If it's Good For The island ‘ 9 The Guardian is For It “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEAT HER Cloudv with a few sunny periods; south. west winds 15. Low-high 35 and 45. Authorized as Second l‘lnu “all n Deplrtmcnt. Otta'a. and for plymcm the Put Office of postage in cash VOL. LXXVII. NO. 264 NOT CHARLOTTE’I‘OWN, CANADA MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1964. MORE Tm SEVEN CENTS 16 mass 3 New Ferry For P.E.l. Will Cost $17 Million; Causeway Before ‘72? \ Hon. J. Watson MacNauglit handle 90 cars on the automobile l tia route "This vessel. costing lollcltor general of Canada_ [01d deck. that's 30 more than the $11.747.000. is expectc to be In Abagweit now carries. 24 6." rail lservice in 196 way cars versus the Abegwelt’a l 19 and the new ship will carry 1.000 passengers. members of the Maritime Mo~ tor Transport Association that the new Department of Trans- port ferry for Prince Ed I ' - l . . “"“d ’5 :CAUSEWAY BEFORE '72 land serVice Will cost apprul-' The new Kihip will be able mately 317.000.000. go on the Newfoundland “a . completion of its conversion and .Mr. MacNaught was speaking When the new causeway be- 1 mm “at Sprmg WI" Operate be' at the closing banquet of the as lw'een P'E'l' and “‘9 mainland l tween North S‘deel’, and Port sociation‘s annual convention ‘ ‘5 Completed. "Which every ROOdl A.“ Basques >n WI“ 8’1th ser- here on Saturday evening When Islander expects m be behre 4 Vice as a carrier of containeriz- ‘ Mr. MacNaught felt the ac- .quistion by the DOT of the ter- ry. “New Grand Haven" Who important to this region's trans to I portation picture. This ferry. O 1‘ President Johnson he said. “the department \\’ill b 1972." said P.E.l.‘s represenra 9d {riCight' refrig‘traled and gen" closing the tender call within . “V9 i" “‘9 Fweral cabin'al- l 02?] cafrgo‘tand m1.“ 8150!? cal?" .. l laeocaesimen, . v couple of weeks. He went on; He also pointed out to said. p P | and said that. “it is hoped to trucking officials the DOT's shin have this ship ready to serve the building branch had recently let island traffic in 1967. [a contract for a new truck. au ldclV SPACE AGE By HAROLD MORRISON. LONDON fCP‘l—A huge in- ‘ ternational borrowing of per- haps up to . cou- pled with belt-tightening on im- ports by special higiier duties. DOT is undertaking its first‘ major venture up the road from ' thehAi; Age to the Space age MIAMI, Fla. (AP.l — Pan- wit te construction at Mill. ' . « l , Village. N.S. of a ground statio. :emomum make Om‘ m . “1: that win he used in relaying’ asement of a downtown Miami communications from earth 5;, ‘hotel Sunday night as President tellites. iJohnson arrived for a cam- Thls station is to be part of m l paign-season reception. international system that ls ex-l Hundreds of teen-agers. al-. pected to give world wide covet lmost all of them Johnson par- 9 age with a string of satellites'tisans. engulfed the president lTh S ringing the earth by 1967 Oiland threatened to mob him as! ant ees 8. , The solicitor general said that . tomobile and passenger plans call for the new ferry to l for the North Sydney — Argeu Nine Homeless Following Fire SOURIS -- A widow and heriren. #- it BRIG. DEXTRAZE SGT. LESSARD l lAwards Announced ' Soldiers COL. MAYER. l ranging from two in mi family of eight children arelyears of a c. Mrs. Cba-isson’s 196 he walked down a ramp mm: ° homeless at Rollo Bay West. sixirrusband. a Einrmer and trucker.l FOllOWing the dinner Mr, the garage at the Dupont Plaza miles west of here. after anldied in the past two years. i acNa'ug'hi Was questioned (“FEMEL ‘ The shoving and pushing be- came so intense police officers got extremely rough ing to clear the are early evening desti'oyedl their twoctorey frame home and‘r contents on the St. Peter's Highway. Sunday. Also destroy- when construction will begin on the all-weather highway be tween Albany and Miscouche. He said he had had some discus- Mrs. Cbaisson and family were epor visiting relat- lives in the Rollo Bay area, when tthe fire broke out. lBi in attempt- ‘ a. 9 Problem l l l l I l UNITED NATIONS (AP) - ‘ e cause . - :gsw'inlfjuicgeal‘by ham- N0 Onelwas undetermined. The ze.i sums that morning, but maxi Several reporters. traveling . United Nations Secretary_Gen_‘ LONDON (Reuters) ~ The; ty with the United Nations Homdesg .aw M“ F 1 'ttwhichdspreag to the nearby barn.i “decided to issue no commun. i With .iohnson were aulcd I era] U Want said Sundav mp Queen has approved awards tolih 1e. Congo last. January. ohm ' d h '~ " ht‘mliid was antic? rii ' h :' tam" “1W” ib°d“-V ""0 “‘9 We“ and “Whore to solve the UN's present three c nadian soidi s in re ‘ mig- "- A- Dex'raze 0‘ Mm" 58011 an Cl letg c i - .htgi a am y, on t on rcurn “(spotters and spectators “x. . financial crisis mum Emmi ’ a ‘ en c"‘real. who is credited with sav- changed blows and shoves with : mankind to the same type Sm“ ‘inE more ihim 30 missionaries police. firm that er ‘tt i ‘ - One report. which could notlwam p m] ed two word‘. .hc confirmed. Said JOhnSN‘ at Thanl spoke during an on i :0 he 901M W35 Pith“ Strm‘k 30‘ (servant-e in the general assem l lognition of gallant service while Body Of Fat Man Is Unidentified It was not believed i 0 any livestoc in the bags“ was‘OIYmplc Team fire was out of controltGiven welc‘o'.“e when discovered. and no person»1 been created a P. A. Mayer of Ottawa. ' ‘ . . . l l whether there was insurance. imam got a “my awekomelfalced _ mule uncharactenstl. l membe“ “kin 10mm fat man 1-9 m .prlests and nuns at great per- . _ t ‘ . K g whether they I s on a co ‘ . V ~ (commued 0" page 5 C0" " l‘home” at the airport Sundav. lcally~as secret service agentsl scheduled Nov. 10 general a-- steel slab in the morgue here. lmgaeegfigé Ill/$893139“ “aide , . V .l - s - . l d With the €10le reading 5-15 l and mm“! hUSUEd mm from me sembly Opening Should be post Dozens have seen him but nonel Dextraze‘s citation mentions l r ' am, the shriek of bagpipes garage ""0 the hOlel- poned to give the United Na , - “ ‘ pierced the early-morning dark- Hundreds 0f 99-0919 “Md be' tions and Russia time to try to knel‘ his name IS SUperh Ieadersmp and con. al effects were saved from the . ’ Cliaisson home. 1 VANCOUVER fCP)—lt waslmdentaiiy or slugger! on thelhly hail of the l9th anniversar. and Si“- ": A~ 1" DPS-“aid 0‘ ere was no immediate esti- an uninspiring hour of thell‘lead by 3 Pnhtlcal Placard- lot the UN charter. , quell“ C'ty' mm. are bolhi mate of the loss. nor knowledge morning. but Canada's Olympicl The president looked grim-l Earlier_ he sent GASPFZ. Que. (Li‘iNA for. ‘CFOdlied With saVlng several appear to be among emergency steps decided by Britain's new Labor government to save the pound from speculative attack.‘ The program. to be unveiled by the fledgling Wilson regime today, may also include offers‘ of special tax rebates to en- courage rcporters to sell more abroad. as well as appeals to Britain's workers man-‘ agers to hold the line on prices. 1 profits and wages. i Amid reports that Britain has been steadily losing gold from its vital reserves during the last few months. the Wilson ad-‘ ministration in its first work of office put the finishing touches. on a temporary scheme to= bridge a widening trade gap be- tween imports and exports. London's Sunday newspapers generally agreed there may be no change in the. official bank interest rate. but tiiat the axe ling er currency exchange 'crisis two years ago. i iwages and profits. l He will complete the day with Indications are the heavier I duties may be imposed on man- ufactured goods rather than on lraw materials and to this ex- ltent much of Canada's eXports to explain his actions and de- l to Britain may escape from heavier taxation. But Canadian Belt-Tightening Order Due Today For British Huge Borrowing " Being Planned ' be among those who may be I‘ . PLAN LOAN ' Determined to support the pound at its current exchange rate. the Wilson government in reported negotiating to borrow up to 51.000.000.000 from the in» ternational Monetary Fund. and even seek loans and credit from other sources to guarantee the pound against devaluation. This also was a step Canada took during her 1962 crisis. The concern in international quar- ters is that those countries which impose import curbs usu- ally are slow in removinl them. rime Minister Harold Wilson has frequently talked of gradually replacing more im- 3‘ C .4 ports with greater home pro- duction. The Wilson'pian will be (ill- closed in a loint press confer- ence today held by Economics Minister George Brown. No man in the gov James Callaghan. the. exchequer. Wilson then will call to lo Downing Street. his official res- emment. and chancellor of land Students from death. has will fall on imports through a idence. representatives of tho anlmander. of‘ series of surcharges similar fol powerful the Order of the. British Empire. l those imposed by Canada din-.2 grass .tives of Britain's industries in Union Con- and. representa- an attempt. to persuade them to accept restraints on prices. a national television broadcast tcisions to e. British 0 1e. Undoubtedly. he will use the oc~ Fair lpresident. r. no results. Quebec." he said in an address the Liberal Association in 7 DETROIT (APP—Tile United MOSCOW (APl—Mikbail Sits-.Rawdon. 40 miles north of MONTREAL tCPl ~— Agree-l . _ Auto Workers voted Sunday'to icv. the man who delivered the Montreal. ment has been reached banning; call' off its national strike indictment of Nikita Khrush- Mr. Amman" described me strikes on the site of the 1967: a m against General Motors Corp. Chev- was reported sunday years of Progressive Conserva- Montreal world's fair from now: Bl" Whemer GM CQUld resume a u t 0 production immediately was left unsettled. AW announced a ma- jority of its 360.000 members in night to be seriously ill. He has been in hospital be- cause of kidney trouble and a recurrence of tuberculosis. says tive government as a time o.‘ until the exhibition ends, it wasl frustrations and humiliation: disclosed Saturday 0 The agreement. yet to he‘ y In 9 - P signed. was reached after six} 0 l for our French-Canadian peo- lc." able. The reports said that. after r role in top- as Soviet the Confederation of National lvotes to stay out until Trade Unions and the Montreal Labor Council CLC. As a result. no strikes. work young people. we can at least explain it." he said. "Certain reactionary ele- ments of the Tory party. not Canadian National Railways was forced to cancel trains. al- ter routes and change timeta- bles on mainline services dur- gineers. firemen and some leaders against any rash heha brakemen booked off jobs. cit- vior at a meeting in Capreol. lng illness and other reasons. nt A CNR spakesman said boom the national contract. The disruption followed week lario and Wainwright. Alta.. as .l have not reached accord are division points for a change or tor 23 assembly plants and 71y“ transmission division willow run. which a u f o m a ti c missions for all GM cars. cllned the key post of party tint secretary because of his health. It but been apparent for some time that Suslov was not in m'a k good health. Liberal Backbenchers Said] Behind Opposition Victory . |lcagucs they wouldn't support a] Meanwhile. the Liberal MP: OTTAWA (CP) - What was .‘ bill which lacked both the eight i who wanted eight holidays as billed as a great victory for the ‘iholidays and the national St a: . well as the minimum still opposition parties in adding a- . an-hour minimum. were dissatisfied. They were eighth statutory holiday thileOULn COMPROMISE aware that Democrat Week to the government‘s laoori Back went Mr. MacEachen u. Stanley K n ow 1 es (Winnipeg code was partly engineered by ihis ministerial colleagues. Mm North Central. long. an advo- younger Liberal MPs. inform iconsidorabie discussion. lhglcate of an eight-holiday provl. ants say. .majnrity went for a comp”, sion.’ probably would make a The code as introduced in to a misp bid the Commons to raise Commons listed seven holldaysl The :m.,.rnmn, would put up the number of statutory holl- ing employees. At. the same. time. the fair agrees that if wages in other parts of the Montreal district are. increased. similar increases will be automatically paid Expo employees. lion. still have the cynicism, the temerity and the lmbecility to retard the adoption of a truly and uniquely Canadian flag." A text of Mr. Arsenault's re- the tario and the Western Prar- gency measures were under way to keep traffic moving A‘unlon spokesman said there was no strike and there was ll intention of violating the work '3. crews. The effect roughly as dramatic to double the mileage runs of at nearby the crews, who are paid on the supplies (Continued on page 3 Col. 4) cs. Supervisory personnel took over some jobs to keep freight and passenger trains moving r s was released to press before delivery. "600d Ffiday- New Y9" 3- i a united front on a bill provid-rda’ys- Victoria Day. Dominion Day. M $1.25 and so...“ Stuntman: DiLEMtMA' d “be Ibor Day. Thanksgiving and holidays Priva e y. an i m ' source's say. in some cases cot- ' government support- ers made. up their minds not to vote against. the. eighth holi- day. But they couldn't easily vote against the government and especially against Mr. Mao ‘ Eachen who has strong ties Iwitb the younger Liberals. . The upshot was that enough . Liberals stayed out of the Com- lmons a e crucial momenti Christm n a. An opposition1 That‘s the way the legislation 'mndment ' dded Remem' I came into the Commons when! bronco Dav. 'Mr. MarEachcn was required "5 chain-Hy Dre-WM?“ l": to support the government‘s pol “bloat. the legislation c00- snmn. if he “Sh-l in make It, .lained provision: for a $1 Zb-Ali- mm. display of cabinet my; hot" minimum wage for the “my M. lh, its...» more than 500.000 workers at‘ fccted by the legislation. plus eillitt statutory holidays. Despite a stiff battle in dc ____________.. INSIDE TODAY fence of these provisions ov ‘ u r ' v rthfl. d"th - - ~ - - - -' " that Mr. Knowles amendment Labor Minister MacEachen a m it is . - ' Classified . . . . . . . . .. [mserlmg an eighth statutory hilarity of the cabinet wants“ i3 - of to EW RS FOR A title eighth holiday drf-opped anl ~ .... m. ” ironing passed by a v c o N D T m mum wage o esn triar. ‘Womm-a . . . . . . . . . .. 6 I The labor code including tbei This happy Quintet includel up its 14th annual two-do ' . _ : V . . . y P.E.i. Vice-president m "mm :m m “mm” "‘ ; Editoriall ......... A. icxtra holiday. null has one or new officers of the Maritime convention. The)! are: new Minion out “their? T's 0' Pm " m, At poinot. a tronp of m“ Sign. cm i ll“ h""‘“°.‘..i"..""l oi; i: Motor Tran-9M Association in review. left. Nfld.. Vice- ” m- Mie- n. ' M. II: noun-ti m Ml MP. “2pm” milile Co. ' E3320?“ senator: still couldl my we" elected s'wrd" ' "mm "a". s" "on"; #‘J‘flgaficmlqv Oentnvillr :0...“ i . ~ cy mined Mr. . ac- ' " ' t - hm Mud. . when the association wound Arthur Mord. Cornwall ‘ ' .Incmd for the organ- MI W tell hie Clblflel (30‘. M torpedo he “a y l ' "'3" “W m W .. U GM plants ap roved a new gowugflftmfti{:;esw:serfih if we cannfli always “GUS? months of talks between Exp . three-year natiori’al contract. cm co r the anger of some 0f Quebec" "mews “"d representatwe‘ "(1 By THE CANADIAN PRESS whcn scores of loc0m0tlve en- contract. Crews were warned bv However' some local unions trans- he 15 - member Commons flag committee has voted for a idesign of a single red maple 1leaf on white. with red vertical jborders, an informant said Sun- lday. ’ I The source .said the vote was taken Thursday after the com- :mittee had eliminated all but ;three designs in its secret ses- Sion. Although fiirt'ler committee 1 they meetings are scheduled for this ream at ' the T plant “’“rk'ng ‘ week this choice. may be. the de- agrcements which supplement ‘sign recommended to the ram— ‘ mons as Canada's national flag. 11““: “J1: 29:;‘igurggetmgaggs' $33539?“ ghg’dgfim‘l"? “i: 2291:3390; itgrfifl‘l‘cgeoiasggz ing the “(962(8de its operating lng off is “an obvious stihte"- end changes in operations to mgfhgygsrgghzarga'og‘gg "any However. the fact more moot- . i t - I ‘ crews roese c an esi f ‘ ‘ ' ' ‘ . ‘ '. .‘ ~ central committee. SUSIOV de‘ threshold of a bloody revolu- out by labor unions represent work aghedules in north:er 0.: oggiaggign atgdcuarézl'eld raging! bypass Nakma m northern 0“ lagfeemenls- Anion: 28 Which ""15 are planned k’aws "pp" fit the possibility for further nego- tiations to aim at unanimity. Deadline for reporting to the .Commons is Thursday. when the six week time limit con‘ 1 tained in the committee's tel-ms n s the lane landed from hind barricades outside the b0- - ‘5 hOdy “’85 pullPd from the 1m“ , u _ officials are watching the situa- l casion to. blame the previous l T213032“ use athlete. “epped “31.4%,”, of this,“ waving ban. l nggefiitegxgrdfifsme :Ver:W i Gulf 'of 'St. Lawrence Aug. 3 in l thyazer:afi::‘ate;istm: during“ tion with anxiety. fearing that lIConservatlve government for or to the lam”. ‘ h tners support.“ Republlcanl A o“ t h .” lthe fishing nets of Albert Lan- lent-15mm dan er" and raisesisom Canadian exporters Will Britain: trade troubles. . . . . l“. .. . -- -~ x 'When the pipers-Were fin- l 3317‘? 'GDldwaler-and chanting quest; ignegezelegagfiomnah; glols' 0" a sandy bead! known Lhis courage agnd composgre asl I Q b ‘ lshed. a small-sized .orchestra ' "W9. W3!" 333%" a majority of members a.” e as Grand'Greve' l‘an inspiration to the personneli n let loose for two hours to eu-l Wa'lf‘hanls 0‘ "We “’3‘” neglect t6 cansent {n mam-Tl He was a heavy "13": “W” serving under him and also to! tertain athletes waiting for a ’JOhnson we.” heard '3‘ rCpl-Y p0“ . lleel'm and abnu‘ 20" Found-‘- the missionaries. ‘ RAWDON. Que. tCPl —— Pro- piane connection East. l the Presidenl' durmg “‘5 ‘ He “’35 “hm” 40~ "9 “’"1‘9 only Lessard. whose rescues were vincial Secretary Bona Arsen Among the several hundred days SWlnS Into southeast Flor hT 9 U'S' has called f" a 8 Pair 0f unmarked Dam5 and made under hostile fire from I y auit said Sunday night the Pro early risers out to greet the Maggot. generally a cordial re- s.°“’d°‘Y“ °“ Whether .the SwimOCCBSins hearing the inscrlP- arrows. spears and guns. was 4. . .- ' gressive Conservative pa rt y team were Jack Davis. Liberal CEIDilon in his iravfils that began i we! U'“°“ Shoum “'59 “5 fien' tlon “Broadway N 03. 72024 cited as “ shining examplel ' I ~ and its leader John Diefenba_ Mp for Coast _ 081,113,"), and With an automobile ride from i an“ assembly V0“? for “MT”: i M-4-12." land an inspiration to all mem‘ MIKHAIL SUSLOV key-I are chiefly to blame 0, Mayor Bill Ram. of Vancou. Fort Lauderdale to Boca Raton. mam 0 3’30, dues for Ul“ His hair was medium brownlbcrs of the force.’ " I . the current unrest in Quebec ver. ‘ J file-Dorm; at lghe scene 15:"! glia‘he'ifielem'gaft‘ The Comm and and a partial dental plate filiedl‘ “Five years of a Diefenbaker ° "so" "me was 9 he” ‘ ' the a left b two issill l regime in Ottawa started the. . pushed or siugged by a police Such a ShOWdPWn might l‘e-i frontglpu er iniimrs m g Vote End V l r . . . . - trend toward the irreversible S‘h‘lkes Banned officer who was trying to clear;sult in a SOViet withdrawal _' Pp I, ‘ ‘ , l . BY MICHAEL G‘LLA‘ 2° “few”? 9“".“5' . situation we no... witness m a way through the mob for thel from the. UN. some delegate; Police Inqumes have yielded :To GM Sinke. OTTAWA tCP) -— A majority unguimagurggflfid {0:116:59 “at! 1 ea ‘ " ” sign bill that at the and four Conservatives voted against. Six liberals. one Conserva- tive. a New Democrat. in So cial Credit member and Crcditiste were understood to have backed the design. The committee chairman is Her- man Batten and a chairman traditionally casts a vote only to break a tie. Before the. committee was es- tablished none of the Widely- circulatcd designs on Parlia- ment Hill contained red bor' ders, Both the government do- isizn and the single red leal suggestion of the New Demo- crats had vertical blue borders. The single red leaf on white with red borders was among he more than 1.000 other de- signs in the Parliament Hill room where the committee has been meeting. By JOSEPH Mair-Sl'l'l'ildx LONDON 4(‘P‘ Amid re- ports that Sir Alec Douglas- Home will step down as Tory leader, 4? - ycar - old Reginald Maudling's claim for the top job received new support dur- ing the weekend. Maudling. chancellor of the exchequer in c Conscrxallve regime defeated Oct 13. will fill the role of deputy leader in the new House of Commons, says The Sunday Times. But there is nothing flf‘liliilt" on Sir Alec's plans and Maud- ling‘s most formidable rnals are also apparently slated for important positions on the op. position front bench. James Margach. political r‘nr- respondent of the Conservative Sunday Times. says lain \lnc- leader Carve on Sir Alcc's team. villi he invited into the shadow cab- tact. The Evening Standard ear- lier saw Mncleod. leader of the Home of Commons ln frme film. mlm’ste'r Harolr' MncMil- lavernment. as Maud- tllu'l "most dangerous" rival. Edward Heath. 46. min- for industry and trade in the last government. was ex- pected to succeed R. A. Butler. 01. m form secretary. lMaudling Backed iAs Tory Leader 'hearl of the Tories' policy Ida visory committee. Much hinges on the strategy of Prime Minister Harold Wil- son and how long he and his Labor government will put off an election with their present over-all majority of only four. Sir Alec himself said he in- tended to lead 'iis party in on- position bill commentators have predicted he would step down unless the elm-lion came soon. Wll‘llln eight months or so. Thatcher Said - Only Jesting SASk \‘l‘OOX 4Fl” New!- papcr men did not wait to leaf l‘l-cmlcr Thatcher's full state- men when they reported ‘Mt the said Saskatchewan might join the boiled States it Que- bec withdraws from confederat- ion. Deputy Premier All. Mc- Donald said Friday. Mr, McDonald said the pre- mier. pressed for comment about possible Saskatchewan action if Quebec withdrew from confederation. said his or")- vince might join the. U.S. Newspaper men ran off telephone dispatches said McDonald. and did not wait to hear him add; "But don't take no ‘ inc uriously."