Hotel. ’ Nw If i's Good For The Island ' The Guardian Is For it VOL. LXXVII. NO. 268 ODS FAR OUTDATED “Rough Times Reported From Inshore Fishermen. {boats under 86 tons, it was re-ifuture for these people?" vealed. : ecuanicel’ teenitios’ ip the of at fishermen,”’ Mr. They must it j te gl inca i a ay alia Diy. “gore Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1965. hice aghast = > iz E 3 i cr ih bet R z Ji | i = ; ; z H 3 i z iv} Ra “We can't 2 [ iF fishermen with 150! » he | It started in 1929 and lasted come home day after | into the 1930s. Macquarrie Back 22#2=iS= * ® also decreasing. It ae ae At Hill Office Ee iercrt crease in production, this man CAPITAL BUREAU jwinning course when the nomin- ©*Plained er tanto cmemteee ( Kinds ant | Oot ot sects wittinteal wi ? '|Managers of : from This is the fifth annual confer- : Of P e meeting P | rli ed For Jan. 18 The opening Of the initial which produced nouncements. USED REAR ENTRANCE “Prime Minister Pearson - no. other available for questioning by _ Parliament ‘Monday @-. three-hour meeting left re- t it also has, a go0d | porters. The; angouncement on aide_to the prime -ministef. Previously, .Mr. Pearson: legislation from | Parliament was made by an was ring iknown to have been conside " . For Blackout By JACK GRAY TORONTO (CP)—An_ electri- e os ee aa are See em vn @ gr. and serving some- | 3 what the furetion of an outside Announce ‘tees “sen ’ shee mre a Onn set tl Be SERA Metro _lts failure, at a Queenston, \— SO5- ) to | sion of Camada’s newly -elected — etation.a few have | . Ta te. caused last Tuesday's make the! The Comimons seems likely to breakdown, affecting an , hoped the | be where it left off mated 30,000,000 in university's seismograph. continue bess a Cities, including New Y; a ee to professional schools of | The minority Liberal govers- ehiet, said Monday. Recount Mt. Stanfield said Foge at ie Nov. 8 one campaign to im- URG WITHDRA present: time nearly per Sede Meas boverts-ol- 06 | Likel of t¢ in Nova Scotia uni; |deal of left-over tario Frida 1S y come. from outside the |last sessios. And’ initial. indica- cage checdd. euuider withdraw. Princess Goes and-do not. bring any/tions are that the atmosphere of | ing from the international power pa GRANBY, om, Se casate assistance from the/|the tew omnes will be as ici i b i st ¥ Sr Cit ae denser of fr-| To Washington [inc aionday ‘pave the Libera | >roe—_—___“SS0L BB Se Joe ve candidate a 45-vote win but the | | ; US. tear, _ WASHINGTON (AP) — smn. |<ansaate 2 trol win bat tt) BA CCENIGERS DISAGREE He said Monday: ling graciously in the chill eve- | servative candidate has said he se : I am_ sure the people of On-|ning air, Britain's Princess | wij) seek a recount. ; tario share the relief I feel, that Margaret arrived with her hus-| Liberal Louis-Paul Neveu had ° ° S15 Tciorecy the ogi le Stndny ah tora foordas 25%, "op Muenaers eel! Cruise S ip ( ompiie ‘ : count and Conservative ¢ ? : week's. power failure” Visit here. date Paul Trepanier, mayor of p He said the investigations); A jet-Star plane placed t/Granby, was second with 9,475. gre have made it obvious ‘a search-|their disposal by the U:S. gov-| Only 15 votes behind was Creditiste Gilbert Rondeau with ing examination must be made ermment carried the royal cou- | no Arizona, where they |9,460- The only other Shefford ihad heen guests of Lewis Doug- | candidate, Lucien Pearson, re- has, former ambassador to Brit- | ceived 514 votes in the official lain and Mrs. Douglas. +eount: : _ A total of 394 votes were re- jected in the official count and Mr, Neveu was the lightly hit by these deduc . losing only one Liberal vote. Smith Asks For Loyalty SALISBURY Reuters)—| of all equipment as well as the organizations involved, if we are to ensure that there can be no repetition.” Big Freeze Sparks Blackout In Britain LONDON (AP) Freezing No other countriés cold gripping most of Europe |any big power blackouts, but ice | Breakway Prime Minister Jan blacked out parts of London and/and snow blocked roads of two other major British cities snarled traffic from the Atlantic Monday night. with brief elec- to Siberia and south to the Ri- tricity cuts forced by overload-|viera, In Britain, hundreds of ing demand. , ‘cars stalied with frozen radia- reported | loyalty’ of Rhodesia’s police and. armed forces. of doubt” the government of | Rhodesia, and called on Rhode- 5 the cold@st |sians to ignore ‘‘insindations”|) ,- first to lower eer ene Nov. 15 im 60 years, four below that there is tt thor-|__ A “honeymooning oe of London. Some down- 22t0. Seow fell on the Ialtam ity. — Ec (eounle, Ais Ses. Lends Giion paris S Lemted wat Riviera and even Madrid wae | nailer i on ad traffic lights failed at the | “Quay em. cold. Elsewhere: |, Poa ae and tra ights | The ‘on the INSIDE TODAY and presumed. lost. height of the homeward rush. lower-than-normal tem-| Yarmouth «Cruise Lines Inc.,, \proaes “4, 15 Classified Births "*eeeneaes The busines district of indus- Derby— seen e wwe e nee of the 7th Coast Guard district jwith the |Smith appealed in ‘a national |¢he vessel Saturday. | broadcast Monday night. forthe | < He repeated his claim that his of the crew are believed te regime is “without any shadow |beve taden the ship to the bot: 'tom. Another man died of burns jin hospital; Pe ec rn ae With Safety (AP)—A Us, said + MIAMI, Fila. Coast Guard investigator Monday the cruise ship Yar-} Capt: V. G. Niebergall, head mefehant marine safety divi- sion, disputed in almost every} trespect the complaints of sur- vivors that the Yarmouth Castle | © ppec to cope was poorly equi; ‘aust that swept nine passengers, death in their cabins, eee a 4 Miami .from Nassau, ships. Surviving passengers there -was no warning as fire raged through the ship, ltay unused @n the deck and lowered. HELD FIRE DRILL fire drill aboard the ship in Regulations the that the overhead sprinkler system |failed to operate, that fire hoses that jonly four of 14 lifeboats were 3 “Three weeks before the Yar- +|mouth Castle sailed we held a ac- ‘cordance with the international convention for safety of ships at sea,” Niebergall said- “International convention ~ |lows one-half hour to get life- al- |boats into the water. This boat |three weeks ago got its boats into the water in eight min- utes.” Niebergall said he haé testi- ‘mony that the fire hoses were \used until the water out.” Bat by that time, “all: the- water | satisfactorily. red said, in the world | wouldn't have done any good.” Eisenhower “We didn't have authority to (Continued on page 5 Col. 3) er, (left), deputy ‘mipister of esty-in-govern. fisheries for Nova Scotia: Hon. Minister of fisheries for P.E.I. ‘discussed the evening's program. ament a parliamentary opening before Christmas. But at that time most Liberal planners were hoping the election would give them a majority government. Standings in the 265-member Commons are: Liberal 131, Pro- gressive Conservative 97, New Democrat 21, Creditiste 9, So- cial Credit 5, Independent-Con- Servative 1, Independent 1. At dissolution, the Liberals had 137 seats. . “With relatively little change in the standings, there has been only a minor shift in personnel! And with the same on hand, there has been nothing to indicate increased harmony. TO CHALLENGE LIBERALS | In fact, immediately after the | election results were known Op- position Leader Diefenbaker he would challenge the Libs | ls in Parliament on the hon. | ment issue. | But the big battle in the new | Parliament could be over medi- cal care insurance. In order to fulfil his pledge of a national medical care plan by July 1, 1967, Mr. Pearson | must move fairly quickly to get the scheme started on its legis- lative process. But Mr. Diefen- baker, NDP Leader Douglas and Social Credit Leader Thompson have indicated they are far from satisfied with the Liberal pro- posals. Mr. Diefenbaker has said they were designed in a hurry with- out careful investigation of cost or need. Mr. Douglas has said the Liberals appear to be wav- ering on two points his party considers essential — complete coverage for everyone and ex- clusion of participation by pri vate insurance companies. Mr. Thompson wants a plan without a compulsory nature. COLLECTIVE BARGAINING Along with medical cate, Mr. Pearson has said that collective bargaining for civil servants ranks high in the list of priori- ties for the new session. Other proposals carried over (Continued on page 3 Col. 5) ‘Recovering FORT GORDON, Ga. (AP)— Former president Dwight D. Ei- senhower'’s physicians reported Monday they are ‘immensely impressed” with their heart pa- =— ae Pee wor NORE SEVEN CENTS '} "There's little doubt some Lid- 4a 2 ET PE OPA TD TNs ER EE EE Bat ct WEATHER Snow thig afternoon; winds increasing to southeasterly 15. agli s 20 and 35. Wednesday: showers, . 16 PAGES ember Suggested ture Post - s Guessing Game é Pe 3 ls Continued By KEN CLARK OTTAWA (CP)—The gussing game continued Monday on an expected cabinet shuffle with |) much of the speculation cen-|> d#red on the agriculture portfolio left vacant by the defeat of} Harry Hays in the Nov. 8 elee- | | tion % ® There was talk the Liberal government might go after H. A. Olson, the Social Credit member for Medicine Hat) to fill the post. . if However, Robert Thompson, Social Credi‘ leader, said no of- | ficial approaches had been made to the Alberta MP. iF The_ portfolio traditionally goes to a Prairie MP. The only Prairie Liberal left in the Com- mons after the election is Vet- erans Minister Roger Teillet. But his non-farm background and his urban riding of St. Bonl- , ; ait face in Manitoba make him un- | suitable for the post. H. A, (BUD) OLSON On the other hand, Mr. Olson jelination, he would better ff is a farmer and merchant, aud jinto a portfolio such as trade,: some informants say his views finance, transport or industry, on agriculture. and other mat- | ters présent no insurmountable WON’T GO TO QUEBEC : barrier to joining the Liberal Moreover the agriculture oe : Quebec ant eae wb would | province cae oa roger matter. #t has been the private pre- It.isunderstood basic Liberal \8etve of the West for so long. thinking would require that Mr. | Another “possibility “for” thw Olson switch parties to become |job is Saskatchewan Senator agriculture minister. A coalition |A. H. McDonald, former agri- . with Social Credit to get him |culture: minister and Liberal wend se 2 le eer wt jhas t ac | INTERESTED IN OLSON ja. Commons seat. Another poe ity is ‘Bruce Beer, farmer F a jerais are interested in getting | . Olsbn into the agriculture | post, whether they have ap- | proached him or not. asibili ’ (Continued on page 3 Col. 3) If. he did come over, some Liberal thought has been giv Wilson Gets to appointing Mr. Hays to the | Approval Senate from — he could | continue as minister without | ° prams On Sanctions He was vitally tied up with | @ number of government pro-| LONDON (Reuters)*— Parla grams before his electoral de-| ment early today apptoved leg feat in Calgary South. In_ the | isiation t ernment cabinet he could help Mr. Olson natin tame on shepherd some of his programs. |the breakaway Rhodesian gov: \ inging Mr. Olson into the |ernment. ‘al caucus would have the| Roth houses — the Commons fedeitona advantage of giving | and the Lords—acted speedily to the Liberals a bare parliamen- | pass the bill through its required tary majority of 133. They have |readings to enable Prime Min- the support of 132 Commons jister Harold Wilson's adminis- members now including a Que- |tration to take fiscal, economic bec independent. |and constitutional action against Sources say one. thing does | Prime Minister Ian Smith's re- eeem fairly ‘certain in a situa- | gime. - tion where just about every-| The bill was immediately thing is the reverse—Forestry | given royal assent and became Minister Maurice -Sauve, —- now: law. acting agriculture minister, ap-| The legislation met stiff op- pears unlikely to get the job. | position from the Conservative | Known to be personally am- | rightwing in the House of Lords, |bitious, it’s clear he hopes for led by. 72-year-old Lord Salis- ja senior cabinet portfolio. But | bury, champion of Rhodesia’s by training (economics) and in- ‘white settlers. Non-Op Rail Unions Ask Wage Increase MONTREAL (CP)—Some 53,-|maintained in future negotia- 000 non-operating railway work- |tions with the railways.” ers presented new.contract pro- | WILL RETAIN YARDSTICK |posals to Canada’s railways; He denied reports that the Monday alling for a general|general negotiating committee 55-cent hourly wage increase |would abandon the durable plus additional pay increases for | goods standard which was used | skilled and night shift workers. as a means of comparison be- | The non-ops’ joint négotiating |tween railwaymen’s salaries | committee; speaking for .mem- nd those of workers in other | bers of seven unions, asked for industries- |a 20-per-cent wage. in¢rease for The current contract expires |skilled workers to adjust what pon 31, and Mr. Smith said his lit called existing wage inequi-|8Toup is ready and willing ta lties and a 10-per-cent increase negotiate. : lfor regularly scheduled night Apart from pay increases. the | workers. ponte include a j : a = vacation improvements, plus Unlike former years, when all lthe inciision of St. Jean Bap- | 100,000 railway workers not ac-itiie Day in Quebec as a ninth | tually involved in running the paid statutory holiday. trains presented a united front | The atk alls Gall oa. the lim their contract demands, the |___"© Proposals a'so 1d tne < eutraitted tailways to bear the full cost of ars ec OR the employee benefit plan: the Be ree eee se adoption by management of a Separate from the joint nego- prescription drug and a dental tiating committee are seven care plan; and for the’ basic ee ee ee rere ‘life insurance of $2,500 for each jeome veneer ne ‘employee dring his workin Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- span to be continued after 7. way, Transport’ and “General |¢irement at no additional cost. |for, 20,0 ‘CLC) which speaks! The unions also seek accumu- for 20,000. : The CBRT submitted its de-|the rate of 1'2 days a month. mands Nov. 2 and the main In the event of forced reduction |item was a proposed 9%-cent | of staff, the unions ask that, hourly wage increase. ployees affected be given Richard C. Smith, recently consideration for appointed chief negotiator, said: |employment with the vo “Despite reeent reports, the with the employer paying durable goods standard will be moving costs. > ay - a! ~~ - % lating of sick leave with pay at .