If It's Good For The Island The Guardian VOL: LXXATX:*NO. 192 is For Re @utherized es Keconé- Cless Ottawa and % the Beak: Gitice Hepartment, te cash. Mall by fer payment of” pestage 2 Premier Alex” Campbell (LEFT) and Summerside Mayor George. Key look onzas National Centennial Commis- _fioner John Fisher signs the COMMISSIONER HONORED AT SUMMERSIDE town's official guest book ves- terday at a reception for Mr- Fisher in the Town Hall. Mr. Fisher, a. Maritimer whose mother hives in _Sackyille, had RACIAL CONFLICT FANNED - ‘Negro Policy I In Chicago - Opposed By Nazi Group_ things to savat--a~ banquet honoring him last night, about the Island's enthusiasm and. energetic. support of Canada's centenmal. Gee story on page ae ardim Covers Reine. Paward Island’ Like. The Dew” | | stood first and second in zeit ut ge , ove sh roe 7 WN, CANADA, - EDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1966. Z Ayrshire, Holstein Rings Hold Interest At Big Fair Strong Ayrshire and Holstein: shows held the interest of dairy minded ringsiders Tuesday at | the Provincial Exhibition. Jallytown Pet, a mature cow owned by Sterling Widden, Truro, RR3, N.S. was the fe- r | male Ayrshire champion. The title went to Raeburn | Heroine, the winner -of the 4 ‘year-old class) Mr _ Whidden's cow was the top.animal in the mature class. She is owned by Earle MacRae and Son, Brook- | reserve- field. East- River Dairy King took the junior male championship— there- are: no senior bulls—and College Sunlight took the re- serve. The East River, all - owned by Almon Wood and Little York. The Sunlight pit is owned by Mr.. Whidden. They the class for yearling bulls. The Holstein female champ- _| fonship went to Diamond Hill Johan. the first-prize mature ‘cow owned by Oswald Newson | |and. Son, Parker, of Kingston. She was shown, by Hollis Newson who is Oswald's grandson. The reserve, female Holsteia champion was Chetry Viéw | Penny, owned by | Smith, Freetown The cows were | first and second in the mature | class. Mrs. Smith is a new ex- | hibitor at Charlottetown and champion bull and reserve stood one and two in the calf class. An interesting feature of the day's dairy show was the pres- ence of the veteran Keith Bos- well in-the ‘ring. The Victoria breeded, now in his 74th. year, retired | from competition several | WestRoyalty Guernsey | Years .ago ar But the prospect of | competition brought. him back-! heneath her shoulders again this ye The following is the summary of the regular classes: , HOLSTEINS Junior bul! calf 0. J. New- Continued on page 3 cal 3 Tops All Dairy Breeds A Guernsey cow owned by: J. Eric Hurry, West Royalty :won | the best uddered class at the~ Provincial ‘Exhibition Tuesday | morning against all dairy breeds. Patosie Roberts was October 1957, so she years of age._She was second a | by ‘ Gordon -Dickie, NS. = The second place cow Truro, this Elmer. K. | year was East River Trudy own- ed. bv Almon Wood and Sons, Little York and shown.by Wal- _ lace -Wood In third ‘place was ‘a Holstein cow owned by Elmer Kk" Smith, born in | is eight | had a | den, Truro, | Freetown Master. ‘An Avshire-cow, ina, owned. by Son was next She is-Sov reign Ida Fairvue Mar- A. MacRae and Alberta. Boswell. of Marshfield Nancy ament. (Bill N.B> who Jersey cow River North in the fifth position and year ago to a Holstein cow owD-| an Ay rshire cow, JoHytown Orh- owned by Sterling While: N.S. was sixth. ‘}. . The cattle were placed by ; s. | Bennett also interbreed, registered beef steer of Fredericton, placed. in the class on Monday evening. There were a dozen cows en- tered in this interesting class. 4 ent Nor MORS THAN WEATHER TEN CENTS © % HIGH HEMLINE | WINNER FOUND | LONDON (AP)- Linda Ben- nion bobbed up Tuesday as the girl with the longest hair and the ‘shortest skirt. in * swinging London. Her hair dangles 27!2 inches Her. -hemiine. hangs inches above her knees. 10 | ‘ Her main occupation — is studying the graphic arts, -but she’ also is contributing ~ her ‘figure’ to the grapiie arts scene and her talents fo thi waitress profession, a Why such a short. skirt” “Well."’ she said, “my: boss wants the girls to*wear their hemlines at the level of the table tops. I'm not as tall ‘as some of: the’ other girls, so that makes me: have.a realiy short. skirt.”’ Her boss is. Samuel Gee, 42, who sold his British cosmetic business for a-reported §$!,- | 400,000, retired and then. went into the restaurant business His place is called Nero, | the Mad Ox. a | What does the title mean? | “I'm not quite sure," he | says. “Does there have to-be | a.reason?” | “This .is amchange. The food and the ‘mini-skirts. My wife j and F got tired of looking at one another ali day." - “Russian Ship Is At- Churchill 1 By BEN WARD ; -OTTAWA (CP)-—The federal cabinet meets today to decide. what to do about a country-wide railway the next three weeks. It’ would be the first such’ walkout since 1950. <i “ Sources close to key ministers say the main issue is whether Parliament should be called into emergency session hefore or after the strike date, which: still has not™been set by the unions. The guessing is that the strike will be called in the Sept. 1-Sept. 6 period. There also has been speculation that Monday. Aug. 29, will be selected. A. decision will be made at a_ conference of unions in Montreal Monday- - Labor Minister Nicholson, who returned Monday from a. com- bined -business-holiday trip to Britain, spent conferring with ‘officials on tion, OALL LIKELY It is-expected that heads: of ithe raiiways ‘and unions wiii be called to Ottawa for a last-min- jute mediation effort by the cab- met, after the sfrike deadline has-been announced. 3 Such a ‘step was’ urged Mon- iday b® NDP Leader Douglas. his department strike expected within ~ most of Tuesday | the railway situa- “Showers or- thundershowers; winds bs- coming southeast: 20. Low-high 58 and 72. Thursday: Senne and: warmer. § \ « 20 PAGES wing Railway Crisis. Parliament Recall Reported An Issue ‘conductors and hrakemen>- Con- tracts» for locomotive engineers sang firemen ‘do not expire until thesjend of this year Wages are the main issue with the various demands averaging 9 cents an hour. The non-oper- ‘ating workers, who ~ include clerks, telegraphers, shop ‘trades and the like;.have re- jected posals crease ilent,,to present '$2.22. The railways insist for’ an 18-per-cent: in- over two years, equiva- 40 cents an hour on their pay rates averaging 12'2 per whatever general settlement reached by either last-minute talks or government. legislation, Major, side issué is the train- men's’ demand--for ‘a contract clause to compel ‘he railways to negotiate the introduction of jany new technology that would ‘reduce jobs or adversely affect. - |working conditions.” In 1950 the non - operating ‘workers struck the railways for 10 days to win a wage increase conciliation ‘hoard pro-_. = 1s fcent is the most they ean af- ford. |. TRAINMEN INVOLVED A conciliation board in the trainmen’s dispute did not-offer a - wage recommendation but . ‘said an increase should be worked out on the “lines of | made a fine showing through the . CHIC AGO ‘AP.~-The Ameri- area and to the all-white Jet. encompasses the pack Sat 5 (ORE ee LARC A SSRN —————-= GHURCHILL, Man. (CP) |’ Failing a négotiated settle and a five-day work, week. The ean Nazi Party, né@west_force_in jferson Park neighborhood on the Nazi. ofator~ incited- the white The champion Holstein bull The 11,500-ton Russian motor |ment, the government likely will settlement “came after Pariia- @he spreadifig conflict aver open northwest -side. — demonstrators : was Diamond Hill Alert. also lraqi Air Force Pilot Flies vessel Kommunarsk, first So- (call Parliament. to order -com-/ment passed a compulsory arbi-- housing for- Negroes here. said The marchers, Negroes. and owned by the Newsons. The’ re- | viet ship to call at this northern ipulsory- arbitration. Jt could take tration bill, ordering the strikers % Tuesday it -Hopes.to .unite: while jwhite persons, are supporting GAINED MEMBERS serve champion bull’ is ‘Corm- Manitoba port on Hudson Bay, |up to five days to pass such a |back to work. - people in an organized unit. demands of Dr. Martin Luther Asked about reaction to the cose, Mem) Kriss owned by Soviet-Built MiG To Israel \docked Monday night to take on.) {bill : Firemen went on, strike “Our specifies purpose is to King Jr. and the Negro leader's e®try-of his group into the-hons- Cormies Brothers, Richmond RR a cargo of wheat. - |The’ dispute involves _ unions | jagainst ‘the CPR for nine days who had ‘themselves a really “good day gas ae show ring: The. TEL- ry = Iraqi _ Tally the wh nd-teach them associates: for—equal opportunity 98 turmoil;Vidnjevich replied: ae defence organize acohe- for Negrnes in buying and rent- | We Made raore new members | “AVN +Reuters)- Air Foree pilot “kn defected | Shipping officials said A. sec- \representing : about 100,000. work- \in 1957__and.. three days in 1658 ~— (he=was~passed-over-during- pro ond Russian ship is-expected to ers in non-operating jobs and lover the —tecision ‘0 femove- “foeome-— oR OA OE said abies n the “leat: two weeks—than—in- smotions._ —__—_———arrive—shertly—and—that—several-_the—.Brotherhood— -of —Railroad, firemen —from—dieset- ‘Christopher Vidnjevich, area! The~Nazis appeared in Mar: the last five years.’ Bru i Fi a ie We contented elitr tiie quoting” an |e follow. _ |Trainmen, - reptesgating « 70 0,000 ee ee commander of the Nazis. ‘quette Park on the southwest He declined to give the num- Ss res jsent- prior warning to Israel-of Iraqi Air ‘Force spokesman, | As he talked with a reporter, iside Sunday, when a crowd of ber of new recruits. But he did | i+ (his plan to fly over his MiG-21 sail Tuesday a MiG- 1 was reat | advocates of open occupancy white _ persons taunted soles Say a Sasier has * ‘roughly 300° Re orted ” ~ Het aircraft. - : while on a high-altitude test foc N t actual members” in t p : : a ae ae ee ee ee A esters mitary_suache Hight ver the western pat ot Con ly iciary OW onstrators to the city's central i ‘O'Connell, whose polite distriet tional organization headed by A brush fire. which erupted i eet ois geaee hone The pilot ’said he was George Lincoln Rockwell. | The motive, Vidnjevich said, jis opposition ts Communists: “We savy the Reds started this in the Fortune area was report- ed fo be under control last night. The fire~originated’ in ‘the vacin- ity of Dingwell’s Mill. I ct tact the Soviet-built MiG-21 -is the first -such plane _to._be..found..in- in) the free world. Bacterial Ring Rot Control ‘signed during five years to Fi base--at--Kirkouk--from--which -he- flew bombing sorties against the tetNam Probe — ines At Anti-\ 3 wae : aa og = , : ‘The. “pilot, said he left Rashid ‘Kurds. Is Discussed At Confer: lnc vt "eh hing” he fom St elers Fire Depart pr tone Baghiad’tnind He” seit i was teat 1 : rence ; He said Nazis will pass out ‘0? Forestry. Division’ were. on a Teeny ey Tite iors defect: apts decided 1 > : WOLFVILLE. N.S.~ (CP) — appreciate the extreme Sitticul- Literature soliciting mem- ithe cnaan than an hour inter. came only after a recent post-| WASHINGTON (AP). A US. The judicial picture was still This 1s the new left dis. Control of bacterial ring rot-- | ty that faces our research bers wherever the open housing | Another. which started late in The pilot, whose name was ing to the Rashid base near congressional committee on no ‘as the three-judge panel |logue,". shouted another specta- serious threat to the seed potato people,” said Mr. Callbeck. ~ ;demonstrators: march. The|the afternoon-in the Morell dis- not given, told correspondents Baghdad. jAmerican activities began in jondered hearings this afternoon tor and he and a group. were industry--must lie in govern- He said that in some regions Nazis will .‘‘take the offensive” (trict behind a garage operated pic reasons for defection were He said it was waile he was) ivestigating anti-Viet Nam war ‘on the constitutionality of the lswept ‘outside. ment regiilations, alertness’. of growers _are_ reporting attacks 5ePt- 1%. he added. with a march by George Geldert, was extin- the discrimination he felt in the there he managed to smuggle jactivities Tyesday. in hearings |suit attacking the commitee’s ARREST EIGHT ‘growers and inspectors and an their plants by the devastat- |inte a Negro neichborhood ‘guished by the Morell Fire De- jraqi Air Force as a Christian out of Iraq a letter, addressed punctuated by heckling, shout- |legal standing. “1 ata hae 7 etaht pee avoidance of contamination,the—ing disease of late blight. | Vidnjevich, 22, said he was partment --~and his: fatigue from bombing io the officer commanding the |ing and the physical ejection of | The appearance . and testt- woe ae id an ir a Canadian potato industry con-.. The Atlantic. Provinces. was DoT" in’ Croatia—and—his father ~4—third—fire;—near Fanning-—-missions infighting -against Israeli Air Force, informing jsome_ spectators. mony of Phillip A.. Luce, who Idowntown: Polick said at least ference was told here Tuesday. one of the regions because the Was killed by Communists. The brook, was reported to be in the Tebel Kurdish tribesmen in him of his intention to defect |. Almost overshafowing the ac- said he is a former member of baste Heine’ seene. Samwha iin bt Callbeck, plant patholog- | weather conditions, well suited Nazi leader -also _Said, he has vicinity of some buildings in the northern Traq. and seek asylum in Israel. ‘ual testimony« was a budding |the pro-Communist Progressive | the line of spectators during @ ist with the agricultural depart- to the growth of potatoes, also lived here since 1950 and has be- area. The Mount Stewart Fire Another reason was the inse- The pilot said “he chose Is- row between Congress and the |y,abor party and May 2 Move- inode: vecees xed check Gall ment an Guarniey: n. said contributed to development and come ‘an _American citizea. _. , \Department answered the call, curity he felt as an officer dur- rael because it was the only judiciary over attempts to pre- |ment, sparked an outburst after liianediosty conduct. ence agencies also play a spread of the late blight, Mr. ~ but late last night there was no ing successive ‘military coups in country within range which he ‘vent the House of Representa- the hearings finally began amid). | j i hiwat arge Batt Raines in-known | Callbeck “said. report as to whether the fire was Iraq. And, the pilot, who held was certain would not hand him tives committee from proceed. | wrangling between lawyers and | This Riad an obit ad tii Sonnets Msc lin a a ee, ae e| Spacecra lunder control or not the rank of captain, complained back to Iraq ng commitiee members. ee ene Machinery zai rahe wen ue | 7 i At on 15 os ie “Let’s stop this fink testi- es oe ae e . ; je te rom ie comm! ’ “Because the positive iden- W&@S unreported in the last two Gets Set jec te hoeeidne’ mony,’’ shouted Jeffrey Gordon, | He noted that Communist pub: lroom and from the cor cm ee decades, almost.100 anti-disease one of those subpoenaed to tes- |i ations and some of. the wit- ~ tification of_only one _infectetl | nemicals have been put through ° ie: outside. Some 30 persons |tity “U.S. get. out of Viet Nam.” ae subpoenaed had called : ; . | ; ‘police és- : , ness tuber is sufficient to bar-a crop screening procedures at Char- For Pictures | jammed the room and police és Police hustled him outside. |the hearings an attack on the from the seed market, ‘you can lottetown. Bodies Of 3 Babies Found In Deep Freeze PASADENA. . The US jbiter is round the Calif spacecraft ‘AP)—} _Lunar Or- swinging round and moon, getting set for its first’ picture-taking | sweep iThursday by making sightings jof its guiding star, Canopus. U.S. space agency tracking | jexperts at the jet - propulsion ilaboratory said Tuesdav calcu | lations showed the craft was, jranging from 124 miles to 1,151 le TOFIELD, Alta. (CP)--A 22, The family stores its. daily oe ee ae surface | year-old unmarried woman. was meat ina separate freezer. Although its low _ point Is | arrested Tuesday. after her, After discovering the bodies. slightly higher “than planned ls mother Siscovered. the -bediies-o Mra. Brown tun ber: husband ithe. orbit is. satisfactory for. hs Loney he three babies in a little-used food when he arrived home from photographing an’ area on the | {timated another 300 or :so lined he corridors. | Another spectator. jumped up| right of free speech and dissent. ishouting: “This sure is a phoney | “Nothing c ould be farther Only moments before Rep. t |Joe R. Pool (Dem, Tex.) [hearing.” from the truth,” he said. lopened the hearings, a panel of | hree federal judges dissolved a “temporary restraining order | against the session issued Mon- Submariner Papp A day night by U.S. district Judge _ 4|Howard F. Corcoran. -F i E This prompted hot speeches lew ° uro e s\on the House floor by a eee protesting what they . termed cal mestrnee || MOTREAL TRA opt ett is pena with eae _.__ + |day sight “s‘a. man tentatively the ADE: 10. flight. “He ident ritted identified’ as’ Joseph Papp’ was the airline as KLM, a Huteh a passenger aboard a transat- concern | Syria Warned freezer in. the hasement of the’work at about & p.m. leastern: edie ofthe wien Thurs- |? lantic’ airliner that flew from The man boarded the fligh te mother’s home. : Mr... Brown then phoned gay. Some of these pictures wil | 13 Montreal to Amsterdam Aug. Amsterdam and ‘we presume RCMP said one of the bodies |RCMP. alg Ha anlatined [2 10. that_ he stopped at Paris,” the may have been in the freezer |) RCMP said: each off the bodies | tiurcday's photographs. ak | By Israe A> Joseph: Papp, 34a -Hungar--poli¢e, spokesman. said. - for more than three years. All was wrapped in, brawn paper. though 'primarily a test of. the | ; , lan-born Canadian, wis picked ‘CONFIRMS REPORT’ the babies were ‘a few months The bodies were removed to |oraft's camera, are expected : JERUSALEM (Renters) up Eridayspight in the harbor of Th 8 tion .of a ston at old at death |Edmonton’ Tuesday. for an a0 jnow an area out of range The Israelitcabinet met in a Brest, France, and claimed to 2)" PY Laie x y Patricia Florence Brown of 'topsy to determine cause of learth telescopes. ‘special session Tuesday to, con- have crossed the Atlantic in a ae 7 Mahine eee ee Edmonton, the woman arrested, |death. : accel sider renewed fighting. on the’ home-made submarine. Rela- | iia the train. ticket te was charged with concealing a RCMP said Patricia Brown we border with Syria. tives in Montreal ~-aid “he scatieeat - Child hady-and remanded aiworked in Edmonton They -de- MiG Fighters © A statement issued after .ine his home here Aug. 10 French police said the oaly week withoul plea after an ap- clined to identify her employer m meeting warned Syria against The RCMP -spokesman «aid paper. besides an identity card, pearance in RCMP .court in.Ed-«They said she. visited her. pa- | ‘Are Reported lrenewed provocations and said Tuesday might the tentative found on Papp when he was dis- monton: Police said she was un- ‘rents regularly during week- | Israeli. armed forces would con- identification was made by an covered in Brest harbor was @ married ends: SAIGON (AP) Two MiG-17 tinue to provide effective de-'emplovee of ‘the vir.ine Jcon- Paris-Brest. train. ticket. The charge. under section 215, Patricia’s family lives in a fighter planes: fired cahnon at fence against. any provocation. cerned. The spokesman aiso. The RCMP spokesman said © of the Criminal Code., accuses (bungalow on the southwest out- ‘four U.S. Navy. skvhawks at- Vaan save ioe de ian WG? i nye the airline. ticket. purchased by her of* placing a child's body iskirts of this: farming com- tacking a train 70 miles south | lighter lanes were shot down g Papp was bough in April ot In'a freezer with intent’ to con- munity of 1,200 ‘people. The of Hanoi, the North’ Vietna- | ny) ne a thee hour ‘batrie. in the \ 'this vean.” ceal the fact that she had been house is about one. quarter mile’ mese capital. Monday. ‘of Galilee atea Monday. | INSIDE TODAY Asked wehther the RCMP was delivered of the - child north of Highway 14, which runs’ The slower Skyhawks took leeria Or aue to have destroyed tilaual investigating the whole matter Police said) Mrs. Earl Brown (to Topfield from Edmonton, 35 evasive action and escaped un- Ithree Israeli. patrol boats island mews .....1....... 2 of Mr. Papp and the submarine discovered the bodies at 6: 30 |miles to.the northwest. harmed, U.S. officiais said here. I Hamas SOIR OE sonte sees: : he spoke of, the police spokes p.m. Monday when she went| Mr. Brown operates his own| In the, ground war in South it ied eared aa ae mier | Ee ct 3 man. said only “we were inter.. down thé basement: to “clean™the- trucking” business from the |Viet Nam, U.S. air cavalrymen | aa hl SAN cs ant rahim |” Editorials ............... 4 ested hecause of a request from freezer ‘ oe : oo S teed Senne: Sees a aiavieta. seid hia oii s ‘wilt |: pe! en wey E ; the department of external: at. The freezer was used’ prim- |« Patricia’ has a teen e (for a North Vietnamese = bat- 7. : ae Ca 7 ts ; fairs.” “arily to store game shot by Mr.\brother and. a teen-age sister at talion that gave up mountain CENTENNIAL STAGE IN VALLEY a Lange Be : ilintibsbiele § Finance, markets “ In Paris, a Canadian em- Brown. Access to the. basement ‘home: positions it held three days. : ee ee fs y Spert are aa is bassy official said Papp will: he ifs difficult, through a trapdoor. Mrs. Brown works at a real American losses included, the The BC. Centennial: stage- inte the Fraser River Valley interior gold capital of RBar- ‘but will reply 10 each*Israeli ag | ’ onal bere teh A 0 liesued: witha Hew passport a “land, down— sfeep.stairs, police jestate and insurance ae in To--\crews of two helicopters de | roach, a replica of the rigs us, community of Langley. The kerville te Victoria gression mercilessly . .. what- “Classified . 1H. 12, 18., 14 AR embassy toniay: 5 said. field. \stroyed Monday. | ed im gold rush days, wheels coach is on a run from the old (CP Wireghote) ‘ever the eost.” ' ‘MORE yoo ® < i ¥ epee ge ce *