If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It i WEA ecattered nor MORE SEVEN CENTS 2 0" © “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ne Oo ae | VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 280 as! owt ae CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1965, a eemeena THER Scattered snowflurries; winds westerly 20. Low-high 25 and 35. Wednesday: snowflurries. 24 PAGES ‘géd On Qu } : Will Be i i FF i iE ‘ : Fe 11 = 3 f to present floor prices | ““w be disastrous with pre-, E FARMERS MEET AT SUMMERSIDE | $32 Per Cut, Floor Price Sought F conference may be .called | Canadian federation of | agriculture: “The national hog conference | convened by the CFA almost two ats 3 FEE or Hogs years ago proved to be so suc- 1 and continues to make i Veteran Pilot - Dies At Age 71 MONTREME (OR) — Hobbs; 71, was trained to Wright and served 5 a valuable contribution to | industry that the Federation | g >p the commercial people get | opportunity of having their | considered, very often | these problems are disregarded ‘by the breed associations which have different ideas about what | is important. ‘ The economy of Prince County’) has marked contrasts, Mr, Rodd Certain areas have id culture which equals the best in Canada in others | ice pring the First World War. considering the setting During the Second World War) National Cattle Confer- |he was commanding officer of | at duchasauee t a Conference of this RCAF stations at Dartmouth, 9¢5Smen and professionals. : The proposals are contained N.S.,. and Patricia Bay; B.C. He djed Monday. Actress Breaks With Tycoon HOLLYWOOD (AP) —Actress Funeral bec Status Commission Bilingualism Urged constitution giving Quebec a ‘tion. confederation is advocated by representatives of 40,000 teachers and 9,000 young busi- jin similar, massive “briefs” |being submitted today to the | royal commission on bilingual- (ism and biculturalism by the | Quebec Catholic Teachers Fed- eration and the Junior Chamber ;of Commerce of French Can- \Natalie Wood Monday an- | *4- -\mounced the end of her engage- The two big organizations say For All Provinces MONTREAL (CP) — A new | The junior chamber repeated | most of the teachers’ Is the Royal Navy Air Serv. special status within a two na-| and added that Quebec should | take over the fields of wnem- | ployment insurance, family al- | lowances, bankruptcy, economie | Planning, marriage and divorce. | It says the Senate and the j;armed forces should have French-speaking sections and that some French - Canadians | Should be among the decision- |making officials in the federal | departments of finance, trade | and industry. SEE DUAL RIGATS The Association of Protestant ment to Ladislav Blatnik, Venez- French-Canadians can no longer | Teachers of Quebec, with 6,000 uelan shoe tycoon. | tolerate the status quo and that |members, says both major lan- We ve Stopped Losing, #=-"=== | lenge to those who would: like | to upgrade the areas.- The ef- Other than to confirm that she | Canada is going through a grave guage groups should have the returned the huge diamond en- Constitutional crisis. |¥ight to educate their children \gagement ring during the week-| The teachers’ 150-page sub-|im their own language across - AIR FORCE CROSS PRESENTED Lieutenant-Governor W. J. Through sheer devotion to duty MacDonald presented the Air and loyalty to his pilot he was Force Cross for gallantry of the able to direct and guide the | highest order to Flying Officer pilot back to base and subse- ‘ SAIGON (AP)—U-S:— Defence} tion said that in April, 1963, FO Parker was the navigator of a CF 101B aircraft and dur- ing the flight he noticed his Is Report From Saigon lars indicated,-he said; “a-clear ision. by Hanoi (North Viet zens housing onthe east side of ication to Town Planning | National Historic site was den- fort of all should be toward mak- ing. all of the farming operat- ions move toward the quality of the best, the president sug- | gested. | | ) WARBLE FLY | Road»presided. Chairman of the ' tions committee was Mrs. comment. Blatnik also declined to gtve the reason for the break-up. HALIFAX (CP)—Quebec stole }gualism in the federal govern- |ment and all provinces and | greatly-expanded powers for the | Quebec government. | The Newfoundland. lend, Miss Wood made no other | mission calls for official bilin- | Canada. The brief calls for the teach- ing of a second language, French or English, in all Cana- dian schools and creation of a | bilingual federal district im Ot- | “We know there is no emp! e nt. landing...Premier-Walter yy - | provincial government Donald F’. Parker, North Wilt- pilot had taken seriously. ill. o tiew. Mayor Walter Cox | Secretary Robert §. McNamara | | Graeme Linkletter, Prince | Holiday Plans | would get a larger share of di- |The 400-member Association shire, at an imvestiture cere- With complete disregard for his and other military and civilian | said Monday night at the end) Mam) fo’ escalate infiltration) Cointy agriculture representa-— f }wect taxes, negotiate interna- | da. Prof ode Sune ia mony at Government House own safety he elected to stay dignitaries attended the cere. |of a 36-hour. visit to South Viet and ‘raise the Jevyel @f the con-| tive discussed the warble fly Made By Die | tional treaties, pass its own im- de deme ah s thé Quebec yesterday afternoon. The cita- with the aircraft and pilot. mony. ..”. Nam: that his most vivid flict.” < | campaign and urged the com | OTTAWA (CP) — Conserva. | Migration laws, withdraw from government aaenes should as- , sion is that “‘we ‘ne ese gets must be countered, | plete co-qperation of everyone tive Leader Diefenbaker said \#ll federal-provincial programs, sume the bility of ap losing the war.” jhe added, and in this connec-| cerned in having their | Monday “he will ‘take a 10-day | 8 up its own broadcasting net- sisting research. In the interval 8 ; a 8 But he declared the enemy tion “the South Vietflamese £0V-| soimais treated. Materials, | Caribbean cruise next month. Posieren and give more aid to edu-|sine the Canada Council and _ has intensified ‘its fighting and | ernment will farther increase its) Joo instructions are available| He said he will leave Dec. 11|©@tion and research. ld other federal research agencies U (| ; [ Oves this must be eountered. He fore- military E ; at a small cost, he explained, | on the Empress of Canada. ‘She The federal government should set up French- cast a long struggle. His Temarks Deigntened spec’ | from key mén in very district: |will make only three stops on|*9pend its university grants, |Sooum fet up Premci language He told an airport press con- | ulation that the 'U.S. will boost | ne cattle should be treated—|the cruise—Puerto Rico, the|Sudent loans and all other Pretich Cassde. . P ‘ », [ference the United: States will ithe number of its millM@ty per-| uw moierial is poured on the Virgin Istands and Jamaica. | forms of. assistance to education|" “te Caughnawagd Defen a : s 4 : continue to send the troops | sonnel in South “Viet Nam tO) animais’ acks:-on «tele | 2d culture. The Cantda Coum | committee thn titines « < | maadetctor swacing she war, Wu $90.068 from We present. 178,000) DO'S ait chadetier expla. cil would stop distributing | ie big tenerve just south’ ¢ : ( 00 lined to say how many. And ‘that: air attacks WP I | oa. ag ( ‘ _|grants and scholarships in Que- | ibe’ tenes f Cees recent on Se ee “The t Recnion tines Oia lee, : |e two favor two ; yes fs “ ‘ ; eu: Trou a: od —_ bs os be ates pe Ne one Se, ; - coho f bai eed * sittin snctpainltciesan ith Vines rele ‘North Vist Nach through it laciae by Wallace: Me WANT LABRADOR | om ahead . area reméle soled to feat income lepartment, { The teachers also request a| The Caughnawaga Indir | Council Jact night, five resolu- |homes on Jot numbers three and 'stitutional. A request by North-| ’ eres thee as jae oon Green,, director of | are iB Tos | constitutional clause annexing | most of whom work in the tions were passed. four of his subdivision as ap- ern Affairs and Natural Resour- | oa Lo iw Se ay heh ef cherie | tli h | Labrador to Quebec, wiping out | a8 high steel men, did not s; They were: (iat' a. building Proved by City Council on April |ces to take over the Lawson pro- | : 1s gm ging Bs w kibert Linkltior of Linkletter ig i | the controversial Privy Council —_ ey eee permit be issued for senior citi-_ 1 1965, and as requested in. his perty and develop same as a Tf gram decision of 1927 favorable to to. | North River Road, subject to | Advisoty Committee, dated Nov. |ied the plans and specifications 25, 1965 apd that the plan filed) 1 was agreed that the halt | Meeting the approval of the ! accompany the bylaw to es block containing the Charlotte. | building ; that a buitd- tablish and regulate building ‘town Clinie on Rochford Street Be issued for the new |2reas as zoned in the city, al- petween Sydney and Richmond. school on the west side of Teady read a second time, be Streets would be changed to a. ; Spring Park Road, subject to @pproved and adopted. commercial zone to allow the, The amount of $750,000 is the plans and specifications 1" regard to the final resolu. | ion of the Charlottetown | available annually from the fed- meeting the approval of the tion the suggestions made to iCjinic building. | eral government for AIRDA pro- building inspector: that the City council by the Town Planning the area east of the present | Jects. but this province just can- of Charlottetown make applica- Advisory Committee, chaired by ‘prince of Wales College. byild-|"0t afford that kind of partici- | tion fora loan under-the terms Coun. Elmer MacRae, were €x- i125 bounded by Grafton, Bd. | pation, as the money available of the Municipal Development |cepted as follows: lward,--Kent--and- Cumbefland | #800 & matching basis, Agricul- and Loan Act 1963, for the erec- APPLICATION DENIED ‘Streets is to be changed fro m/| re Minister MacRae told the tion of 2 mew high school; that) jt was agreed that the -Law-| commercial to multiple zoning | Prince County federation of agri- John Wheatley be granted son, Gass ete. properties in the (Continued on page 3 Col. 2) | eyiture. last night at Summer- = 1 side, Doctors Ask Free Choice | ‘INSIDE TODAY ‘Too Expensive In Medical Insurance Plan | By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP)—A spokesman for the Canadian Medical Asso- ciation said Monday the organ- ization will accept a publicly- operated medical insurance plan ae doctors are given the ight to decide not to practise under it. ; Dr. Vietor C. Goldbloom, chairman of ‘the association's economic policy committee, said it would be preferable if the! “As long as physicians are and jnumber of doctors, dentists and nurses. were increased first. “But if this is the decision we will accept it and do our best to work with it,” he = said. He added, however, that the public should. realize unless doc- tors are given the right'to opt out of amy scheme there {| a possibility that another doctors’ strike similar to that in Saskat- chewan in 1961 would result. Diefenbaker Has Criticism Of Gov't Spy Case Handling tive Leader - Diefenbaker® said ing of the Spencer spy case in “a cavalier way of dealing with espionage.”” He told_an impromptu press conference that take “appropriate action to get | to the bottom of this” whén Par-|Mr. Diefenbaker said that a jlong-term future lament opens Jan. 18. said the justice depart- fave an indication. that it | “had a case” at the time two) his party wilt | OTTAWA (CP) — Conserva-; minister has adopted the same attitude as his predecessor did Monday. the government handl- | | in connection with another inci- dent. This was an apparent refér- ence to the Gecision of Guy Favreau; when he was justice minister Rot to lay charges in the Lucien Rivard bribery case. man now faces trial in the Ri- vard case. The Conservative chief said the government should give Mr. ifree to walk out, they'll walk in. | i you bar that door they'll | break it down to walk out.” Dr. Goldblodm was participat- ing in a four-day health services conference sponsored by 21 na- tional church, labor, welfare and Summerside ............ 3 Kings, Queens, City en Prince County om jother organizations. EXAMINE SERVICES } Using the teach-in system. of | speeches with panel discussions questions from the audi- ence, the conference is looking /ot..the _Hall..coyal_.commission teport and the federal govern- ment's offer to contribute to \provincially - lic plans. Dr. Goldbloom said there mag | be a lack of personnel if such | a plan is started in 1967, the federal government's target date. But he added that the $500,000,000 health resources} \fund offered by Prime Minister | (Pearson should help to cope -~ } the manpower problem in the, Dr. Goldbloom said the OMA} favors a ‘choice in the pat- 'tern:"’ of insurance offered and | ja token payment by the patient | Russians were expelled from Spencer . every opportunity to to deter unnecessary demands | Canada for paying money to two }talk. There should bee a commis- |on the doctor. Canadians for information. The | expulsion occurred last May. At that time, he said, the gov- ernment indicated that thon- sands of dollars had been paid | for the information. Now the government was ‘‘running away from its own case” created by its own statement. Justice Minister Cardin has fied as Victor G. Pr _a former Vancouver postal worker. He said there was not enough evidence for prosecution. Mr. Diefenbaker said “‘it is passing strange’ thal the iustice sion of inquiry to look into the matter thoroughly. Sette 0° bt ong ONLY 22 Ss - 4 Cc . OPPING TILL Dr. Wolfe said evidence tm) ‘Saskatchewan shows any in-| \erease in services. has probably | \fesulted from doctors’ decisions | jtather than patients’ demands. | During a morning session, Dr. | John E. . Hastings of the |school of hygiene at the Univers | oa Toronto called for damages in methods of medical report incorrectly assumed Can- more of the same kinds of personnel and fa- de | ; 4 , FIRE VICTIMS ARE BURIED’ AT SUMMERSIDE The funeral services for five members of one Summer- side family, who lost their lives in an early morning fire which gutted their home Fri- doubling the expropriation for | agriculture in the budget the | minister suggested. It’s about | one million dollars now—he ex- | plained, and an item of $1,500,- 000 would have to be added to that—$750,000 from the. federal “have to be shown as revenue—and ‘We're | just not geared to’ expenditure | of that kind.” } “What we do spend, however, we mant to make sure we spend | it in the most advantageous way possible’, Mr. MacRae said. In Edward Laughlin, Sherbrooke. Blizzards) Isolate _ | British Areas | LONDON (AP) — Blizzards, gales, rainstorms and floods raked Britain Monday, piling | snowdrifts up to 18 feet that iso- lated hundreds of farms in forthern England and Scotland. -_Most_of.. Europe—reported—gen-- erally miserable conditions, with colder weather predicted. Drifts blocked /deliveries of Prince County now a survey is being made to determine worth. | while projects—it's, the Acres | survey—and ‘we hope it will | point the way to solving some | of the most important prob- | tems. One need for such planning | | is that the farm size is steadily | | increasing and this will likely ‘swept the coast. mean fewer people actively en- | gaged in agriculture. i (Continued on page 3, col. 5) day, were held yesterday. The victims were William Allen, Sl, and four of his children, Joan Anne, 13, William, 7, Nancy Faye, 5, Kevin 4. So- fodder to snowbound cattle in northern Britain and farmers | compared conditions with the | winter of 1947, when many cat- | tle perished. 2 } For the first time in many years, British railways can- | ceHed their cross-channel ferry at Newhaven as gale winds On the Continent, stormy seas battéred Kalian coasts for the sixth straight day. lemn _ Requiem - High Mass was celebrated at St. Paul's Church which was filled . to capacity. Afterwards, Rev. Pierre Arsenault. (left)stand- ing over the coffins at grave jplanned for ithe show Monday. at the national | \centennial conference by distri-| broke away from the: | guag : s2 \buting a detailed outline on the | organization in a 1960 language | “This is an economic fact. ojects it hag | dispute, went.even further and! The Bicultural Association + under a fed-| said Quebec should become in- | Montreal says bilingual feder? 77 ~=municipal eral-provincial program. let impressed delegates from other provinces with Quebec plans, which range from an $8,- 000,000 conservatory in Quebec City to a $220,000 cultural cen- tre in the Magdalen Islands. Approval has been given 1,100 municipal projects across the country costing a total $39,500,- 000. The federal government The Jaycee Pp, which -. national gro idependent if Canadians lose | An illustrated, bilingual book- | their will to remain united. ;ment for us in the French-i. | guage world,” the brief sa; civil servants should be poste in bilingual communities. Britain To Send Force. To Zambia chips in $1 per capita and the (province must match this. ~~ Provincial delegates said mu- imicipal interest in the program ister Wilson's government was | reported to have decided condi- tionally Monday to send a Brit- the prime minister in the House of Commons, This could be to- day or, # snags develop, later LONDON._(AP )..-Prime—Min-:ment--before-it—is announced—by— third. Provincial Secretary Bona | Arsenault of Quebec admitted at @ press conference that the 100- page booklet was published ex- enlture ~or_ centennial asm. He referred to reports from western newspapers that it was. enthust- EB side. performed the service before burial, Assisting him were Rev. Austin Bradley, (centre) and Rev. Leonard MacDonald (right). (See story on $a 7 Among the main conditions |reported by qualified sources: 1, The force must serve a de- \fensive role on Zambian terri- jpressly to. show. that Quebec |tory only. isn’t lagging behind anybody in | 2. No other outside troops should be allowed into Zambia ‘while the British are there. The reply of Zambian Presi- dent Kenneth Kaunda to these - j|and other arrangements now is awaited here. Wilson has called for today another meeting of his cabinet }which would need to approve the terms of the final agree- Liquid Fire For Cruise MIAMI, ’Fla. (AP)—A “‘liquid fire’’ apparently sank the Yar- mouth Castle, the chief engineer of the cruise ship testified Mon- day. : was not a wood fire,” George Vazeos told a U.S. Coast Guard board inquiring into cir- cumstances of the Nov. 13 trag- edy near The Bahamas in which dians, lost their lives. when you burn liquid or some- thing.” he said. ‘‘They were not dark as in wood fire.” Rear A miral Louis M. Thayer, presiding over the hear- jing, asked: “Could it have | started from oii?” } “No,” replied the engineer. “Frem. paint?” “T ean't say.” | The engineer said he first | learned of the fire about 1 a.m. | when someone told him fn the lobby: ‘Chief. I smell smoke.” | Vazeos said: “I ran fast and 89 persons, including two Cana-_ “The flames were clear, like | is shown by the fact that munt- jig, tok f to underpin the in | BE gyi token force to rpin the the week. \eipal contributions are often s.curity of Zambia on rebellious | Meanwhile, Opposition Con- well above the required one phodesia’s northern frontier. (servative Leader Edward Heath, anticipating the develop- ment, presided over a special meeting of his shadow cabinet amid signs that his party will back the Labor government's decision. Heath's men evidently ac- cepted Wilson's argument that a military presence in Negro- ruled Zambia will enable Brit- ain to preserve some control over the crisis in central Africa. The alternative in Wilson's view could be fulfilment of Kaunda’s thre-t to invite less-moderate powers—either African or Com- munist—into his country. < |saw smoke coming from the door of room 610.” Vazeos testified that the cabin on the ship’s main deck was a |store room for things such as floor cleaner and wax. but was | being repaired for other use. ‘SMOKE NOT. HEAVY : heavy.” “The smoke was not Vazeos said. “I hosed it’ with | the engine room to start |firepumps. I gave the hose _ someone else. Then I went | the engine room to check equipment. Everything seemed lin perfect order. | “Then [I heard the’ abandon- ship signal.” caw’ sbeat 5) gate tae gat ered. Vazeos related. “I heard |e cabtain of the Bahama Star ca them, ‘everybody jump into the water, you ": be picked .up’.”