about the time of her death. fost eters os ay 18 > aa oi Gy mote ee PULLS WRONG WAY ACT 7 Woot mecfic prices: {eagle ditbuars of 100. Suing. gears the upward | st before the July 16 summer eid the tax bos wil a lead Mrs. Josephine Griffin, 60- Los Angeles,\Calif., has a pert wave Tuesday’ at Chicago's O’Hare airport during a stop- Chicago two weeks ago to visit — relatives: Last night she board- . D. Davey, at itis charge a percentage me esol on the prices they have to pay suppliers. This has an additional snowballing or pyra- miding effect, “Max Saltsman~ (NDP=Water- Joo South) said the markups on and downward movement of producer prices,’’ Mr. ee said. He iso said there has been” a najor shift_in_recent_years_to- wards--higher-cost__protein foods Famine \[ WOULD DITCH CEILING recess. The cabinet and the Liberal caucus met Tuesday. Conserva- . |tives and New Democrats were to hold their caucus meetings today. the first year. The budget a. expected to pro/ vide for check inflation, though: friends and away—from -cheaper. cereal aw | | STILL IN-THE--Wi Enland, where ae used eae ‘ ie Mieslae. ut on this,”’ she yet Se iaae cane erevining foods. Housewives” also want ‘The bank bill would scrap the| Details of the new pro ho that- while.“the |Iast year. Mr. Williams said this |More processed foods and pay .v-|six-per-cent interest ceiling on |for the aged still are : tail . of food sales in Can- lis true. for more sophisticated packag- : bank loans and substitute g ironed. out by the health de- ” ,029,000:000 from | Mr. Davey; howeyet, said egg |ing. .floating rate that could rise to |partment. Health Minister Mae, e ucec of Oo. a1 tween 1949 and |prices at this time of year usu-| “It's just a personal opinion, | By ALEXANDER FARRELL eouititions, as ee Lb oa Eachen ee . July “that 964, the farm value of raw food |ally-are over their annual hump |but I. siippose that is brought on UNITED NATIONS (CP) — oney uae Sid coe = an ‘ ‘dh materials produced rose to only-|and should be declining. He pre- |by the higher percentage of The United Nations’ economic This’ proposal, generally en- | (Continued on: ‘oe 5 col.: s a $3,048,000, 098 from $1,234,000,- |dicted that egg prices next ‘year |women now employed outside chief repeated past warnings P ™ d Page 9, Col...» ’s best yotate land: uae ‘meant, he said, that the ‘lfarmers received in 1964 only 41 cents of the retail food. dollar’ will be somewhat. lower than’ this~ year, though higher than last year. Mr. Williams said foodstuffs the home.” “Well,” “(E—St. said Richard Cashin John’s West), “I can tell you, based on my experi- Tuesday that there ‘is a real possibility that famine soon will occur in much of the world. Philippe de Seynes of France, UN : undersecretary for eco- By ‘NEIL MATHESON At “the I far beyond at r spent, compared with 58 cents jare by national and.in- jence, that wives that don't work aihin Biaire” seit aeaikic Gee A sharply reduced yield of.po-| Hor Willis, Kingston, who |so, if cevtain developments oc- jin 1949. ternational trends” more -than |also, prefer packaged and*.pro- alleen a food surpluses, partic- tatoes. and strong market”pros- planted more than 600 acres this | vw Mec eee ‘enid the rep of other commodities. He . noted |cessed fonds. ularly in Canada and the United pects were suggested-<to’ The byear, said the yield will run: per- haps 285 to 325 bushels per (ge tablesiock spuds could be nging $1.35_ to” $1.50_per_bag W ent SA a * a ey ee ~ yey me Pe States, have to make the {global Salaun between food Back Benchers Wrath. Guardian last nigh a two of ‘ oye): i Breaks Over Medicare: potato men. rae Apis eae he per 2 n'a month OF s0, he estimated, production and population pre- ~ Bert -Mcé town, . If frost should damage the timate ‘of ¢ long ragéffled as ‘ihe Kaetons, MARKET LOORS' North Dakota and Idano crop— fal ‘wikid population by the end| OTTAWA (CP)—The _antict- (position to a delay in the. start head ia tter ‘gtowers, told The Mr. Willis.’& ca gene their plantings are late — the of the century is 6,130,000,000— pated wrath of the Liberal back ing date was over. piraian las( night the crop in|as a producr; said market |Price here could hit $2.50 per | in 160,000,000 “highar than the esti- /Pench broke over Finance Mil-| “No I imagine many, ite my> bag after the freezeup, perhaps | ister Sharp and his cabinet col- self, regret that we found it nee As running 25 per cent ormal. mate made two years ago. The producer, trendstook..sfrong. It’ end ag one en oy by late November. world population now..is _esti- leagues in a hot, three-hour essary to postpone this pre 4 gouth, Charles Taylor, 17, ” “Mr. MeCardle normally gets, spt seed will probably run |_ That’is speculative, but Mr. mated“ by the UN at about ‘a meeting of MPs Tue® |gram. bushels to the acre, or slight- | two’cents per pound to the grow- |Willis was emphatic in his opin- From Yr ai ri e Ss i a 3,000,000,000. hs! deat wen Sati Gee ae 1, 1967, is the starting Ay more. This year the yield will jér, and tablestock ‘around $1.00|, Continued on page 3 col. 8 i sdatiniat- Ae Mic Share gave te cnivae government's average 300 bushels, he~ said” to $1.10 a bag delivered . at ship- Me P e ap -tmdicattan-be hy care . now before Parliament. The Middleton man “added that |ping point. INSIDE TODAY “OTTAWA (CP)—The cabinet] Mr. Pearson said in a state- per cent through the Northern eat Price ne, aeirameate’ ple to pre But Mr. Sharp announced it's the same story alt” around _his area, and that igcludes, some MIAMI, Fila. (AP) — Hurri- cane Inez, the end of her-mur- derous rampage ~nowhere in sight, slashed and clawed - through the Florida Keys Tues- day, then burst into the Gulf‘ of Mexico and new targets for her wild winds. Churning backwards from the heart of The Bahamas? the~vi- elous, unpre dic table storm lashed 65,000 Square miles of tea and shore. Along southeast Florida's Gold Coast.from Fort Lauder- dale .to Miami, power trans- formers blew in showers of green sparks, palm trees bent afd snapped and foaming surf eut streets and highways. A_ teen-ager wading in the thundering surf in Fort Lauder- dale was knocked down by a huge —wave__and— disappeared. Police said~ they feared the had ‘Changes Course, * hims At New Targets But thé market looks’ strong and Ahe prices could easily go _Island- a “Summerside ........00350°3 Deaths ......... seesos five 8 Editorials ...... TE” BES | Kings, Queens, City. we ee via the United States, ‘Tuesday night. drowned. Two elderly. Miami Beach res- idents—Isaac ‘Buzy, 84, and Miriam Radin; 74—died of ap- parent heart attacks while try- ing torjig shutters at homes. PUSHED. CUTTER ASHORE Seventy-mile - an-hour gales and mountatnous waves Guard cutter Point Thatcher on a jetty just off the resort row of Miami Beach. - In a heroic act, 50 to 1S men, women and children waded into the toweting surf-and formed a human chain to . help stranded coast guard ~~ reach shore, mile. clip at Key Largo, the lace of ‘keys that leads from (Continued on page 5, col. 6) Arrest Is Made In Doctor Death TORONTO (CP—)Donald Eu- gene Cooke, 28, of Guelph, Ont., was arrested Tuesday and’ charged with capital murder in the death of Dr. Rowena G. D. Hume, woman doctor. |skull, broke hed nose, ‘and cheek: © bone and fractured her jaw. HIRED ‘TRANSIENTS Friends of the slain doctor itold police she often hired trans- 88° Canada’s oldest jient workers through a Salva- tion Army hostel-to do odd jobs | Police said Cooke was ar- around her 15-room home. rested by detectives while walk- _ the home of the widow. Police said the man was reg- istered for part-time work with Dr. Hume's home, find no evidence it was ran- a charitable ‘organization pat- ‘sacked. tonized by Dr. Hume. bludgeoned body Monday on was ~ foun the second ~ floo: The body was found by a ~ erview her, Police said hundreds of pers- Dr. Hume's slashéd in reporter who was to in- landing of her midtown Carlton ons knew the frail, retired phy- Strest home Pbdlice — said of blows that « their | beached the 82-foot U.S. Coast | the |” With top winds “hitting a ®-. start--of- the 100-mile-long. neck-.| ’ lavishly: ing along a Toronto street near jfurnished with antiques she col- . ected during her long career, © ied untidy but police could ©. she |sician whose home was located DONALD EUGENE COOKE, was killed by. a blow or a series jin a district haunted by ‘bur- fractured her |glars, drug addicts and drunks. court by a policeman —< > 28, of Elora, Ont., is led out of etree 1° tee Cee. “> being charged Tuesday with after ‘coviig] murder ia! the beating aa. has reversed its ban on con-|ment that the company prom- jsteuction of -a- natural gas pipe- |ised: “Hime -and —_natural__gas__.export. through it from Western Canada of western gas required to sup- Prime jply Eastern’ Canada _ will Minister Pearson announced transported through the North- The reversal was -based on] 2. The company will aim at a promises by Trans-Canada Pipe |target of 60 per cent of eastern Lines: Ltd. that their present-jrequirements ‘being supplied Northern Ontario - pipeline will |through the Northern Ontario remain. the. company’s main jline by Dec. 31 1976. ~1,-More--than- half -the volume. be ern Ontario leg: 3. A long-range objective of 65 —— saith ot De Mawelien: Ontario -line. 4. An agreement with the fed- eral government to ensure that Trans-Canada could never dis-} pose of its interest in -Great Lakes Transmission Co. — the U.S. leg—without approval of the federal government. REMOVES WORRY Mr. Pearson said that the National Energy Board ‘‘after reviewing Trans - Canada’s un- dertakings, has said that in its view these undertakings would remove the possibility that the Great Lakes line might become in effect the main line of Trans- Canada.” = The government last August rejected Trans-Canada’s. bid to build a 36-inch line via the U.S. to export gas and help supply the eastern market. Tle North- ern Ontario line. now in opera- tion is a 30-inch line. Mr. Pearson said that follow- ing the government’s decision Trans-Canada offered to ~make certain commitments to . meet the government’s objections. These were sent to the energy board which found them “an adequate and acceptable fe- sponse” to the government’s ob- jections. Mr. Pearson said the com- pany’s.,new. promises remove the government’s basic objec- tion and it approved the board's recommendations for construc- tion, export and import permits. ‘Moncton | Clergyman. Elected CHATHAM, N.B. (CP)—Reév. L.E. Blaikie, minister of St. Andrew's. Presbyterian Church in Moncton, was elected . mod- erator Tuesday of the 98rd ‘| Maritime Synod: of the Presby- »|terian Church of Canada. at the opening session of the church’s sannual meeting here.” P Mr. Blaikie, a native of. Dur- ham, N.S., succeeds Rev. E.H. Bean of Sydney. Rev. Carl Cur- rie of Murray Harbor North, P.E.I. was the only other nominee. Mr. Blaikie» who trained for the ministery at Toronto Bible College, Mount Allison Univer- .| sity, Knox College and Acadia University, was minister of the B field, P.E.I. pastoral charge following his graduation (CP Wirephoto) aren I and moved to Moncton 10 years ago. i ; Increase ~ Not Foreseen TORONTO (CP) — A Canada ‘Packers spokesman says there should be’ no immediate price increase in meat products as a result of the settlement of an 11-week strike by 5,300 employ- Ss. * “This business is highly com- petitive and as yet the other companies are not subject to the same high wage increase we are,” he said. The strike by United Packing- house Workers in six cities won them a three-year package in- crease totalling 55. cents an hour and_fringe benefits with an estimated ~ value of between 13-15 cents, The wage increase will have an effect on prices, the spokes- ‘man said, but when. and how the = difficult to calculate. By KEN. SMITH Canadian Press Business Editor EDMONTON (CP) Cana- dian business will have to give high priority _to (planning _ its manpower needs if it “is achieve future. growth, John Deutsch, chairman of the Eco- nomic Council of Canada, = Tuesday...’ He told the 37th annual seats ing of the Canadian Chamber portant gaps in manpower plan- ning, even: among some of Can- ada’s largest firms. . “This is not surprising, per- haps, in view ofthe long period of slack which existed in the labor market in the late 1950s and the earlier .years of this decade,” he told the 800 dele- gates. . “4 “At. the sienenk time, how- ever, the pressure of a high level of demand of all kinds is revealing acute shortages of skilled labor. “This reflects, to an import- the operative date of medicare lone year to July 1, 1968. “As far as I'm concerned, the expressed— its—-policy. ca that is the peliey, Mr. Sharp said after the meeting. Reports from the closed meet- ing said that Mr. Sharp encoun- tered dismay about the medi- care delay and the fact that the IMPs weren't advised before- hand of the cabinet’s decision to scrap July 1, 1967, as the start- ing date. On the latter point, Ralph Cowan (L—York Humber) com- mented. briefly: ~— “We were promised consulta- tion until we were sick in the face.” DODGES QUESTIONS Prime Minister Pearson turned ‘aside questions by say- ing “it was a cau- cus. ” Mr. Sharp acknowledged the oe had heen lively on subject of medicare. ; of Commerce that there are im- | He was asked- whether the op- range 8 that it would-be changed to July 1, 1968... OPPOSITION EXPECTED | He~-said—Tuesday-—that—strong- opposition to this change was te be expected. It was ‘not surpris- ing that the Liberals were com cerned and disappointed. The step had been taken be cause in the public interest it was necessary to have financial stability. _ Postponement wae only desirable to combat infla tion and fising government “x penditures. Mr.. Sharp -made -it plain he ns-to enter the Commons dé- bate on the medicare bill and will speak strongly for procéed- ing with the program in Jtly, 41968. indicated thatthe issue. is far from dead after the a: teh to make It ani ap- pearance at the I party’s policy. conference Oct. 10-13, probably before ‘the Commons debate on the pests begins. ManpowerTraining Needs ore ROGER DeSERRES of Mon- treal Tuesday was elected pre- sident of the Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce at the + Chamber’s annual meeting in Edmonton. (CP Wirephote) ant degree, the cost of past ne- jglect im this vital area.” } h Manpower planning, he. said, will be as important te a bus- Stressed By Council Head iness’s success: pas shied: finan cial and investment riaete Between now and 1970 number of young persons @ ing the work force would’ don! the number retiring. But. the would be virtually no inere: in’ the~ critically important. 30 & 4 age group. ’ “This will intensify the ee great problem we already. have in developing adequate supplies of managerial skills and expéth ence to organize our inctéas- ingly complex affairs,” >. Dri. . Deutsch said. +) “Obviously we will have to ab tach a_ very high priority. % meeting our needs in this, : “This will have to include op- portunities to allow our bright , young people with the proper pons igs vand, oe i) quickly, the important ‘responsibilities they will have. te carry in the building of eae ture. — om “It will also mean that wet will have to devote a great 7 more attention to ae mas skills. of those already in agerial positions.” ,