II It's Good The Guardian Is For It For The Island who @unrdion “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEAT HER Mostly clear and extremer cool: north- west winds 15. Low-high 38 and 56. Thursday: sunny and cool. . VOL. LXXVIL N0. 221 Donald Dunkeid. 30. of Claremont. Ont.. (left) yester. day captured top honors in the Authorised as Second Clan Hall by Depart visitors' class at the opening of the Canadian plowing cham- pionships at Brudencll Park. WINNER OF VISITORS’ CLASS the Post office nut. Ottawa. and for payment of postage to out Here he adjusts the furrow settings of his plow before the competition. while his father.. Murray Dunkeld. watches. Commons Okays Bill Doubling llarm Improvement’Borrowing and other, .gapitalu. im—' said the government wu not do- nTTAWA-stam' ~~.~'lhe Coma . mons unamlmously approved Tuesday a government bill dou- bliii: the maximum amoun farmers can borrow_from banks l under the I'mprovement Loans Act The measure lifts the loan ceiling to 315.000 from $7.500 to OTTAWA (CP) The Cana- dian Labor Congress will char- fer its 10th provincial federation of labor at a‘ convention in Charlottetown Saturday. The Prince Edward Island Federation of Labor, subordi- naie provincial body 01' 1.200.000-member national labor ol'giinlzaition. will be responsible for co-ordinating the activities of CLC-affiliated local unions, particularly in the field of pro- Vincial legislation. CLC president Claude Jodoln said Tuesday in a statement announcing the formation of the 10th provincial federation that the CLC is the only trulyvna- fional labor centre which pro- Vicles Canadian workers. with- Lul regard to race. color or 9 to bury provements to farms. ‘1 The bill now 'goes'to the Sen-lpmblems. ie. ing enough to solve basic farm Douglas, New Democra- It was the first legislation ltic leader. said the basic prob- lpassed by the Commons since ilem facing farmers is declining g. 11, when federal-provincial lfarm changes were approved. 3 paying more and more for land, 1 Au i fiscal income. Farmers were .‘ Opposition spokesmen all wel- ‘ machinery and seed‘bui getting f'l‘f‘r Dlll‘t'hases 0f farm ma-l corned the higher loan limit, but . loss and less for their produrls. CLC Scheduled To Charter Provincial Federation Here {creed advisory services in re- : search. education and organiza— ay. "Faced with the rapid devel- opment of automation and tech- ing solidarity, practice segrega- tion on religious or nationalist grounds," Mr. .Iodoin said. "The workers cannot afford inter-union conflicts that are launched by regional bodies which. under the guise of a nar- row - minded nationalism. are pursuing selfish aims and which very often obtain for their members working conditions and wages that are far hem the Canadian average." Heward Gra fftey fPC— ifilrl‘ljirlne-MiSSisqum) said the new lleader Mao new on loans for farm lprovements alone would not iothcr measures to improve their , h icla’i'ms 0" GESINCIIVE “9W de"some rates would decline under Vices. tion geared to the needs of to-j d I i l l l GLADYS lOSES STEAM l Dora In Final Fling Brings Rain lo Nlld.‘ By THE CANADIAN PRESS Tropical storm Dora had a fi- n‘l "mil Tuead foundiana wit blgh winds ""1 Ilean rain . The storm moved out into the Atlantic Ocean late Tuesday liter a swing throu ii the Mar- "ml' proviizces nday. No or "Wm?!- deaths Ported. , The highest winds from he "Wm as it crossed the Atlan- “6 provinces were reported In tentrai Newfoundland. where 7"?“ reached Q miles an hour. “3" were no reports of dam- hShIns had several days warn- ms that the storm would reach 8"Anne arena off inc ,Maritimes. M 3“ vessels hailed for . km "in no “shit. trawler: 1'5"?“ the harbor at St “'0 8. Nfld. u" Worst damage was I “3" by flooding in a low-1y. [:3 subdivision new homes lrlmmm' were swept away when storm water. Nearly three inches of rain fell in a 12-hour period in Hal- ifax Monday. The storm began in the Carib- bean as a full-blown hurricane and caused millions of dollars of damage in Florida and Georgia ' MIAMI. Fla. (APl—Cold air bill) In the k turned away from the storm-bat- - tend shores of the southeastern United Stu“. i The winds of this year’s f clone and seven tropical storm were reduced to miles an hour from 00 by Gladys was barely of hurri- cane. force and the U3. weather bureau II a hell was in prospect. The weather bureau issued its last advisory on "iurricnne Ethel as it sped toward demise In the cold North Atlantic and de- clared W Dora deed. {loan applications. l l sewers were unable to handlel -—liittlng Now the ’ stop. the flow of farmers leav- ing the land in Eastern Can- ada. It must be followed lnl. SHOULD DO MORE Mr. the government do more to make the Agriculture Rehabili- areas and build vocational CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 16, 1964. Potato Outlook Said Good AUGUSTA. Me. (Am—Potato digging starts in earnest next Monday in Aroostook Count) and for the. first time in a dec- ‘ ade the farmers‘ annual gam- ble seems about to pay off. “The prospects for potatoes for agriculture as a whole-- haven't looked this good in nine or 10 years." agriculture Com- missioner E. L. Newdick said Tuesday. He said not only potatoes but also apples will find an eager market. Drought in other parts of the country has curla‘ ed crops of all kinds. Newdick said, and Maine‘s bumper sup- ply should bring a good price. E. E. Barker, manager of the Presque Isle slate employment office, was ' N.B., Tuesday recruiting potato harvesters. tKhrushchev was quoted Tues» im- ‘ 1 land rela cated Khrushchev did not men- tion t l Grafftey suggested that’ tation and Development Agency r He said 4,000 Canadians have been recruited so far toward a goal of 7,000. It takes an esti- mated 28,000 to 30.000 workers to harvest the potato crop and there aren't that many avail-‘ ‘ able in Maine. Khrushchev Reports New Weapon} MOSCOW (API Premier day as claiming the Soviet Un-i .ion has new weapons that could . annihilate life on earth and, warning China that all means} ' be to defend Soviet? é bombers. Members of a Japanese par-Q Iiamentary d e 1 e gation said 3 Khrushchev made the state- ments to them. The Japanese who met witfi Khrushchev in the remlin. quoted him as saying Soviet military men. scientists and en- gineers showed ' Monday "new means of destruction." Khrushchev said he was amazed to learn that the weap- ons could destroy all human life on e arth, the Japanese re- v said t-‘iat after mention- or The ting the weapons Khrushchev .sharply disputed Chinese bor- . d . . hinese ng of spread- ing warlike sentiments. Notes made ,by the Japanese ed y to reporters, inch-g er claims and accus the West in connection with e weapons. as he has in pasti Instead. he talked in a con- text that made China sound like jregulation and the probable enemy. ago also reported the premier! ,seemed greatly concerned, iii-[designed to let the railways sc'iools in these areas to retrain Emmi obsessed_ with the china workers no longer needed on ‘problem. The Soviet Union saidl the Ian Marcel Lessard (SGLac-Saint- Jeanl earn as little as 15 or I) cents or getting desperate. They were being exploited by loan sharks. He suggested that the govern- ment guarantee bank loans to cover farmers' purchases of supplies. such as feed grains. seeds and fertilizer Charles - Arthur . Gauthier fCreditiste—Robervall said the government should assist stable marketing of farm products. Loan legislation was ineffective because hank managers were reluctant to lend money to far- mers. RAPS DEPARTMENT He. criticized the agriculture department for hiring "tourists from the cities” to investigate These ama- teurs knew nothing about farm- ing and kept telling farmers to sell out and move to the city. Creditiste Leader Real Caou- ette said statistics show that ‘Quebec farmers do not get as many loans as farmers in other provinces. “Why do we refuse to grant loans to Quebec? Donlt thev meet their obligations?"f Yvon Dupuis. minister with- out portfolio. told Mr. Caouette e had a provincial loan board and many farmers rec loans from it rather than the federal board. Praise Heapod On Farmers OTTAWA ‘(CPI praise on the honesty of fann- ers. the Senate Tuesday night gsve' second reading to a bill amending the Farm Improve- ment Act to double the maxi- mum smount. to 815.000. that O .. n. farmers may borrow for capital 1 mprovemen . The bill will be examined by the Senate banking committee tod ny before being brought back to the Senate for third and final reading. i i \ Itwo ing more than s aid eastern farmers i miles of Soviet territory. i an hour of labor and are‘Khrushchev weeks ago China is claim-l 580.000 squarel 1 "Only madmen love war," i was reported as I saying Tuesday. “But if we ‘ have to fig'il. our motherland with all means. We means. we will defend ave numerous powerful H Edmundston, ‘. i l i l i t. ‘. l 5 FOLLOWING INhis father's footsteps, Carl Willis. 26, Char- , lottetown research officer at the Experimental Farm, plows his way to the Maritime plow~ Brudenell Park. His father. mg title during the opening Stanley Willis. is one of Can- ada's representatives at the day's matches of the Canad- . _ p 1964 world title meet in Aus- Ian plowmg championships at - No. MAMEMTESFHANIGE l Called By BEN WARD OTTAWA tCP) — No major changes in railway freight rates are expected under the revolu- tionary railway legislation pro- posed io Parliament Monday. if anything. informants say the sweeping program designed to free the railways of rigid let them com- lpcte as they see fit with trucks, nological cha n ge. Canadian lmnre effective. encourage they A visitor who Spoke at length planes, pipelines and other car- workers cannot permit them-,setting up of light and medium iwith Khrushchev several days‘rriers. selves to be isolated within 1.4- lindiistry in depressed rii r a1 bor bodies which. while pi'eacn-‘ In essence. the legislation ls drop money-losing branch lines and passenger services. stream- lining their operations on nor—1 mal business patterns. 0n freig'it rates. it proposes to scrap the old system of across-flie-board increases and make the rail carriers as flex- ible as possible in rate-setting. There would be only two lim- itations, All rates must "compensatory," meaning they “03,33” SEVEN CENTS Top Plowmen Competing FOCaadian l arl Willi Maritime The mantle of greatness mat a' Canadian plowing champion- ship entails, the Esso Silver Plow and a money prize of $50, is the goal of eighteen Canad- ,ian plowmen today at Brudenell land a young research scientist Jfrom Charlottetown, Carl Will‘s, ,PhD. stamped himself as one of the favorites against strong op- position, when he won the Mar- Jitime championship deciSivcly yesterday afternoon. ‘ Working as carefully as he would on a research chore in his plant pathology field the Charlottetown man ran into sevc icral unexpected difficulties but lfinished with 77”: points, tin: better than runner-up Roy Hoeg :Athol. Nova Scotia. Another Island man. F: ii w i ll iMills, Bay Fortune was third. ijusl one point behind. Winner of the visitors' match .— it comprised men from th 9 other provinces who will be. competing in the Canadian match today was Ontario’s Don Dunkeld. Clermont RR and hisgleam- male Doug Reid. Brampton, was second. T o m Hickman. Chilliwaick, BC. was third and Quebec‘s Ange-Aime Leduc. St. Ciel. Soulanges Loun— ty was fourth. WINS JUNIOR TITLE . Wilfred MacMillan, Pow..ui, won the P.E.I. Junior cham- pionship. A neighbour, Ian Smith was second. George Campbell. Primrose was third. Barry Wilson maintained n13 victory string when the Corn- wall 21-year-old farmer took the P.E.I. senior Utility class. The Queens County and Provincial Pt‘opoSals For Railway ‘Revolulionary' i imust not fall below actual in one area to attract more costs. and "captive" shippers—business but cannot because those who have no alternative the automatic adjustment of; other rates would cause losses_ in other areas. The legislation would remove this barrier. transportation—will bargain for rates within a range set by fed- teral authority. ‘ For t most part. present Such changes won't occur freight rates meet those pro- overnight. ‘iowever. The freight; visions. rate structure is a highly com-. , v ' plex affair containing hundreds‘ MOVE I'NLH‘ELY of thousands of individual rates. 1 Although they “'"l'ld hf‘ “‘99 It will take years before any 1'0 raise a any rates I“ significant revision occurs. 1 1competitivc centres, the l‘flll‘ ; 'ways aren‘t likely in do so be- KEEP GRAIN CONTROL ;cause it would probabh~ cost 1 The legislation retains federal ‘ ,them traffic. S‘iippcrs would rate control in the important‘L ‘switch to other types of car- = area of grain shipments. ‘ .riers. Following the recommenda-. . Some rates will drop. how- “0" 0f the MaCPI‘erson myaI :ever' when the r P g u 1 a f i o n commission on transportation, ‘against so-cailcd discrimination “'Im'h 23"" "‘9 government "‘91 blueprint for its new railway- legislation. the low grain ratesg set by Parliament would con-; ,t.iniie. ‘ iis lifted. This one forces the :railways to c ha n ge certain types of rate en masse rather than individually. , For Pump“? 8 ranwav may To offset these. however. ihe‘ iwant to reduce a certain i'ate'r‘t‘llwae‘r's won”, be “IV?” $22“ _._7- 3 000 a year in substdies. EPA OFFICIALS MEET WITH BOARD OF TRADE Representatives of Eastern Provincial Airlines met I a at evening with the Council of the Charlottetown Board of Tram, at the Gloriotutowa Hotel. Shown engaged in discussion, are from the left: Ivan lin- clair. secretary of the board of trade; William Harris. Gan- der, vice- president of Eastern Provtncial Airlines: W. R- T‘iei‘e is a new provision that the Crows Nest ‘ewry five years with a view to‘ possible adjustments. This rate was set in 1925, pegging freight ,charges at 1899 levels. British Vote On Oct. IS LONDON (CP) —- F. n din it imany months of uncertainty. ‘ Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug- las - Home announced TUCSORV the British general will be held Oct. 15. “They're off," says The ‘ iEvening Standard in a headline ‘ Ithat captures the air of sari -ing - gale suspense built up by Douglas - Home's long holdout. , The election date has beell generally predicted but antim J paiion of the announcement’ assumed drama by Sir Alec'si lflying visit to the Queen at her ;Scottish Balmoral Castle. elections INSIDE TODAY l l Births. deaths 3. l7 ' Classified 16. I7 ' Comics . .... .. .. 15 i Sport . , . . . .. N Finance. markets C Brennan, president of th e w”“‘"‘" - ---- -- board of trade Purpose of tho “Hum.” ‘ meeting was to discuss EPA gin!" °“”" c“, ‘ air transportation as it affects ' -* ' Prince Edward Island. (See story on page .‘H , ill senior Champion’s 74 points were one better than Art Jones. Pownal the runner-up Harold odfrey, Cornwall who was the runner~up for the provinciai crown at Dundas last Week, wm third with 72%. NOT SATISFIED Carl Willis. 27. was not satis- fied with his work yesterday. .7) though it took the eye of the W judges in his class "I hope I worked most of the kinks out in that one," be said before the judging decision was announcw ed Veteran observers watching the plowing yesterday would say little beyond they expect a grand bit of competition today. The stubble match starts at 8.30 ii‘ the morning and the sod coni- petition gets underway at 12.301 . ny one of a dozen compctr tors could emerge on top of the Canadian plowing world today, 20 PAGES Title Today WI Ch, h. land Islanders have taken to the : friendly. capable plowmen com- peting from the other seven pro~ vinces. But under the skin of ‘most Island followers was an unspoken hope one of their men would come through in the tough competition that is expected to ay. ONLY FATHER-SON TEAM Alex Vic-Kinney. president of the Canadian Plowing Council reaffirmed yesterday that Stan- ley Willis and his son Cari are the only father-son team In Ce.- nadian championship plowing history. A father-son, back to back victory in the big meet would be even more of a novelty. Stanley won te Canadian match last year by the wide ‘ margin of 20 points. Nobody else was even close to him. several plowing observers observed yes‘ terday to this paper. Clark Young. Unionvale, On- ;lario. who judged all of yester- ay‘s matches in conjunction with Chariottetown's Dave Pea- cock. recalls that Stanley Wil'ls' performance last year in the 1 Canadian match really s i nod out. His work was tops both in the stubble and sod part or the competition, Mr. Young observ~ ted. Carl is naturally trying hard to follow in his father's plow- 'ing footsteps. But the young Island man will have, to improve on his yester- day‘s performance if he is to challenge for the Silver Plow ‘trophy. Both Dunkeld who scor- ed it'l'r'z points and Reid scored 81 in the Visitors Class were well ahead of the Willis :toial of 77% In the Maritime lmatclt OPENED BY PREMIER Several thousand people wat- ched what David Gilchrist. Fre- dericton. NB. called the first ,Canadian plowing championship ‘meel east of Montreal. Premier Shaw opened the meet official ly after Lieutenant— a. Ibis early plowing days behind a team of horses, and comparv ed that experience with today's mechanized operation. Other speakers Mayor Bruce Yeo of nearby Montague. Agriculture \tlinis- .ter Andrew MacRae and Mr. McKinney who brought greetings t from the Canadian P l o w l n l 1 Council. included MacNeill, O'Imat‘y Heavy rain soaked the hold. overnight and delayed the WM (Continued on page 3 col. 0 Plowing Meet ls Scheduled For Ontario S The 1965 Canadian Champion- ship plowing meet will be held in Ontario and the 1966 meet in British Columbia. it was de cided at the annual meeting of the Canadian Plowing Council . ' . 355 "If? 0" held here this week. it was‘ -9XP°N gram W1“ he “Viewed learned yesterday from Alex lobe is McKinney. council president. The Ontario meet will be held on the Massey-Ferguson Faim at Milliken, and the British Co- imhia meet on the 2.000 acre Buckerfield farm near Chilli- wack, the heart of one of the province's most active compel- ilive plowing areas. The two men representing: C. here today, .lack Andrcwsl iie Next Year and Tom Hickman. are both from Chilliwack. . Mr. McKinney, who has been council president since if was iorganimd a decade ago. was again rc-clccted president. ‘ np. Hudek. Winnipeg. Manlv vice-president; F. A. Lashley. Toronto. Ontario is se- cretary and Clark Young. Un- ionvale, Ontario is treasurer. The British Columbia meet will likely be held early in April. noted .Vlr. McKinney who ob— ,served that this date has been accepted as suitable by plow- men right across the country Thcrin Ellis, O'Leary is I dir- ector from this province. QueensMPsDueloday 0 Attend PC Meeting CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIANI OTTAWA — Queen's “Pa I Hon. .1. Angus MacLean and“ Heath Mncqunrrie are flying to Prince Edward Island today to attend the annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Pro- gressive Conservative Associa- tion. Principal speaker at the meeting will be Opposition lead- er John G. Diefcnbaker. Macquarrie returned to Ottawa this past weekend from Fredericton and expressed en- thusiasm for the conference on ded om! Ho laid a exlrcmciv thoughtful papers ted by members of the acaitk mic. professional and business communities who participated “In the discussions. politician- and non-politicians looked care fully and seriously at the major issues facing Canada. The 9‘s— suits will be a great benefit to ,the Conservative party and w ‘fhc entire country, because our democratic a y s t e m requires broadly-based parties with al- ticulafe and sound policies for :the nation." Mr. Macqunrrie i said. ‘ He said it has been a happy cxperience to revisit the can» iCnnadinn goals which he nitr'rlpus of the University of New Brunswick as he had served ml ‘the faculty than from 1047 to Q. i were prescl- 194.