If t's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For tt | « f , o > > ee + * . 5% isc aay 5 Hapa gaat ws pee ae DL. LXXVIII. NO. 244 otsthaiod ng Sessad Cin, ite © Abraham Clpik, Goh) 0 Cenc, eles Bee we iat wats to be canted ¥0 Commissioner B.C. 4% ‘ eee § Prince ~ LOnTErewn, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965. Edward Island Like The Dew” Cloudy, sunny by southwesterly 25. Wednesday: a few Not mone SEVEN CENTS Frozen MONTAGUE Producers who supply farm products for | vious. _|Langley Frosted Foods people ‘Montague last night named a five-man committee with a view to seeking aid from the government because of a ser mre depressed financial re- “— committee of Glen Mac- _| Laren and James Cain, New Perth; Sumner MacKinnon, Point Prim; Maurice Mermuis, Brudenell and Morley Annear, Lower Montague will join: other committees which are expected to be named at meetings in Ken- sington tonight Chariotte- town Wednesday night. The joint committee will probably meet in Charlottetown on Thursday evening. DRY WEATHER Stories of sharply curtailed in- come from pene, beans, broc- coli, caulifiower, , indicated Mr. Okpik told his new eol- (that it.was lack. of rainfall leagues that he intends to pull that was, Yee: tas falafel no punches in his new job. in production, but there was also Territorial gg se aE ga Pa sats Sivertz, in Ottawa Monday. ee Ottawa Treatment Of Cape Breton By Tommy Douglas = =e Se ~ of the last-twe -Pariia- | By -900:000' in tie GpRMNE or a” HEW! centre of “the coal fields and ‘Me Tecelved-a et “1 ' \tiis-year from. peas it. and . independent candi- teroeey ~ at rip Al Demo ot pee at nearby Lingan and, " to On adie ed coud. \ground which netted him $400.00 go oe ee the harvestiag | date in the Nov. 8 election, al- ome Sy oe improvements to existing was’. tee uted x a year ago. He averaged §,000 equipment was in poor condi-|leged bribe offers and Liberal = arrived this . a ce mines. oo oa aad 2.908 ae pounds per acre last year, but | tion. intrigue were involved in a gg se ge Li WOULD USE COAL eel rae aa, 7} only ahd 1,900 pounds this year. to back the ~Liverals ately rapped the Liberal _Mr__Douglas._on_his - ee wal sad ae: ai L.W.Roper, Brudenell, charg- signed after the 1963 roan by | giving: Cape) a oes “Canac ‘shipped- “the “plant “with sloppy -man- 4 4 six-~Socia oa swing seross ‘Canada in the\it could : ute LBJ Recove “Social---Gredit--MPs, -_ mines $25,000,000 Guuiiian tae the Nor 8 esteral!”! — nd done.” ; agement practices. ‘This listed . helping the Liberals oust “the ont Noah tinue ae” mach | eieeteh, opmensied: {0 ja.met et-|tems to produce posers (ite pounds of calla cb tay first Seen Slower Diefenbaker government. the other. . essary ta buy coal from the! “You can have little thermal 8.310 pounds, said ME.! WAgmINGTON (AP) — Presi-| Dt. Mercoux's pamphlet sad | United States for power produc- | plants dotted across the coun- /P0PeT whe ex?! a = eae hdaden acobeblp . will: re- [fave Decharme, described. es } hie’ — ¥ aoe ee tion. The power one. be manu- |try’or you can plan the thing ee ae “ oun : = quire longer to recover his eter Sint ae wie i. ptm gyn factured in Nova Scotia in the where you make a big invest-/oniy 520 pounds culig. on. the | Strength and return to peak = ths pletinn of allegiance ahd Se aie ment to create a national power third load of close te 8.000|*Vity than anyone thought, his Hg . nancial aid for grid ir c 5 anid joined Premier Smallwood of wa Beotia's ailing coal indus. Mexico Plans core pounds. wes, Me Roper} BLD Meryee said be Goes (Newfoundland, J. W.. Pickers: sr fi te attached to te! The government must “think | charged, that on his first load |20t think that the presideni’s Stee “hae ‘ooie aan ens we a Spot DG Pegi ee teem, invest |the plant had cleaned out the | tose ee eenne thatiper, Were waiting in Mr. Doyle's pr a i . said an article in the Fr. fae Fick tan ta marr eae 0 Tene on ate (ae, O. -aee, Docnarmne en ial Post . indicated. tarifis) MONTREAL (CP) — Mexico ere ee ee a. ALLEGATION announced economy in general. ed ed DENIES es eed mt eee Monday tat “it will Continuing on the theme of! R $s Bann “ar President’s gall-bladéer The ,Telegram quotes Mr. fair in Montréal. Mexico is the 62nd country to } producers for continuing |p i? participation in the ® paca United States aga The Mexican pavilion will be {-Labor.. Minister MacEachen/located on Me Notre-Dame, part err wi the federal of the fair's St. Lawrence River | nt would “‘invest’’ $25,-' site. Soviet Fear Of G ’ UNITED NATIONS (AP)—| Fedorenko asserted West Ger- *xpressedBy UN Delegat sharp criticism at times of the plant at Moritague. Presiding was Smith MacFar- lane, past president. of the P.E1. Federation of cerseare who. told the meeting ~ he tried unsuccessfully: re years:ago to organize a grower<e association which would have Miller West, party financing, Mr. Douglas! said the crux of honesty and In Jakarta wi ih cumsipn andes te c a nds and the’ NDP intende to propose an ope! ON SINGAPORE (AP) — Indo-| ing up of these funds for pene |nesia's army imposed a mil- | Na plete “‘public knowledge. _ | itary “Full disclosure would cover |Party in Jakarta Monday, said }a broadcast from the Indones- lian capital. But. President Su- |karno was reported resisting | military pressure to dissolve, e r mM a in y be aati Wein sen |here said a number. of ane | and organizations linked to the; | Communist party ‘also were. | placed under the ban and the power ful, Communist - dom-| jinated trade union federation, | | Sobsi, was outlawed, _presum- or organization, having an inde- ably throughout Indonesia. ‘everything,” he said. ban on the Communist | day Seriet delegate Nikolai T. Fed-'many wants to acquire nuclear pendent power to use nuclear) The Indonesian a i contin- ko charged Monday that a weapons ‘by hook or by crook” powers.” hued its crackdown ‘oe be §.-proposed treaty to halt the | and that the U.S. treaty has de-| [nists believed involved in the! of nuclear weapons con- | vised to make that possible un- | loopholes that would per-|der the framework of the North West Germany to emerge /Atlantic alliance. He said non- Pa nuclear power. | proliferation of nuclear wéapons illiam C. Foster. chief U.S.' would be effective only if all negotiator, .denied the loopholes were closed and if! ge and challenged the So-, creation of a multilateral nu- Union to resume negotia- | clear force or other forces by in Geneva “as soon as/NATO was prevented. ible” on a treaty “we caf! He said that if West Germany |obtained nuclear weapons the clash occurred in .the Communist Warsaw pact forces Nations assembly's main | would be compelled to take stm- ountry political committee jjar steps. it t opened disarmament de-| poster described Fedorenko’s | ~ General..y |Temarks on West Germany as onan ;“stale polemics.” launched the debate with “We seek no nuclear sharing in NATO which as bate. Phant appeal for concentrated ef- | 7 Gs to devise “concrete steps arrangement a motual character” that) could involve such dissemina- at least provide a we tion,” he added. ‘‘The treaty we! a\have suggested would bar such I treaty. | dissemination, since it would ‘He. said a halt to the spread) prevent the creation of any ad- lar weapons is “now pef-| ditional entity, whether a state the most urgent and »res- nl problem” facing disarma-, Ment negotiators. | GUIDELINES | spokesman said Thant had | ‘mind informal discussion’ by : big powers during the pres- assembly session that could INSIDE. TODAY . guidelines for agreement | oa.'6 treaty. the Soviet Union ‘and the; Women’s sees 6 treaties, have maeitiet Editorials evecsies : ties on preventing the| seeseees eeeees of nuclear weapons to| Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 not -now- possessing | Prince County 2 oer < xk ee ee ee] |DIVIDED ON NATO honk” Matet “Te . oup. attempt Diplomatic “sources in Wash-' against Sukarno despite the nee have reported that U.S. | ‘president's appeal to the mil- { policy-makers are divided on the | ‘issues of a NATO nuclear force co en omen 'and the need for a non-prolifera- - tion treaty. Foster has been de- Chief Boy ciel scribed as urging top priority ; fer the treaty. He told the committee the fact | To Visit Canada that the Soviet Union has. sub-| (CP) Charlie mitted a draft treaty for discus \yyocjean: Chiel Scout of Britain | sion may indicate tha’ there is | and ‘the, Com ah oe wm [Basis for hope that the urgency | visit Canada in 1967, at the in- Shier tr ea recente: ‘8 vitation. of the national council lof the Boy Scouts of Canada, it He said that In its present | was announced Monday: | form the Soviet draft continues! “5. visit will te just belore er ie focus narrowly on Soviet pre: | after the 15th Ward Janes oe oe a et at Farragut Park, Idaho, in Hehenet ‘akeost™ \1967. This will be Sir Charles*| "Yet. we. are encouraged ty by [first visit to Canada as bie’ the fact that perhaps the aaa Union is now prepared to ne tiate. If the possibility of cal negotiation now finally ot Leaders On we can view this as a sign of ree pore te Hustings | ble with the firm resolve to seek | to agree or a treaty text we By conv CANADIAN PRESS ¢an all support.” | TUESDAY The 117-country talks on Ge-| Pearson—Edmonton and West- meva are expected to resume |lock, Alta. early in January after the as Diefenbaker — Sudbury; Cap- sembly adjourns. France is for-|reol, North Bay and Pembroke. mally a member of the negoti-| Douglas—Sydney and Mone ating body, but has never at-|ton. 3 tended Communist China, also| Thompson — Fraser Valley a nuclear power, is not a mem- Riding, B.C. ber. Canada has participated ac-| Caouetie — Charlevoix riding, tively in the talks. \Que:. Food Producers To Seek Aid From Gov't ged with culls from the pre-| Blair Wood, Montague, sug-| vious, customer's peas. | gested it was really a difficult —, INCOME. CUT | job to run one of these process- Mr. Roper said that he had ing plants efficiently. He said s to the acre on the, that the plant at Sherwood is s, This year he received Tun most efficiently, and sug- gested this is because it is a omer compact unit. This has nothing to do with the purpose of the Montague meeting but Mr. Wood insisted that 100 acres farm is the most efficient farming unit. He does not agree with the modern surge to enlarge the operation. { 2,700. 14 ac $76.00 te his crop. A year ago) he received $400.00 for peas from the same land. Last year) the $400.00 was netted after pay- ing for cultivation, fertilizer ap- plication etc. This year he did all of that work himself, and still received only $76.00. James Cain said that he had 60 per cent of his pea crop by- passed. This is done because the tenderemeter test was too high. peas were too hard to war- rant harvesting. Another man oe he had 14 acres bypassed | get himself elec’ ie ie i and kidney-stone _— was | Doyle as denying that either Mr. !Smallwood or Mr. Pickersgill | , i he had was aboard his private plane. | gay that| Mr. Pickersgill had never; Bethesda been aboard his DC-6 ‘‘in the | run 14/air or on the ground.” | Mr. Doyle’ is quoted as hint- Before the eration, the doc- ing that he had conducted his; tors —_ = average hospital own investigation of the Mar- {stay after ao opera- 'coux claims and as saying: tion is to 14. days. \“You would be surprised at! Dr. Mareoux, Social creat | NEW SERVICE IS SUPPLIED This’ edition of The Guard- | ian has a first for the paper | and. for Prince Edward Is- land. On an inside page is | carried a Hi-Fi insert pro- duced by the Gravure Corpor- ation of Detroit, Mich., for Toronto Carpet .Manufactur- ing Co,, Ltd., allowing local advertisers to take ad- vantage of full color roto- gravare advertising. Prior to this only — metropolitan newspapers have been able to offer this service. “This new color material is shipped to The Guerdian as pre-printed newspaper . rolls and is fed into the press in the | nsual way. (See picture on page 5.) WEATHER afternoon. Winds Low-high 42 and 62, . clouds, warm. 16 PAGES ‘Rhodesia Flouts Move To Head Off Collision MONTAGUE MEETING HELD Gov't Seizes Former by ADAM KELLETT-LONG | SALISBURY (Reuters) — The Rhodesian government seized, former prime minister Garfield | {Todd Monday as he was about! ito leave for Britain and ordered! jhim confined to his farm for 12 | months. The restriction order followed | |by. only a few hours Prime | _|Minister Ian Smith's rejection | ‘lof British Prime Minister Wil-| ison’s latest offer to continue! ltalks on Rhodesia’s demand for | independence. Todd. a champion of Negro- | majority rule, was served with ithe restriction order at a Salis- | Marcoux Story | replied: out of 88 acres grown. > Gr ae test starts C ll h at 85 or less. pays the top) ecmon => Called Hogwas Se ee st td psn en A rin uid | 90 (CP)—The ‘Tele-, some of the information that I for peas testing 116 to 125. For! 380 asso multi - millionaire! have. peas testing 126 and up the er John C. Doyle as say-- “One major question that | price is $40.00 per ton, but the ing that allegations by Dr. Guy) should product is accepted only at the Marcoux of bribery attempts in|} why prominent names option of the processer. “the affair of the six’ EQUIPMENT. CRITICIZED “hogwash without a ve of script were: before | its “There was “criticism - of -the truth.” : |publication.” _ harvesting ‘ equipment employed| Mr. Doyle is quoted in a. Mon- | by plant — no|treal interview .as saying that | asked to confirm whehter he ody was to speak for) Dr. Marcoux published the’ al-|owes the Canadian government: Hthe Langley Fruit Packers. Glen|legations in a pamphlet last| several million dollars in per-| MacLaren said he-had lost 1,200|week “because he is trying to’ sonal income tax, Mr. Doyle|™*, The newspaper “The position has been completely exposed inthe news papers by the tax department h just as he was pre-| |paring to fly to Britain to ad-| ldress a televised Rhodesia teach-in at Edinburgh Univer-' sity. In London, Wilson sent a cable to Smith in an 11¢h-hour| effort to persuade Rhodesia. not | to seize independence from Brit-| ain unilaterally. Todd was scheduled to share ithe platform at the _ teach-in with Britain’s former Conserva- tive prime minister, Sir Alec! |Douglas - Home, and Cledwyn be put te Marcoux is | Hughes; the Britishh Labor gov- men-|ernment's minister of state for are| tioned. in the—original_ man | Commonwealt relatipas. |ARRESTED AT DINNER | Todd's -host- in Salisbury, ) The Telegram says that when! Tod Haddon, said the special’ branch police arresting officers arrived as Todd was eating din- Haddon said: “There was no drama were _so_ gentlemanly and_ Bat ish you have no idea. Doyle as adding that the tax tice?” dispute was ‘‘simply a matter |of how much I owe—how much considered personal" all-white government rules |should be pepeome: “There were no f | granted—it was the exact oppo-| “ Mr. Doyle) is quoted as! Rice Bowl Hit Hard SAIGON (AP) “—— Viet Cong | guerrillas, operating in batalion strength and attacking with ;mortars, appeared Monday to |be stepping up their coepelee to seize effective South Viet Nam’s rice bow the sweltering Mekong River delta. Attacks on 10 South Vietna- mese governmem military posts and watchtowers in the last few |days indicated the Viet Cong strategy may be switching from seeking to expand Viet Cong in- fluence in the central highlands to a drive.for further control in tue south. Todd. has. carried his fight for ‘Negro rule in Rhodesia, where 4,000,000 Negroes and only 220,- avors. 000 whites, to the: United Nae ons. 7 Before going to the UN to ad-| |dress its special committee on ieolonialism in April last year he announced his full support for the Negro nationalist move-| ment led by Joshua Nkomo. | Nkomo also is reStricted, fo a jcemote Negro area. The farm’) jwhere Todd will be restricted is! 200 miles from Salisbury. Maj.-Gen. Spry Retires From Scout Position OTTAWA (CP)—Retirement of \Maj.-Gen. D. C. Spry of Winni- peg and Ottawa as director of the Boy Scouts world bureau, ef- fective Oct. 31, was announced Monday R. T. Lund, deputy director: of the world bureau with headquar- ters in Ottawa, will act as in- BELGIAN ROYALTY STOP IN en route from Brussels to Mexico to begin a four-week Shown ene MONTREAL Queen Fabiola, King Baudou- in, Mrs. Jean Lesage. wife of Quebec Premier Jean Lesage and Mr. Lesage. = Ne A 8 YE i ECON ARBRE ST ERS NSE SE RIES BR NCD FS takin lg Alaiye 0s terim successor until a new ap- pointment is made by the Boy Scouts world committee. Gen. Spry, who is leaving: to | Lecome president of Glenland | Ltd. of Montreal: a property in- | ae ha and development com- has been director for the rend 2 years. The 52-year-old director was | an infantry commander in the Halian and northwest Europe theatres during the Second World War, becoming the young- tere cond ot have een | Premier Todd asked the UN to press for Nkomo's release. He said the restriction of Negro na-’ tionalists is “‘a ime to the’ name of Southern Rhodesia." STUDY TEXT The Rhodesian poversmest said it is studying the texts of Todd’s UN speeches for possible subversion, A Rhodesian law makes it an offence for citizens |to make subversive speechhes overseas. Todd denied any sub- versive intention. He said the only alternative to negotiating rights and lber- ties for various Rhodesian rac- ial groups is the maintenance of ‘white rule by force. He once said that drastie measures such as _ festrictios , without trial ‘‘had the result of. | putting the white people on top. of a smouldering volcano.” Todd’s restriction ca a few hours after Smith rejec Wil- son's pr 1 for mediation in the Rhodesian independence dispute by leaders of Commorn- wealth countries. Smith also said his govern- ment has made up its mind whether to defy Britain and seize Rhodesian independence But, he said, just when the (Continued on page 3 Col. 5) = Johnson, Senators. Concerned. WASHINGTON (AP) Preai- dent Johnson. federal officials and a dozen senators e concern Monday that anti-wer and anti-draft demonstrations across the United States may unilaterally. undermine peace efforts in Southeast Asia. | At the Capitel, Senator Thomas H. Kuchel , assistant R publican leader from California, declared that protesters who burn draft cards and feign iil- ness to escape military service are “sowing the seeds of trea- son,” # President Johnson, recuperat- ing at Bethesda Naval Hospital, expressed concern that weekend demonstrations in a score x American cities may cause Pe- king and Hanoi ‘‘to miscalculate ga unity and determina- - State Undersecretary George Ball said Communists may mie- interpret the American public’s © support of U.S. policies in Viet Nam and this may lead “to a prolongation of the war.” PAN MARCH Even as the criticism poured forth with virtually no dissent | Plans were announced here and [ia Ney York for another mass protest march “in federal capital, and ti_ ro made its first arrest under a new law | Prohibiting the destruction of \ derground est major-general in the Allied | | draft cards. ee A Be cde H. |The White: House press secre- e war, he was vice- tary, Bill Moyers, told report chief of the general staff aad at Bethesda hospital the web. then chief executive commis- dent endorsed a justice depart- sioner of the Boy Scouts of Can- | ment investigation of whether ada for seven years before gc- | Communists are involved in the ing to the world bureay. parades and Picket processions. ScrawJed Message Reveals . Last Moments Of 7 Miners SARDIS, w, Va. (AP) _ A: Message scrawled on a door in! desperation graphically told of the last moments of seven men who died in dense, choking smoke more than two miles un- in a northern West Virginia coal mine. The message discovered Mon- of four bodies about 7 a.m. Mon- day, after finding the message that gave some hope the men |might still be alive. : SIGNED BY FOUR The note was signed by Leedy. 58. of Blactield: Maser 'day also wrote the end to heroic Savage. 57, of Rosemont: Isaac rescue efforts of more than 100 Moats, 39, of Moatsville, and lmen who had toiled since late| Andy Kurusez, 44, of Gallowag. | Saturday night to save the pe message a tye |stricken miners. rred ners’ efforts | The message said: “Couldn't | eens pg em og - get across.” The tragedy in the Mars mine; lee ae ae the bodies of Kenneth of Clinchfield Coal Company) and here left behind seven widows | Banish, 45, oe Los Creek, had and 28 fatherless children. One been found in another section ot of the victims, Carl Banish, was the mine. the ‘father of 10 children. Charles Lantz, 26, of | Rescue squads fought their| non, was the first victininy way through fire and smoke”in! cated. He died Sunday night en the unsuccessful attempt to save route te hospital after he wag the miners who apparently were carried unconscious from the | asphyxiated. | mine. i rc i ea Wetters brought out the tast ' _——" i 1