If It's Good For The“ island The Guardian Is For It Cline commotion “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Mostly cloudy, a few showers: Hg winds. Low-high 58 and 70. Thursd cloudy. ht ay; Wu. N0. 198 Authorised-smell- Halli! hardwa- Wmmmnmufldmho‘ no CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 19, 1964. mug" SEVEN CENTS FALLS FROM TRACTOR Killed In A 19-year-old American youth According to the RCMP. Rob- ert Mitchell of Milford, necticut was standing on the rear portion of a farm tractor travelling on Route 19, Argyle Shore. He slipped, lost his foot- visiting relatives on the Islandl Con-7 EPhail. at Argyle Shore. Visitor From Conn. Accident was tentatively assumed to be‘ r injuries to the head. He reportedly had been stay- ing with his uncle. Fred Mac-; His ? cousin, Lewis Gary MacPhail.. was driving the tractor at the time of the accident. d Mrs. Leslie Mitch .. i ,- i in THURSDAY 20 PAGES“ Flag Filibuster ls Charged As Issue Remains Stalled SharpAsks PCs To End Debate OTTAWA iCPi—Trade Minis-’ ter Sharp said Tuesday there no longer is any doubt the Con- servative opposition is slaginglconfirmed Commons filibuSler in ine flag debate. He called on Oppo- and that is by Parliament." he told the Com- mons. Conservative ta c l. l c “Yes,” said Michael Start tpf"-~0nlarioi. Mr. Sharp said Mr. Starr had that the Conserva- tive party has no policy on too flag. a decision of staging a clear to , l » sition Leader Diet‘enbaker to Until the. sub-amendment. was was killed in a highway ac- enfy°WZEel§lsa§gsege3:31:32:l labandon this “negative pole." introduced. there were some cideht yesterday. land' 1e“ for the United sales" | “There is only one way Can “innocents abroad" who didnt {ads will have. a national flag. ‘realize the Conservatives were filibuster_ It now was s . were obviously designed to pre- QDE‘STm” ASKED vent such parliamentary action. Mr. Sharp the first cabinet Paul Martineau «PC ‘ Pon- tiac - Temiscaminguel asked if 7 Reactions ranging from da- light to anxiety to delicious fright are evident on the faces of these excited young» v ing and fell onto the road ben- Mr. In ell i - - . .. h r . . . . ' .mmlster to speak m the na .t e gmernment would conSlder 29th a wagon hem: pulled bc-e 41 Earl fittest. Milford. hav'o tdebate since prime Minis; invoking closure to cut off de- hlnd the tractor. been notlflfll 0‘ the" 30“ Ex-slave Will Adams will be ipearson introduced the res... bate and reach a vote. There we. no direct evidence} death Apparently they plflllll- 114 years old Thudsday. but jlutiOh June 15, said he was "NO." said Mr. Shanp." . . I that the wagon, wheels had.Ed l“ 193V“ for P-E-It 1m“ he plans to really celebrate [shocked by the recurring theme ‘challenge the opposition to al- passed over m and It was. mediatelyz when he reaches the age of lo{ Conservative speakers that: (Continued on page 3 col. 5i believed fat the boy hit mi. M!”- M"°“°“.’" “‘9 Mme" l20. H's relatives say he lthe proposed maple rear nagrflmr '~~--—--»~- head when he fell to the road. .’ Macpha‘l 0‘ Argyle prob:ny Kill. ftoo, they was meant to appease Quebec. C R b I r .n ee lm romclmln ‘ ~ v .' . He was pronounced dead nnl Coroner Dr. L: E. Prowse of the tree: around his Atmor: linrlzguefincg “as?ng ‘apapfigiae; e e s arrival by Dr. Putnam after; Charlottetown indicated last Ala: home, (CP Wirephoto) lthe three red maple leaves as a. . h v. s ~ ROLLER COAST ER THRI-lLS YOU'NGSTERS sters aboard a miniature. but spine-tingling. roller coast- er. Thrill-seekers of all ages lined up for similar rides all over the Bill Lynch midway GREECE, TURKEY wARNEn Canada Bars Sabre Jets From Cyprus Operations By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAW \ lCPl — External Affairs Minister Martin said Tuesdav C a n a d has told Greece and Turkey their Cana- dian - built Sabre jet fighters must not be used in any Cyprus operations. He said Canada has supplied Greece and Turkey with 107 Sabres each under NATO’s mil- itary assistance program on the condition that the planes he used to strengthen the alli~ ancc's capacity to deter or re- sist a:grcssion_ "Tie implications of this con- t'llllOll in the present circum- stances are being brought again to the attention of the govern- ments involved." Mr. Martin said in reply to it Commons question by T. C. Douglas. New Democratic Party leader. ‘ Prime Minister Pearson said ln reply to Opposition Leader Diefcnbaker Canada proposed a special meeting of NATO for~ "very delicate and dangerous" Cyprus situation. ut the m - jority of NATO members felt such a meeting shouldn't 'be held at this particular moment. Mr. Dlefenbaker said the de- teriorating Cyprus situation and Greek and Turkish withdrawal of some of their military forces from NATO command are "full of menace to the continuing ln- iegrity“ of O. REGRET EXPRESSED Mr. Martin said the govern- 'me.nt regrets Greece and Tur- remove forces from NATO's de- 5' a Defence Minister Hellyer con- firmed. in a reply to Le cer ('PC—Trois-Rivieres). still are RCAF members sta- tioned in Turkey to assist the Turkish air force in Sabre oper- ations. He said RCAF officers were [stationed in both Greece lTurkey to facilitate the supply 3 fl- ey Tiave found it necessary in. yesterday. as Old Home Week celebrations moved into high gear. The roller coaster one of three new additions to midway rides this year. - I fice in Greece had. been closed some time ago but the one in Turkey was kept open for liai- son with both the Greek and Turkish air forces. There were an RCAF‘ squad- ron leader. two sergeants and two Canadian civilian aircraft technicians in Turkey. The of- ficer had been instructed to cease visits to the Greek and Turkish air forces "pending further developments." Mr. Hellyer said the tours of being rushed to Prince Edward Island Hospital. Cause of death Blockade In Cyprus To Be Eased NICOSlA (AP) -— President Makarios of Cyprus has agreed to ease the blockade of food. fuel an medicine throttling surrounded Turkish - Cypriot towns. the United Nations an- nounced Tuesday night, While this appeared to re- move some of the pressure from one point of friction be- tween the Greek - Cypriot and Turkish - Cypriot communities. the Turkish - Cypriots received the news with some scepticism. T‘iere are elements that "could easily be abused." a Turkish- ypriot spokesman sai . And hardly had the Greek- Cypriot president and the UN command reached the agree- ment than the government of Cyprus announced another de- cision certain to keep tempers boiling between Atlantic Aili- ance allies Greece and Turkey. which have taken sides in the duty of all five men will expire they will not be replaced unless the Cyprus situation is stabil- ized. WASN'T REPLACED One RCAF officer who had flan ministers to discuss the of Sabre spare parts. The of- male by Clow Holstein Winning B. B. Jones. Bunbury took the senior and grand male championships in the Holstein ring yesterday at the provin- cial exhibition with his Rosafe Prince. The reserve ribbons went to Colby C. Lewis and Son, Freetown with their Llynvenith Nikita Pontiac, a bull that was reserve senior champion every show he entered last year which included Summer. MdP. Charlottetown. Truro Halifax. The junior male junior female champions were shown by Cyril Jones. owns . reserve Brothers. Frac- nd pious nam Show 5 Split town and the reserve female by Glorice Cormier and Sons, Richmond RR 2. The Cormier win was pop- ular among the breeders. as the enthusiastic young brothers are making their first try at provincial honors. The milking classes in the Holstein class will not be plac- ed until today so there are no senior and grand female cham- Judging results: LE Junior Calf —— l. Clow Broth- rs. Freetown; a. Oswald J. (Continued on page 2. col. 3) Yolk. Exhibitor A leads In Angus Cattle Ring "Villvi MacDonald. vol-ii .imooro in Angus oi, the rim "’0" the mitot- clampionsilps Atlantic Winter ron last . “mull-classes atthopro- vase mnetltcla ev- vinciai exhibition ye y topped too of With the Iaiiioi'~ and grand themandtook ' ell-moi ' both in. - for female satin-b. Bil Yor est took Q ribbons. mmmwmmm it won lilo nines aim of Pro- serve used tomato ribbons Erna that Mina tqr Monte with his Keats's On. a mature ribbons.wllteb_ alias-m. llle fourlt gem. 3. Ah: mm. Bonnier- Wmhytflgm . .stdnproducodm-prlm with “mentor mmmmmmlm at lultfour' _ fodndatlon ‘ wwm'llleGIIIthl-U and rim * UN Secretary-General U Thant. just returned to Canada from Turkey had not been replaced. Mr. Hellyer and Mr. Martin in the next few months and that. communal strife. . hens. Cyprus Foreign .Minister Spyrns Kyprlanou. said fie will go to Moscow to negoti- ate a Soviet offer of arms aid. Both the United States and Brit- ain have told the Soviet Union to keep its hands off Cyprus and do nothing- to inflame the situation. CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA -— The federal gov- crossmg of Northumber l a n d l seerce. Attempts here Tuesday to se- cure a statement on the matter met with a blank wall. Solicitor General J. Watson MacNaught. who returned to Ottawa' following attendance It a one-day Halifax conference on retarded children, declinai to comment on the story pub- lished Tuesday. “To comment would. in ef- fect. be to reveal the contents of the report. This would. course. be improper." i r. MacNaught told the 0t t a w a Bureau of the Guardian. t was revealed late last week that it is apparently the intention of the government to regard the preliminary report of the Northumberland Consul- tants as a working paper and not to make it public, at least. for the time being. Enquiries of both the depart- ments of transport and public works also failed to turn up an statement confirming or deny repeated all military assistance to Greece and Turkey under the NATO mutual aid program was. suspended when crisis arose. ’ Mr. Martin said in reply to! Mr. Douglas t'ie government doesn't know whether any of the Turkish Sabres which at« tacked Cyprus 10 days ago were Canadian-built. - If it were confirmed that they were. Canada would raise the matter at once in the NATO counc Mr. the Cyprus ; i ll. Martin said in reply to Mr. Balcer that he intends to impress on Britain the Impor- tance of Britain maintaining the strength of its contingent in the United Nations force In Cyprus. The minister also said in re- ply in Wallace Nesbltt l rdl he sure no nation l Six R-onge Fires ing that the consultants have. recommended saving $40 mil- lion on a combined causeway- Roge in Nevada ELKO, Nev. (APi—Much of northeastern Nevada was de- clared a disaster area by Gov- ernor Grant Sawyer Tuesday as s‘x major range fires burned uncontrolled. Sawyer. in Washington, Dc... appealed to the White House to lend all possible aid in foul Nevada counties. already under war-like mobilization in efforts to halt the waves of fire that. burned 275,000 acres. Portions of the fires were contained. Whether fire lineal held depended largely on winds and humidity. the struc- . bridge bv ng traffic only. . limlti lture to vehicular The transport depart- ment said the matter is in the hands of public works and they would not enter the picture until a final decision has to be ma e on the ferry service and island transportation g e n e r a l l y. Spokesmen for public works de- clined to say anything beyond the fact that the report has been received and is being studied by their officials. A check with a Canadian Na- tional Railways representative in Ottawa was equally faultless. The spokesman said that a n y statement w o u id normally contributing troops to the UN force would thdraw them without advance c o n sultation other countries in- volved and without Mlllhnrlfv of 1 p =- 9. Ho mess Racing Pioneer Dies DEDFORD, Que. (Cpl—Jenn- Henri Bombardier. 447. a pioneer in harness racing to the East- era townships. died in hospital Monday in St. Johns. Que. lombaodier. “101le in this about. 40 miles south of Montreal. was the father of Lu- cien inbardisr. director of op oration: It Bide Brunch race track. Montreal. INSIDE TonAir I ‘..............-.:'.......l. Woman‘s mm":on m m... I I 'come from their Moncton office t :but that in any event. the rail- lway would simply ernment is keeping mum about 1 whatever services the govern suggestions that the proposed 1; ment decided they should. Strait will not involve railway ‘ Ottawa ls Mum Over Causeway provide ‘ Pearson Queried On 2 ByelectionsJ Canada's official emblem? Did the Royal Canadian Legion ap-. pease Quebec by adopting a‘. maple leaf badge” ' appease anybody. Kill Experts LEOPOLD VILLE iAPia ~ lCongo rebels in Kivu rovmco “Let us forget about trying to a p nd Watusi warriors hacked us all two French United Nations ex- O’l‘TAWA (CP) -- Reid Scott iwork'together toward a flag perts with machetes and tin- ished them with a burst of sub- tNDP ~ Toronto Danfortll)l asked Prime Minister Pearson. Tuesday when the government' plans to call byelections to filll vacancies ' Waterloo South. l He noted in the Commonsi. that when two Montreal seatsi [ became v a c a n t last winter ‘through appointments given to‘ f i Theatre Figure Dies At Age 76 MONTREAL (OP) —- Fred Barry. 76. for many years a leading figure in French-Cana- dian theatre. died Monday after a long illness. His career spanned more than years. He began as a school amateur at the age of 10 and went into the profession while in his teens. A native of Mont- real he retired about 10 years ago because of ill health. sitting Liberal MPs. the vacaii cies were filled in 44 days. Westmorland. a New Bruns wick seat held by the late S. H. Rideout. now has been vacant 88 days and Waterloo South, an Ontario seat held by the late Gordon Chaplin, has been va- cant 52 days. Mr. Rideout was a Liberal, Mr. Chaplin a Con- servativa. Mr. Scott asked how the gov- ernment explained the delays in calling the byelections. “That would require quite a long statement." Mr. Pearson os- plied lcebreaker QUEBEC (CP) — The ice- breaker Ernest Lapointe. in a brief ceremony Tuesday. be- came the Confederation mem- orial ship Queen Victoria. Its departure from here Aug. 29 for Charlottetown will mark that made a century ago by representatives of Upper and Lower Canada, the Fathers of Confederation. Jean-Pierre Houle of the fed- eral centennial commlssion told sel a press conference the trans- fo ice-breaker best meets the requirements of vessel that will recall realistically the one that actually took the Fathers to Charlottetown in A. bowsprlt, some fancy de- signs on the prow. and plenty of fine rigging have been added ‘0 ., r Coniederation Ship Mrs? A, . Becomes the l72-foot vessel to give it that authentic 19th century air. The departure ceremony will begin at the old Hotel St. Louis that is all Canadian." he added. DANGER SEEN sugges machine-gun s ting appeasenient.f m weshmofland and flu Conservative party was in help you and not for anything fire. a survivor aid Tuesday. "Gentlemen. we are here to naer of alienating. "not only .else." one Frenchman cried as Quebec but millions of ’Enallsh- the crowd hurled itself upon the speaking persons. What he missed iii Conserva- o with machetes. Slain Monday on a mission to tive speeches was the spirit of aid the Watusi. tall, fierce war- tolerance and conciliation. “Are they prepared to see their party torn asunder, dis- lintegra-ted? Is the party going to sort of wither away to ll commlsswn regional party'of reaction?" i Tuesday was the 10th day of l four other party leaders to dis-3 cuss the flag deadlock but no: decisions were announced after? the hour - long meeting. They scheduled another session for Thursday. Mr. Sharp devoted most of his speech to an appeal to the Conservatives for an end to the prolonged debate and a vote on the flag resolution. ADMIRED DIEF The trade minister said he used to have a "reluctant ad- miration" for Mr. Diefenbaiker as the man who led the Con- servatives from the political wilderness in 1957 with a vision for Canada. "Have they aban- doned the prospect of a United Canada?" he asked. Was the flag sub-amendment. with the suggested form of I Grissom and John 1'101‘5 who are refugees from neighboring Rwanda. were Francois Preziosi, representa- tive in Bukavu of the UN high ' ‘ for refugees. and Jean Plicque. head of the Bit- kavu brand-.1 office of the 1n- the flag debate, which show, no‘ ternational Labor Organization. iaigns of ebbing. Earlier in the] ' Iday Mr. Pearson met with the. lightning Hits Titan |l Rocket CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (AP) Lightning. possibly a series of man Gemini orbital flight quick-striking flashes, damaged a Titan II rocket and some ground systems on the Gemini launch complex. apparently wiping out any chance of a two- thic It was the first recorded in- lcident of lightning damaging a rocket a Cape Kenn y. An in« vestigation was launched to de- termine what caused the bulk to hit t'ie normally lightning- proof pad. Officials said Tuesday the mishap probably rules out until ea y 1965 the three-orbit flight planned for astronauts Virgil I. oiing. proposed plebiscite. I subslim- . It had been scheduled. for De« tion for policy? lcembcr. here, where the group actually ‘met before leaving A group of well-known Canadian actors will re-enact the s . Mr. Houle said Prime Minis ter Pearson and perhaps somo‘ provincial premiers will be Int Charlottetown to greet the yes. i The Queen Victoria, its crew in period costume like its pas sengers. will also visit Saint John. N.B.. and St. John's. Nild. Mr. Houle said authorities in these ports and in Frederictonl co—operated with the commis- sion in organizing the voyage The 1.179-ton ice-breaker was built in 1941 at nearby Lauzoz. . mancels during the Honors Are Divided In Jersey Show Ring Turner Glydon. Kemington and - George MacMillan, Cornwall showed the senior and grand championship bull in the Jersey class at the Provincial Exhibi- tion yesterday and veteran judge Oliver Evans. who is in- ternationally known. praised the sire that repeated his grand championship performance of a year ago. The reserve senior and re- serve grand sire was shown by J.S. Vickerson. North River. who had some strong perfor- day. ,field showed the junior Campbell Mackay. R-othesay. NB the only mainland rd showing here, also had strong performances in several class. to .”' Albert J. Marsh- male Elmer A. Myers. Boswell. champion. l. Hazelbrook the reserve. The junior female champion also was from the herd of Mr. Myers with the MaeKay herd producing the reserve. The milking classes and the (Continued on page 3. col. 2) lHunter River Shiuman IWins Hereford Shields Gordon Matheson. Hunter Ri- ! scrvc senior and reserve grain! per won the premier breedcr's and premier exhibitor's shields in the Hereford classes at the provincial exhibition yesterday with a solid performance that included the senior and grand championships in male and fe- male and the junior female championship and reserve. Everett Holmes and Son. Kingston were runners up for female. Robert MacLaiirin and Son, Belmont. the men who showed the grand champion Easter steer here last spring. brought a promising young bull to the fair tha; went junior champion Iand reserve grand. ' both shields with a sprprising; performance from a herd had never threatened seriously the top nlnncrs in the past The Holmes lier bad the na- John MacKinnon, St. Mm! Road showed the reserve senior male. champion. Judging results: that 3 MALES .lilnior calf -- 1. Gordon MI- lheson. Hunter River (Continued on em I. sol. I