¢ - Lee wey se - . by - " nae opr +r ampere ~ r If It's‘ Good For The Island WEATHER Cloudy with a few snowflurries; winds ° 25, to 45, becoming 20. The Guardian Is For It onion Thursday: sunny, cold. arian sree wee vers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965. : woow onjouse oa . - ision By Teamsters se Down B.C. Drivers Set To Back AG not MORE SEVEN CENTS 24 PAGES VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 275 LOSE WIDOW Touri ist Deleg yates sCriticize AND DINNER THF, RECEPTIONAL-dinner, table guests tochided: of the Prince Edward Island Board of Trade was held at the Charlottetown Hotel fact night. Three of the head: ilton, Ontario and last night's guest speaker; A:W. Gaudet, Charles W. Moffatt Appointed square miles of parkland is aa A second aim was “to assure oe et. ee Pee. S that the federal government and more specifically. president of the P.EI. Board | er fetttutty sate | NB. Hunter taxpayer gets the best possible Farmer, attorney-general and return from private use of pub- provincial treasurer, repre- lic land and from the operation en ne 2 378 }of-commercial_visitor- Is Missing After the policy was criticized » _ |by wegtern delegates, Mr. Mac- MINTO, N.B. (CP) — ROMP 'Donald said he knew how the and volunteers were searching |Christians felt about being ‘woods near here Tuesday for |throwg into a lion’s den. Bliss Sinnett, 35. of Newcastle; It was a basic assumption ‘Bridge, N.B., missing since he | that users want the parks main- pwent hunting alone Monday. ‘tained in their natural state and Three rifle shots were heard resented ‘‘the infiltration of fa- . im the area of . Ripples:” “ne ar cilities, services, activities and # here, Monier night ahd search amusements they have left be- , Tuesday, ROBMP said’ the 4 a . pabhyng. othe din al Ba. ieey is pont ielieved lost in a four-mile long when ‘national parks could be Charles W. Moffatt of Sack-) Ont., . was guest speaker last | tural and industrial centre. He |Swamp. considered as the only tourist ville, NJB., will succeed Eric said he thought the province Plans were being made to attraction here capable of being Kipping as secretary-manager of | He discussed the business of , should be planning for the in- |bring a helicopter from RCAF | publicized effectively: the Charlottetown Board- of | industrial development — ,the | dustrial growth which is sure |Search and Reseue at Halifax! tout 9,000,000 persons visited Trade, The announcement of the | direct benefits and the side ef- | to come and suggested making |énto the search. ithe parks in 1965. Of these, 10 appointment was made last | fects of a night at a dinner sponsored te | the Board of Trade at the Char- lottetown Hotel. Mr.. Moffatt’s Reginald Barton |per cent were campers and 89 and Ron Tyler, |per cent were » Park i V year cost about. $13 000,000 but visitor con- the. Canadian * plaining because the national | parks charge only 50 cents a night to camp. Private opera-' tors had to charge $1.50 to make | a = } Blizzard Conditions Reported In Prince Anvall-day ~blizzard~in™ Wes tt Islands"and” Borden” was normal: companies ducts they deem hot. Estimates of the resulting shutdown of B.C. industry as a , result of the teamsters’ stand | have run as high as 85 per cent. | Employers__in various indus- | tries and services said Tuesday | they fear the Teamsters’ action | much more than the 48 - hour | general work stoppage being or- ganized for Thursday and Fri- | day by the 110,000-member B. Cc. | Federation of Labor. The Teamsters, an independ- | ent union, have refused to join the strike because it would vio- | ‘dairies, Prince County yesterday.dumped| Eastern Provincial Airways can- the pony express and dozens of several inches of wet, sticky| celled an afternoon flight from | other snow on the area. Driving con-| Moncton,'the noon flight to Hali-| companies. industrial ditions were described as very fax and a morning flight to the| wiLL MAKE DECISIONS | Magdalen Islands. Other flights| ™ hazardous. By nightfall a number of cars in the ditch in the Alberton area and vehicles were reported. bog-' ging down on the main highway | in the Elmsdale area. Strong heavy drifting in places. were normal. range “at 11 last night, an esti- mated two to three inches of snow had fallen since it started easterly winds shifted) at about 2.30 in the afternoon. to eactheits in the evening with! Rainfall’was given as .28 inches. They promise to continue de- — Heber Pro- ovt Park Policy “f2="22 oS" cman | n ; By STUART LAKE jroom for expansion of services ices could he developed for theie | 2 * loud crashing noise. N OF ers the federal - provincial tourist! The policy was ’ by Mr. MacDonald said there ia the time, she went. from By DENNIS ORCHARD . conference administered a ver-| assistant deputy minister J. A. a limit to the number of visitors; oom toe room seeking its | y bal beating Tuesday to the fed- MacDonald of the | re- & park can accommodate with- opigin. As she neared the VANCOUVER (CP)—A wea-| eral government's national sources department. He said the out being depreciated through | living room a gentle tinkling PO" more feared than British - |parks policy. ’* | objectives are to retain qual- heavy use. sound attracted her atten | Colmibia’s threatened two-day Industry Minister Gurney |ity of we parks so “‘the people “It is in our best interests as tion, strike took shape Tuesday in Evans of Manitoba said the pol-'can go to themselves in park administrators to help pre- | Inside she found a pare |the hands of the 11,000-member icy prevents both Canadians and un natural sur- vent the saturation point from | tridge calmly. strutting Brotherhood of Teamsters. i visitors to Canada from more roundings at’ expense being reach@d, he said. among the fragments of Teamster drivers will support | enjoyment of the parks. to themselves, both as indivi. Geotge Fraser, director of} what had been a 30x%2-inoh |#" oil workers’ strike scheduled | Alberta delegates said a sur- dual park and as tax- travel for Prince Edward is-) window pane. to spread across the province at | vey showed that only a small payers.” land, said private campground | At her approach the bird | ™idnight tonight by refusing—_| certien of the province's. 8,000 ger owners in his province are com-| flew out the way it had come {for the duration of the oil strike B RETURN —to carry or use petroleum pro- and service and illegal pickets and to seek jremoval of the latter. : Employers hastily ae their positions following | livering milk and mail and will Teamster decision. At, the Charlottetown radi©|make their own decisions on | what are essential services so | long as the oil strike lasts. Teamster contracts allow, them to observe legal _icket | lines and to refuse to handie | “The two - day thing won't worry any operator,” said a |spokesman for the Canadian Restaurant . Association. ‘‘The | Teamsters’ action does. -<— appointment will be effective | centration im some areas was Last. night winds were north-| products they consider hot. Jan. 1. still growing faster than sere The IMT bus was delayed ar | 1.5 32 miles, gusting to 37-\" The Vancouver Sun reported Holi dc y : ~ riving at Al ears on the | earlier. in. the- storm ny were i ys The newly appointed secret- | 7 t highway at ElntSdale, No roose Tuesday strong speculation of a | ere em) | wan experienced coripiating the | Dorthedit $2, gusting La | possible truce in the dispute be- | ployed as secretary-manager ot | trip to Tignish. Tn New Brunswick Moncton | gan following the Teamsters’ ‘Announced the Maratime Motor Transport | quickly possible | Elsewhere in the province | reported nine inches of snow by | decision. tion Inc., an organization | with the essential services.” % sonwfall. amounts were much) Tuesday evening and Campbell-| The newspaper reported Tues: | OTTAWA (CP)—Federal civil representing the trucking indus-| . During the course of Mr. less. Some areas had rain—some-| ton had eight. Halifax and Saint | day a truce formula was expec- servants will have holidays Dec. try in the Atlantic Proviftes. | Grant's address on the essen- e Igian Queen O er times heavy—until almost night-| John escaped the storm. |ted to be outlined to spokesmen |27 and Jan. 3 because Christ- Mr. Moffatt is not new {© ties of an industrial develop- | when snow began falling. | {for oil companies and the Oil. mas and New Year's day fall on Board of Trade activity. He | ment program he stated: “To Snow plows were expected to| Storm Blamed |Ghemical and Atomic Workers’ Saturdays, the Civil Service - was secretary of the Sackville | relate a program of industrial lg operating in the west Prince | Union (CLC). Acceptance of the Commission announced Tues- Board of Trade for 16 consecu- | development to Charkottetown | area this morning. For One Death |e would result it, postpone- day. tive years and after a 0-year | and its environs is, I believe ies er sea ac Ferry service at both Wood | ne " (ment of the oil union’s plan te, The commission said the step lapse was again ee He He | a a project which can be best re- ‘extend its strike across the pro-|is in line with normal practice served two consecutive eolved.by your own businesemen | ki HALIFAX (CP) — At least vince. Such postponement could: of compensating for holidays president of the Sackville and. legislators... These— people BRUSSELS (AP) — Bel-igian Congo, was amed_after| Elisabeth remained in_Brus-_ Po ice. See ng |one person died as the result of | head off_the threat of a_general_| which fall_on-Saturdays or-Sun- of Trade and attended Board a] ‘know the local situation. the |#Um's Queen Mother Elisabeth, |her when it was founded in 1910. sels throughout the Second | la heavy snowfall across the | strike. days. Trade annual meetings for many | transportation system, the labor |“ who nursed the First World War Elisabeth married Albert in|World War—her son Leopold Skeleton ia Maritimes that slowed traffic | Ed Lawson, president of the years. | pool and the market area. To me |Wounded in the trenches and de- |1900 and he became king in III was then king—and helped |and disrupted air services Tues teamsters' joint council, says Mr. Moffatt was born in Syd the job is, as I suggesied, to |fied the Nazis in the Second |1909, upon the death of his un- | jcountless’ Belgians, articalery | CHICOUTIMI, Que. (CP)—Po- | 4ay night. his union is taking only ee INSIDE TODAY ney. N.S., and is the son of R.R. | undertake an analysis of the | World War, died Tuesday night. |cle, King Leopold II. \Jews, escape from the Nazis. ice Tuesday were scouring the Anthony Rector, 64, of New |measures to produce “‘a Moffatt a native of Mayfield, | needs, the attractions and the |She was 89 and had suffered a) In the Fitst World War | Bligaibeth and Albert had area near a village in this Lake {Salem, -N'S., was killed when ® | ing effect on both men wat tama eee 2, 23 Prince Edward Isiand. which exist here, heart attack Nov. 4. troops from her native Ger- lthree ehildren. Leopold, Charles St- John district for the skull ‘car ‘in which he was a passenger | may be a vehicle to drive them | Births ......--e0000-... 22 Mr. Kipping resigned from his | The next step is to plan a pro- |. Elisabeth was the .widow . of |many—she was. a Bavarian—jn- | a il He io who married of a skeleton that may be the left the road and struck a power | in the direction of settlement.” Tiddi ss cresscecescs 3 duties with the Board of Trade at sation ‘King Albert. mother of former — Belgium. it pies te face th remains of an underworld purge pole at Maccan about 10 miles | MUMMIMND Gis sivesacccee des: it gram designed to focus | Umberto, the last king of Italy. * : | WILL KEEP WORKING to take a position with the Is-' attention om these attractions.” |King Leopold ITI ahd grand-| She established surgical cen- | victim. south of Amberst..- -s | WELL, REEP WORKING =| Gert... onec.cacecse 9 land Development Company. | Mr. Grant added that he felt | ;mother of the reigning monarch, | tres near the front lines to treat | An accomplished linguist, she | The rest of the skeleton was | RC said the accident was | Drivers would keep working, wWonens |... 6 GUEST BPEAKER the causeway should focus a ‘King Baudouin. Belgian wounded faster and re- Started studying Russian in her to be sent to Quebec City, 10 \caused{by bad driving condi- | | until their trucks ran out of | Hinases, meckets 10 Kenneth A Grant industrial tremendous amount of attention | 4 communique from the royal |peatedly’ visited the front. (80s. mites to the south. ._[tons. {¥ nn or until rc ie ee eeereerer 4 commissioner from Hamilton, on P.E.1. as a — agricul. | Palace said: GF y at kaa were ¢X-| Summerside .......... 3 “The king and the royal fam- hausted, he said. | Kings, Queens, City S ily have the deep sorrow to in- Teamsters observe all picket Prince Counly oe form the country that Her Royal lines. leaving it up to employ- oe | Majesty, the Queen, Elisabeth, ers to distinguish between egal jdied Nov. 23, 1965, 9:35 p.m., 22-Year-Old Co- id Sets Fire To Herself said she did it “because she |1$ not too effective for chemical at the Stuyvenberg Palace.” The royal court also gave out hs _last medical bulletin. It | | ie having overcome in a| emarkable way a first heart FOR COURAGE Treasure Hunt Pit Bottom Nears _Los Angeles petroleum geologist attack Her Royal Majesty lisabeth h tonight, WEST CHESTER, Pa. (AP)— closer, I saw it was a girl and + ag a a oie teal A 22-year-old co-ed poured gaso- threw my coat on her.” . | particular seriousness, H-- **>#. _ OAK ISLAND, N.S. (OP)— mechanical.” Similar setbacks line over her clothing and set Two -other men also tried t esty died within a few minutes.” Only 28 feet of earth separates in recent weeks have slowed the herself afire Tuesday on the beat out the flames with their The court announced it will go Robert R. Dunfield from a search for the gold and jewels campus of West Chester state (coats, but = fire kept blazing ‘into mourning for one month, treasure trove or a costly disap- that legend says were buried on college: up. King Albert, her husband, was, pointment. the Isle of Oaks by the Enclish The girl, Patricia Conway, a| ‘Finally, a man came up with | killed “" a fall while mountain Mechanical troubles Tuesday Pitate Capt Kidd and other . Junior, from Phoenixville, Pa., |8 type of fire extinguisher that climbing in 1934. ~ stalled efforts of the 39-year-old oe toe The of underground wealth brought death to Robert loved God." ifires—and played it on her.” KNOWN to uncover the 170-year mystery ; |McKenty said, “and with that, Elisabeth was known for her | : ; tnna’e Resta. a former Hamilton Her conition was revorted | ty < Op Mey ‘aes 5 seas steelworker. his son and two land our coats and jackets, we ‘finally got the flames out.” A Roman Catholic »riest and ‘her parents were with her at | critical, with second -and third | decree burns over most. of her. body ‘courage. her independence and love of the arts and of and was known jokingly her jtravel, as The Red Queen for showing throw off Nova Scotia's south shore, where pirates are. said to have buried their loot two cen- turies ago. workers in August when they en- tered a gas-filled pit on the is land. Dunfiele bought the treas- She told /hospital officials her ithe hospital. She was adminis- sympathy toward Russia. She ; as ure-seeking rights from Mrs. reasons for the act were per- pone last rites. visited both Russia and _ Red ae sama yelp eae a Restall less. than two weeks sonal and denied that they had can and a packet of China. Just before her 96th cue ts ee e deoth or after the tragedy “anvthing to do with the world | or Viet Nam situation" Dr. Bernice Bernatz dean of | women. said Miss Conway was in “cood standinc academically, | and a well - liked, attractive \co girl" Jack Shank. a roofer. appar- entiv was the first to see her ablaze. He wa’ working on the roof of a four-storey dormitory | salcnians were found near the , ‘girl on a rain-drenched park- ‘ing lot near the centre of the | campus, which is about 25 miles | iwest of Philadelphia in Chester unty. Only a handful of students jand professors were on the herself afire about 3:30 p.m. ‘campus when Miss Conway set | The college has about 4.500 | birthday she travelled to Puerto | Rico and the United States to | jattend musical festivals- A violinist herself. she was |friend of cellist Pablo Casas, | who lives in self-imposed exile |from Spain in Puerto Rico. The \two played chamber music to- gether privately. Elisabethville, capital of Ka- tanga province in the old Bel- 152 feet, only three feet shy of ‘his first objective and a’ scant 28 feet from the level at which the says he will either be made ‘a rich man or “call it quits.” ' Dunfield, who read about the island and its legendary pirate ‘treasure as a youth in Denver, iColo., denied a report that two days of rain had caused a cavein at the excavation ste. MAY END MYSTERY He has been digginc for the treasure for more than two months and speculation is that the Californian will end the mys- tery and the numerous attempts to recover the Toot once and for all “We're in the original pit, there's no question about that.” he said Tuesday. ‘We're fincing and called to the ground th~' a |students. 2 e fire had ane He oe he be Ni ‘ EXCAVATION HOLDING Seis Pia see arti- could not tell what was burning cota « ° ar | d “The hole is in beautiful con- rhe ; at that distance c [s an ative dition,” he said. ‘The walls are ata ‘tak spiective_le _——- BURNED FIERCHLY , ONLY 27 : =. holding just as we expected.” H. says that when the digeer David E. McKenty at SHOPPING | ¢ Dies In Que. The report heard on the main- Teaches 180 fee beneath re ant prolesior or ‘Enzi in rap te i land said earth had slid into the cay teg soil if there is no san the scene. He said Mie fire was | * DAYS TILL | ST a us aa ge ‘ca Sh a an > of beg oy he i hrs burning fiercely. | service today for . ~ search. ‘is cost- Tet i soe SGrvoe Joo, fee CORRECTIONS COMMITTEE VISITS PROVINCE tv the ht fra eanse Goth bot S28 a when the fire started,” to mer pro; engineer Cana- f a ,000 so far. reporters. ‘I was sitting in a Gian Industries Lid. He died Members of the Canadian Edward Island. Members of bi pines dt willie and bec, who is chairman of the me worth more than $50,000,- Dunfield said he is hopetu! of far nearby with a friend when! after a long illness. Commitiee on Corrections, set he committee are to visit po- labor is shown on the extreme committee; J.R. Lenmieux, re- io reaching the “area of real im -I heard two girls yell out. At / PELL, lice, welfare, court and mem- left in this photo. Three mem- tired deputy commissioner of Dunfield said his crew had terest soon. He has sold ex- SD he eracnte from Acadia Uni | w? Oy the Minister of Justice a nope, me a gee e to study the broad field of cor- | rection, are victting Prince ' | t | : \ ROMP and W.T. McCrath, ex- ecutive secretary of Canadian Correctrons Assoctation. had trouble with a water pump and the digging machine itself, ¢ but the problems were ‘‘strictly | bers of the committee 2-2: — (fram the left)—Jdustice Roger Ouimet, superior court of Que- first I thought it was rubbish | burning. Then IT saw some feet | sticking out and thought i