v II It's Good For The Island . 1 VOL. LXXVII. N0. 180 capsule that an ’-m pressive (fireotfiit on the Lun- ar surface. These es are the first the world has ever Yanks Hail‘Mo‘on Pictures After Six Years Of Failure By RALPH DIGHTON PASADENA. Calif. (AiPt 7- Ranger 7 returned the first close-up pictures Friday on the unknown surface of the moon. The feat. after 12 straight failures over six years. was hailed as a huge stride toward a lunar landing by American astronauts. Ranger's pictures. which were to be released late riday or Saturday, hopefully will offer answers to questions that have' puzzled man since antiquity. Of what stuff is the moon made? ls its surface jagged rocks or a blanket of dust? How level is the landscape? The climactic moment of the tiny space voyager's three-day flight came at 6:03 am. PDT (10:06 am. AST) Friday when Goldstone tracking station in. Californlafs M oi a v 9. Desert flashed word to the Jet Propul- sion Laboratory here that pic- ture transmission signals were beinc received. A great cheer went up in the auditorium where reporters and laboratory personnel were gathered. The 4,000 - man lab- which makes the Rangers had been severely crit- icised for failure on the first Shots Are. Historic PASADENA Calif. (AP) 0.5. scientists ported over a lita- toric set of pictures Fridly n the first close-ups of the moon relayed by Ranger 7 before it crashed Where astronauts may Jet Propulsion Moratory ex- parts'ffrst took a look it quick prints from Polaroid cameras to television circutts thatroeeived video signals from tit spacecraft just before 11. cr settled down to a ' Then t detailodaanalysia of :5 - milli- mstnjm ’ simultane- NIIV‘ was: that convert a aignalstovisible “Chl- mlnary tindtim and aoma of the pictures were to as released Friday nisllt 0' S“ “I. - Gnardian Is For It ' Authorised a‘i sea-a elm sun as naps eat. Ottawa. and for payment at HISTORIC MOON SHOTS seen. 'Ilhey indicate the sur- face in the impact area to be a smooth plain packed with hundreds: of small craters. Clustering of the craters. in- vis' Ie to earth telescopes, in- dicates they were caused by rocks thrown from the larger M six. had anticipated stern mea- sures if No. 7 flunked its mis- sion. Ranger's six television cam< eras returned perhaps as many as 4.000 priceless pictures. starting from 1,300 miles above the surface, before it smashed into the sea of clouds but a few miles from its precise target. PICTURES GOOD The jubilant Ranger project manager. Harris M. Schulu .er. said the pictures look exceptionally good. I think the public will be able to distin- guish quite a few details. "If the pictures are sharply contrasted —— with light and shadow —— we ought to be able to see something the size of a WEATHER Sunny with a few cloudy periods. Light wiradsé7 Low-high at Charlottetown 48 an . , umdiou “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" the Past Offlo- postage tan-fl crater of Copernicus 200 miles the Sea of Clouds.- where Ranger hit within 10 miles of its target. 'Dhe above shot was taken from an alti- . tude of three miles, 2.3 sec- onds before the Ranger cap- sule crashed. St , Fathers CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1964 Province For 14 PAGES een Headed Commiss "mug" SEVEN cams By JAMES NELSON O'I'I‘AWA (OP) — The Queen will deliver an address in the Q u e b e c Legislative Buildings Oct. 10 to mark the 100th anni- versary of the pre - Confeder- ation Quebec conference of the of Confederation, it was announced Friday. The first detailed itinerary for the visit by the Queen. and Prince Philip in October’s!” revealed that she will open the new Fathers of Confederation Memorial Buildings in Char- lottetown on the afternoon of Island Royal Visit Details Released Liberal Chief Criticizes Accumulated Debt Total the Liberal Prince Edward Island will beside the province. in the caselitely, under Commission government of Newfoundland the three-man w in five years. 10 years at the commission named included one most. unless there is an early man from Newfoundland, one. return by the Government ‘to from Canada and the third from_ proper administrative practiceshthe United Kingdom. The Com- Liberal Leader Alex Matheson mission governed the colony un- told the Guardian last night. i til it became a province of Ca- Oct. 3, unveiling a plaque com- spakesmna mem event. arne . “Premier Shaw has been com- plaining that the province is not being used fairly by the feder- al government. I don't want to say anything that will hurt out chances in bargaining with Ca- Details for her subsequentl visit to Ottaw were not announced. In addition to the address. the Queen will attend a military L ceremony .in Quebec markingl _ Mr. Matheson said this obser’ nada in 947i. ‘ d b t th Shaw d if - l 1 , ha a, u e a mnstra grinding oinntzgrsggyalm vatton has been .made to be by PRACTICALLY DOUBLE!) tion has been getting a much Regiment; which she is me‘ a a respected Clylluservant. and Te Liberal leader said that larger share of their revenue colonel-inchief. ) ’1 agree W'th h'm- Ethe liabilities of e provmce from Ottawa than we did." Mr. N p_EJ. t Recalling that a Commission have PraCIlcallY dOUbled Since Matheson observed. the Matheson government was defeated in 1959. An external audit showed the direct and in- direct debt to be 829,454,803 at lGovernment over control of Newfoundland's finances in lFebruary 1934 —— it was a crown l colony at the time -— Mr. Mathe- “In 1958 the last full year of Liberal administration here. we received slightly more than six million from Ottawa out of The Queen and Prince Phlllpl are to arrive at Summe id Tax Incentives l lAre Not HALIFAX {CPl—The Nova Scotia government sun mission to the Atlantic Develop- ment Board says federal tax incentives have not been effec. tive in attracting industry to the province. It recommends direct subsidies to reduce capital costs for new indutries. e submission dated‘ March 28 and made public Friday says the most effective indus- trial incentives are direct. Milk Price Is Increased 5’ - We harm harms“: insomnia. , p c” “1:: Que_ bufmembeg mddesc part Tins . l t go up one cen uuar starting Aug. the Milk Dealers‘ Association announced F 'd Montreal milk prices to 25 cents, per quart and prices elsewhere in the province to 24 cents, Is the result of a promise made tol Quebec farmers June 26. witenl' they marched on the Quebec legislature. I r1 a . n. . The increase_ whlch win-boist criticized the federal three-year l a...“ 0. page a. «if. it; me UNEST Ralph Brooks. 14 of Sussex. i a .50“ warned the same lhlng will September 16, 1959 when the total provincial budget of 31-1 . . 5 happen here unless there lg 3 Shaw government took over. The (eleven) million. In 1963 by com- lh'flw BI‘UDSWle Will be the luhange in the way the (loan. figures were , . as list- parison. the Shaw government youngest SWlmmer '01 {he tulal sllualloo is handled. ed in the public accounts of the received sislé million (fifteen horthumberland Strait swtm j ommission Government year ending March 31, 1903 and one-half» from Ottawa which oday. He stands five foot. lg it we” adopted' presumably. “and the could be up to $70 is considerably more than one- 10 Inches and Weighs 130 would mean that the 12.1.7.1 go.‘ million by the end of 1965 with half of its total budget of 8% pounds. Ralph is the only ‘vernmenl would cease to lune“ the new provincial building now ‘ million. We went behind $1.778.- E O :s total government expendi- tures in this area. ‘ his report . Prof. Wilson “tax holiday." He said a period 3 of exemption from corporation.l taxation "gives assistance1 during the critical initial period when costs are high and losses . aremore probable than prof- its." few metres, say the size of a (small cart." OTTAWA (0P) (‘ an ad a Pictures taken through earth's telescopes have been unable to. d i s t i n g u i s h lunar objects Heme“ than a quarter of a 1 smaller mile. say the size of a large navy aircraft carrier. President Johnson congratuP lated the laboratory for what. he called, a magnificent achieve- ment—"a basic step forward in our orderly program to assem- ble the scientific knowledge necessary for man's trip to the moon. Kenneth Gatland. vice - pres- ident of the British Interplan— etatry Society. said in London it was "a stupendous achievement closed the books Friday on her year ‘ in history for wheat production and exports. The wheat picture at a '3 plan Canada started the crop year last_Aug. 1. 1901. with about 386.000.000 bushels of wheat. Atop this came the record 1963 crop of about 723,000,000 bushels, bringing the total to 1,209,000.000 bushels. Exports hit. 590.000.000 bushels exceeding the previous record of 407.500.000 bushels set in 1928-29. Canadian domestic use was on the path toward placing the about 150.0009“) bushels. first human explorers on the moon." La Presse Strike MONTREAL (CPI—A Labor dispute that has closed down La Presse Montreal's largest newspaper neared the e its second month Friday with no firm indication when it will end. Ono glimmer of hope lay in the fact that the newspaper's management and Journalists are negotiating again. Claire Dutrisac president of the La Presse section of the Montreal Journalists‘ Syndicate said the atmosphere at the first talks in three weeks as im- proved. Sb said too that agreement in principle has been reached on the first two articles of a new labor con. act Further talks are scheduled for Aug. 0. The syndicate represents 170 reporters news commentators librarians photographers and newsroom clerks. The newspaper suspended pilolication June 4 when some soo composing room employees members d the International Typographlcai Union now) left Two Months Old their Jobs. The paper had a cir- culation of about 200.000. CONTRACTS SOUGHT The typographers journalists. sought new tracts with the management. The like the old agreements ended Dec. 31 1063. ‘ Joseph Blaqulera.pr‘esident or the Typographers' local laid although management and com- posing room employees hava not talked since June 22 t would not take much to melt a settlement. A spokesman for the Journal- ists' Syndicate affiliated With the Confederation of National Trade Unions says there is no fir-m'indication when 'the dis- pute might end. It might end in two weeks depending on attitude of management I: said. ' The journalists say the big is one as far as they a is to!) security. tycar starting Saturday: Left over for the new crop 469.- 000.000 bushels, only 17,000,000 bushels less than carry- over a year ago. Big factor in the record ex- port volume was the wheat sale to Russia. It took 198.000.000 bushels of wheat and the flout equivalent of another 31.000.000 bushels. This made up close to tilt per cent of Canada‘s total wheat and flour sales abroad for the year, ON SCHEDULE Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp In a statement Friday said all the .Russian shipments were mode on schedule and the nor- mal requirements of Canada's regular wheat customers "were supplied as, promised by the r Meanwhile. the transportation and grain ~ handling system managed to move feed grain to eastern fenders and wheat eastern flour mills without dia- ruption. said. Nine west coast elevators were filled and emptied 11 times during the year to load vessels‘with a record. SIMIL- Om bushels of wheat and othe grains. met: previous record v'v'ss monsoon bushels in 1901~ consider that certain proposals made by the management. would ieopardine reporters‘ an - Clearances through the win- ter ports 6 Balls: mil Saint John. NB" hit a peacetime him (I also)” w or w tai- was «am or. Canada Experiences Greatest Wheat Year. 9. a ,_ wants a parliamentary commit‘ the t examine operations a! the CBC to determine which officers of the corporation or- tdered this discrimination. . . - .‘ They registered strong I” w'ranmg mic” and unfit" objection to the Social Credit ‘ " ’Party not being invited to have grainfa spokesman at this year’s 1Couchiching summer confer- ence on parliamentary affatrs. c conference Is sponsored jointly by the CBC and the Canadian Institute of Publldt Affairs. [the wartime record of 71.700.- 3000 bushels set. in 1941-42. 1 . ,. e \ . . i E amateur entered. He will start . five minutes before the others 1viocu would be ut lo control tlgan ssdmillion," Mr. Matheson hind $1136.00!) last year. So the ' 1 f ‘ . ' o serve . . 1 gram, u, boo, new and expanu_l amateur status. 0 a commission. probably with, u .prob cm is not altogether one ing industrials similar to thei , ,year period Mr. Matheson said wa". Mr. Math on contends. lithe total debt of the province INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION mended by Prof. Thmas “’11- K 326.993.1352 at March 31. 1959.,ted his heavtesi fire on h . son in a report to the Atlantic ‘ $33,959,709 in 1960; 836.773.0513 to Prince Edward Island Industri‘ . . 3 at the end of March gunned several years ago to The Glasgow Universuy pro— H I N The figures are taken from develop industries in the . in Fredericton mesdaty. . e S o a n e vince. he sa . of $5 million by the Provincial The brief to the ADB asks log; The finances of this provinceILegislature to date and it. has . WASHINGTON 'Apl—A face-ghaving had a lengthy talk with‘_ per cent of the capital cost it 1‘ to . new manufacturing House Wednesday be- that e was being eliminated, and 33 1-8 per cent of the Pay- ‘ tween President Johnson and and why. as a possible Johnson roll cost of 'such industry d-ur- ' Attorney - General Robert F], running mate to the Nov. 3 U.S. ‘ . iney wasn't wanted for ‘ rom this central fact on.‘ ‘ v It says “such grant, will re. LDemocratic vice - presidentialgacéounts differ . ‘_ I _ . u . I , The"word"‘“FridayI"p‘eople' is‘tite’ chief—me ‘ 1 ' ight from friends of Kennedy. told the attorney - geneoal as! of the president say about his‘ inet and sub - cabinet level“l ‘ m any to have secondlwas accused in the Commons H A. Olson 11C —— Medicine place on the Democratic ticket Friday of practising a policy of Rat) and A. B, pailerson (sagv cabinet team intact. Socia Credit Party. ay of continuing debate on a bill to provide the government ' ' ' in August and Se tomber. l LONDON ICPl—Royal assent - "We are sick of If," Mr. Ol- :was given in the. House ‘ ' Mr. Olson and Mr. Patterson ~t.o the British North America; “a”! "‘9 SM 1 l 1'” Act enabling the Canadian Pa -l 'ament to ke scheme. ‘ The bill. along with a num-l Bv V. M. NAIR shortly before Parliament ad-‘government of India is taking1spavrks of public unrest. journed for the last time before‘lemergency steps to tackle the» Riots and looting of curred in some towns. An acute scarcity of at normal' lat least six Indian states, with lpockets of scarcity in many I The government has rushed Mr. Olson and Mr. Patterson stocks to these hard-hit areas took exception to a statement districts of such widely-separ- montagne that guest speaker. 'ated states as Maharashtra on at. the conference were not in the east. 'I‘Ie two Social Creditvme'm- l The states of Uttar Pradesh. hers quoted Reeves Haggan' of ‘are also facing food shortages. an“. speaker, were mt phone“ The 119’“ IWO months 3'" 00'1' on the basis of political parties. t ted . ‘erally “lean months" before the loontimmd on page 5_ ml. 5, j lnext harvest. 7 ---~ ~—» ~ W w-~-—-——- Community Development Min- Ban-The-Bomb ;liou and me affairs of the pro.l under construction to cost more 000 In our year. they went be. l as one means of protecting his lmosi of its members from out-f Looking back over a ven- ‘ of unfair treatment from Otta-' t e of assistance recom- YD lwas $24,714,664 in 1958. It was The Liberal chief concentra- Provinces Research Board. t I 1961 mid It was up in “3.174.115 1 al Corporation which or. 1962. ' . . prov fessors report was made public the public accounts of the pro-; incc~ It has been voted a total board to make grams up to 3503 cannot go on that way indefin-l (Continued on page 5. m1. 2) face confrontation at the‘ the attorney - general to explain industry ‘ White ing the first two years of opera- . Kennedy broke the word Ken-l election. d aamina' .. l he versi v'of the n . . And it agrees with what friendsl well as five others In the cab- that he thinks it inadvisable for‘ OTTAWA (CF) " The CBC.’ The accusalon came (1‘0 because he wants to keep their-ask discrimination against the Eraser Valleyl during the fifth IS OVGd with $696,000,000 to pay Its bills son said. “We've had enough.” Lords Friday-to an amendmentl I r . h ma laws concern-l _ ing the proposed pension; her of others. became lawt NEW OELl-ll (Reutersl—Thel‘ ing supplies Ignite the [the October general election.lworst food crisis in a decade,§warehouses have already oc- iprices has been reported from ’others. TAKE EXCEPTION " but the crisis continues in many Tuesday by State Secretary La- lthe west coast and West Bengal selected by the CBC. . Inalasmanv G‘Ujeral and Kerala the (‘BC as stating that confer- j lsidered critical. These are gcn- The). said M RN, ' ‘wsaNs or more C Parley Dwmdles fister S. K. Dey has warned the . government of the possibility of ' 'serious food riots if the crisis _ ‘ iis not tackled quickly and ef- TOR“) 'APl — The world 3 fedvely. ban - the - bomb conference has " The food crisis has been de- be?" "(NONI 10 a Chinese- domi natcd Communist meeting :vel 'n for several years. but ‘ om g by the walkout of delegates ‘the import of 231W),me tons of ' lwhoat from the United States {mm the Solid Union. and ,1“ the lasl seven years has other countries. including Cap. created a feeling of compla- 1' cency among authorities as well as meeting immediate needs. When food started vanishing from markets two months ago, little was done to check the da. The Soviet delegation aban- doned the 10th annual confer- ence against atomic and hydro- gen bombs Friday night after trend. peso faction succeeded In frees- To meet the crisis of the next "'1 "‘5’ B‘lfi‘lans "I" “I my few months. the US. now has 3'1"" l“ "5 leaders“?- The Russian move completed a series of schisms in Commit- nist - front organizations sinco the Chinese - Soviet ideolftgical idspute burst into the open tqo years ago. i agreed to rush emergency ship- ~ 1 ments of a further 4.000.000 tons . of wheat between now and Feb- ? mary. TIMPoR'rs STEPPED [IP Other imports of food grains are being stepped up. Indian production has stag~ ' hated in the last three years at INSIDE TODAY llabout 80,000,000 tons. At the . ,same time. the. country's pop- ‘ulation has increased by 30“ gfimxaths . . . . . , “"3, “000.000 to , Lt . “ ~~ ' .£?:.'I;'“:‘....C‘l.‘lfi riots: pu hi i c agitation now have. 1forced the government to taka‘ "litrein Leah Yeo of alar- Norummhen-md damn ,iiwlm ldrastic measures. Police have : ‘ u m m . that has drawn internationally int and confiscated hum, “Sum” known swimming stars. The .dreds of thousands of bags of race is from the W food grams trom dealers” ware- Iith h Borden. houses. i l l part of the flireedaiy Borden centennial ceidia'etim which mm May in the feature accommodation” ion Gov’t 24 hours during which the Chi-1 i I \ l t i l t