If it's Good to; The island The Guardian is For it von. Lxxvn. N0. 202 WAYNE AND suusrea ARRIVE IN cm! Comedy h king in Charlotte- of “Wayne and Shuster in “Fathers Memorial Foundat- town as Wayne and Shuster. Canada's renowned humorists. begin a two-week stand at Confederation Centre Theatre tonight. e com y along with a member of the star-studded supporting cast Charlottetown". Corinne Con- ley. are seen following their arrival Saturday evening at the Charlottetown Airport. Left to right are John Wayne. Frank Shuster. Miss Conley and Mavor Moore. artistic director of the Confederation who @nnrdlinn “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1964. The cast of almost 30 was greeted at the airport by a welcoming party which included Dr. Frank MacKin- non. the team ‘ 5' around the Charlottetown Driv- ing Park W as a windup to Old Home eek. Beatles Flee Vancouver Stage Alter Wild 29-Minute Display By WALTER HAYES VANCOUVER (CPi—This city won't soon forget the Beatles. The quartet of singers spent less than six hours here Satur. day/«exactly 29 minutes of it on stage—and left behind several injured youngsters and scores in hysterics. The Beatles‘ appearance be- fore 20,000 at Empire Stadium was pinched into a day that be- gan in Seattle and ended in Los Allgeles. Thousands more youngsters lined up for a glimpse of the singer‘s entering their downtown hotel. bllf. the entire served for them was never oc- cupied because they arrived here late. - Tension which built up during the day exploded when the qual- tel, their long hair flapping. ran 0" stage about 9:15pm. i The audience stood up as one. The screaming and squealing drowned out the singers as they moved into their performance. DEAFENING ROAR The first song ended in a deal ening roar an many of the spectators in seats on the field began to press toward the stage. separated from them by four rows of steel fencing and about two dozen policemen. The Beatles started another song and the audience picked up the pace. The performers could barely be heard. Each ime they shook their shaggy heads the response was car splitting. Meanwhile, azout 500 non-pay- ing fans outside stormed a to foot wooden gate. Policemen and Pacific National Exhibition Hurricane Aims Blow At Dominican Republic SANTO . DOMINGO (AP)— Hurricane Cleo churned across the, Caribbean Sunday toward the sugar and coffee heartland of the Dominican Republic. The island nation went on the alert for a storm on the southern coast Sunday night. _Cleo's Ill-mile-an-hour centre Wind! thradiod a Navy hurricane hunter plane about 100 miles off the aoutfa coast at Puerto Rico. .acndlng it limping home wt one engine and two Wins tanks gone. a battered Wine and seven slightly injured HEW mcmbota. The course of the hurricane in for the southwest of Santa Dom'ligO. respectively. , The weather bureau at San Juan. _.. p. .. lic to pletion of Precautionary so . in the Dominican Republic. mm was re can Ind civil defence and Red 0 units he alert. the population to. remain in- doors Gala- of 40 miles an hour he- lln lashing the southern coast workers put their shoulders against the other side. Both groups backed off when it appeared certain the gala would collapse. Groundsman shored it up with lumber, More youths scaled a fence topped by three strands of barbed wire. One youth became tangled momentarily and was swatted from the fence by a ' m-toting policeman. Unable to see, but teased by bits and pieces of the, Beacic music that filtered through. the group outside lunged again. this time toppling one section of the gate 0 them. No one was hurt. About 25 policemen rushed to- ward the opening and one tossed a boy bodily back through. How- ever. about a' half dozen yottmI sters got in free. Later the group moved to an other fence and successfully smashed it down, but no one was able to enter. PINNED AGAINST FENCE The surge on the field toward the stage pinned man young- 3 a g a in st a restraining ster f Screaming and crying ence. 1. girls were carried by first-aid ' workers to a- stadium concourse. One girl, her knees black from crawling on the ground, sat cry~ Cleo missed Puerto Rico by ing on a bench with a number. about 100 miles to the south of other girls. Most had lost Sunday after pounding tie French island of Guadeloupe Saturday night with 93-mile-an-. Thirteen persons. hour winds. ware reported killed and 40 in- i l m . lured on Guadeloupe. Abou v M I" 1.000 families were homeless in Basso Terra. officials there said. their shoes. Several more lay prone on the cold concrete floor in a state of hysteria. Suddenly. one girl. sobbing mped from the bench and started out scream. ing “Ringo. .Rlngo. . . ." A po- (Conttnued on page 5 col. 3) "mug" SEVEN CENTS WEATHER Overcast with intermittent rain: winds southeast 15. Low-high 55 and 65. 12 PAGES Rio’ring Saigon Students Demand President Quit Veteran Actor l ' ’ ‘ time Provinces by as much as ' lndlan Joe Dles 1 750,000. which would be a dis- astrous blow to our harassed livestock industry.‘ HOLLYWOOD tAPl--Veteran actor Charles Stevens. 3 grand- Given 0n Feed Rates ympathetic Hearing The Canadian Federation of‘ Agriculture receiv very sympathetic hearing from Hon. Maurice Sauve n a protest lodged with the federal cabinet over the proposed Sep. change in the feed grain freight assistance policy. Smith Mac- Fariane of Harrington aa ldi over the weekend. He returned‘ know that the users of feed grains in the Maritime Provin-. ces will be anxiously waiting for a statement from Mr. Sauve. this week." ‘ A statement presented to Mr. Sauve from tile Canadian Federation of Agriculture,: which represents Ontario. ‘ bec and the Maritime Provinc- Saturday from Ottawa where es said: the Federation met Mr. Sauve. Resolved that the Eastern minister of forestry Friday. The. Agricultural Conference en- dorse the presentation of the. Maritime Federation of Agri-’ culture. noting that this presen- ed to go into effect Sept. 1. will ‘ tation pinpoints certain appar- make water rates the basis'cnt inequities that are present rather than rail. for assistance. l 3‘50 whom? 71‘935 andfllhali ‘ e .as em on erence "more than 40 per cent of our.- an'lounced.'menm pom-V l” 1m p 0 r t s are mmst andy freight. asSistance on feed grains screenings and the only mgica] be not implemented until these . inequities can be adjusted: way to move .mem is .by mu’ ’ 2. The Conference urges that “Our technical advisers Fen a feed rains it enc be a as th at in their opinion the pointed flit-mu. 51613;. p" changes could result in a low-1; _ The Conference submits. ering of assistance to the Mari- that one of the permanent nh_ jectives of this agency should the a study leading to equalizer. “lreaflydion of feed freight costs at a 1m‘nimu level for livestock "I land poultry feeders in Canada. feed grain policy comes under. his department. ‘ The policy. which is schedul-i Mr. MacFarlane said son of the famed Apache chief Geronimo. died Saturday. He l l was 71. l l Stevens, known to Hollywood ‘5 l for many years as Indian Joe. had been in pictures since 1941 when the. late Douglas Fail"- .. Sr.. gave him his first role. He was in every mOVle Fairbanks made after that. ’ Known by face to millionsl a d by name to~fcw. Stcvensl lasted through silents. ialkics. it worked regularly on tele- vision. He mostly played Indians but, as he once sai ' “ managed to play a few Eskimos. Orien- tal: and Mexicans in my time. Isq... An expert on Indian lore. he was the son of a white Indianl scout and a daughter of Geron ‘ imo. Besides the Fairbanks films. he was in such movies as The Vanishing Americaiil the Virginian. and the Adven-‘ tures of Dr. Fu Manchu. His last movie-in which ‘iet played an ndian —-- was Ser geants Three. with Frank Sin atra. 5" A! 3 3: II D 5 Accidents Claim Total Of 6 Lives Sixteen-year-old Robert New era of Hartland died in hospital Six persons died in accidents! lin Wood ' in the Atlantic Provinces dur- stock Sunday morning mg "m wwkend" _ [He was injured Saturday night Newfoundland, Nova Scotla‘when the ca,- he was driving] and New Brunswick each re» left the road on a turn near- ported two deaths while Prince’hartland. Lawrence MacDonald. Edward Island was fatality-46, a resident of the Newcastle; “'99- area died Saturday when his} n Nova Scotia. Mrs. Percy car 'waa involved in a collisionl Fricker, 64, of Glace Bay drown- 4 ed in the harbor near her home In Newfoundland, 17~_vear-oldl when she apparently fell from Howard Douglas Skiffington diedj wharf. after he was struck by a car‘i Donald Etheridge. 46. of North near his Musgravetown home: East Margaree. N.S. died after late Saturday night. . he was struck by a Harm. 28. died afteri highway about a mile apparently being struck by a: train near Port Biandford. His; body was found beside the tracks .Saturday. it car on from his 3 Traffic accidents claimed both lives in New Brunswick. Atlantic ganlzation. CORNER BROOK tCPl—Dr. A. F. Laidlaw. executive direc- tor of the Co-Operative Union .of Canada, said Saturday the At- lantic region has a deep and im grained opposition to desirable and advantageous forms of so-l Is Seen In Co-Operaiion Provinces Lag Stan’s University at Charlotte town said the Structure and con cept of the parish has not kept pace with the development or try," in which the Atlantic prov- inces should be leading the world. frequenin supports the poorest sector of the popula. with a truck. to" Fresh Act By JOHN '1'. WHEELER SAIGON tAPt —— A student 'mob. howling for President Khanh's ousrer and spurred by a sudden monsoon downpour. surged into the government ra idio station Sunday. furniture and windows torn-down barricades. Leaders of the rioting stu dents threatened they will burn down the information ministry ltoday unless their demands for civilian rule in South Viet Now are met. At the University Students Union leaders charged the stu dents were extremists and that the majority of Saigon student; with WENDELL BEATON Auctioneer Dies At 70 did not support them The death occurred Saturday The Stildi‘nls massed 8‘ the morning in the Prince Edward radio station after an anti-gov island Hospital of Wendell H. ernmcnt rally to demand a re Beaton, well known Charlotte-‘traction for a broadcast that town auctioneer, in his 715t said a group of students who ‘ t with Khanh Saturday Mr. Brawn who operatedizgreedy'it‘h his explanation auction rooms and a second- ’5 reg'mespmc‘es' hand furniture business at 80 REFUSED. To MEET Grafton Street. was a veteran The station‘s director refused of World War One. and for most to me“ them in the Streel of his adult life took a very ac- the monsoon dOWHPOBT iive interest in civic politics. Struck and 50 did “‘9 “Udell” narrmed police and military personnel obviously were under orders not to bloc the tu At one time he served as a member of the city council as the representative of Ward 3. r. .Bealton was very prom- ent . t m we affairs connected» At the rally earlier. student: with em. branch of the Can- i heard “Pumlmm °‘ Khm‘" adian Cancer Society. and was new preSldentlal regime and its one of the main driving forces 1 U‘s' support in the various campaigns stag-l StUdem leaders demanlied ‘ ed in aid of that organization. )“ram’lng “‘9 consutuuo" For his unming work withithat Khanh promulgated last the society he was honored by‘sunday When “9 "‘0 ed from being made a life member oppremier to president_ The slip the Canadian Cancer Society indents also demanded a porn ‘Scptember 1962. ilarly elected civilian govern He was a keen sportsman and z t ngiufgxi; Vifiteeliiilign. with . . . . "3° tive member of the organize-lhls government aimed m 1'" tion carrying out harness races Store 90pm“; elem?“ but 1"." ice during the wimen ‘now it was impractical because I ' _ . got the war against the Commu‘ Survrvrng are his_\vife, .thegnist Viet Cong. former Margaret helly; tiiree LACK REsoURCEs bm'hersi L~T~ 393mm Bon'l Khanh said the nation's poltt Shaw; James and Harry, smashliii. " leaders Threatening ion Today isources to carry our campaigna and so Communists could easily ‘take over public offices. ‘ The students came away. say ;1 ing they were dissatisfied. I Meanwhile, Buddhists an nounced formation of a new movement to save their religion . and declared their followers are lready to rise if tyranny returna to South Viet Nam. In a statement released at it mass prayer meeting. Buddhist leaders said they would support e “government Nguyen Khanh if it really respects free dom and democracy. including freedom of religion." However. Thich Ho Giac. dep uty secretary of the. committee for secular affairs, told the crowd: "In a minute we can change our minds. our program. our ideals and the government. If there are old trees and dead es we have to change them. ’ This was an apparent refer erence to the Khanh govern- ent. Buddhist leaders, however called off a scheduled all-night prayer meeting. saying too many had shown up and that they were afraid the meeting might be exploited. The Movement for Salvation of Buddhist in Danger is sim- ilar to The League for Salvation of Buddhism which became the key organization in the Bird- dhist fight to topple the regime of Ngo Dinh Diem last Novem be. . OPPOSITION MUSHROOMS Student and Buddhist oppo- sition to Khanh's government been mushrooming for I Week. In the style of the Buddhist fire suicides in protest of the Ngo Dinh Diem regime last yyear. a 53-year-old man told ill! daughter early Sunday he was angry at the Khanh regime and set himself afire in a street near the Saigon airport. He was rushed to a hospital with severe burns. To" I t 31 art" ' ' onto, and two sisters, A nnie,l c p lea melted financml N Mrs. Darrach. Char-r lottelown. and Blanche. Mrs. Hugh MacKenzie. Charlotte- y town. His first wife. the former‘ Nessie Graham of Quincy. Mass. predeceased him. Veteran Wins Skippers Race CASTINE. M .. (AP)~Capt. By RUSSELL pEDEN besrer Young of Camden. the,. NICOSIA (Cpl—The special oldest entrant at 84 and sailin. . United Nations “Den. force," e smallest boat. won the 13th .1, m o b 1 i e armored race SUNdaY- ldian, flexed its muscles for the Capt. Young brought the 23 third consecutive day Saturday {mt sloop Cygnus n across a“ A With an hour-long parade along “on. 'm'ety' lfinish line with a 15-minute “The green “"9 belween wanting J. Eldon Green, of the Sociol- Mr. Green said this has ledge ‘on the next campmtm' Creek and Turkish - Cypriots ogy department at St. Dun (Continued on page 3 col. 5) her . cialization. Speaking during the weekend‘ conference of the Atlantic rc-l gional social life conference, he said socialization is not some- thing “we can choose or rcjcc., . but something we live witht from the day we are born ling til we die." ‘ Dr. Laidiaw said the people of the Atlantic region fail lol take sufficient advantage or ‘ useful and obvious forms of or such as credit ons and cit-operatives and pro grams such as public housing. e was an unconscious but strong tendency to old-fashioned individualism that is not good for the region He said the population in the region is below tional average emigra- tion takes a greater toll. The. four provinces have a higher percentage of native born than any other region of Canada re- ceiving only a trickle of the post-war immigration that has helped build up other provinces. notably Ontario. TENN TO BE RURAL growth the on Dr. Laidla'w said the Atlanta~ ‘ region tends to be more rurall than the rest of the country. The average income is lower. uncm- ploymeiit is higher and there .5 a srnnller share of public owner- ahip of public utilities. Prince Edward Island. with organized in Canada and to.» several millions of dollars an~ have the least to say about aet- ting prices. Similarly in Newfoundland. the "very Ming indul- un-l r l i i ' r they feared that President John- a . i.» S "‘ lg This cat has no inhibition. chow at Toronto. about showing how happy it Persian. feels after winning the All Club of Wineta is owned Breed competition in the Oa- Frank Jeffries oi Streeisvil nadian National Exhibition cot M ti ; A cream Stoneybrook Uiica by le. but only the judges spotted it because of fog. Young is a veteran of coastal sailing and Bermuda racing. The race distance varied from Force commander Maj. John ‘Bcament of Ottawa. an officer in the Royal Canadian Dra- l goons. led the parade in a jeep ‘ which bore the insignias of Can- 12 to 14 miles. depending on ‘ ada, Denmark and Finland. the handicaps. The 12 competing three countries whose skippers ranged in age from 65 Were involved. to 84. ' . ore than ISO iilen partici- . . a V infantry, annual Mame PetITEd Skipper sgroup commanded by a Cana-i troops . Cyprus ‘Delta Force' Flexes Muscles Again ipatcd in the “show of force" ‘and later at an exercise at a Finnish camp on the outskirts of Nicosia. Both Cypriot factions got a look at the Delta force as ar- . mored columns wit-h motorcycle lescorts wound through the .walled city and the northern lsuburb of Tralo'ionas in stifling lmid-day heat that reached al- most 100 degrees. In the. column were four Fer- ret scout cars of the Royal Canadian Dragoons. four Danish scout cars. 10 “pjgs"—- armored personnel carriers -— carrying Finnish troops at! ‘twn recoiiicss anti - tank rifles lmounted on jeeps. FLOOR FIGHT FlEARED ATLANTIC CITY (APl — sions, this was the situation on Swelling Democratic r a n k a the convention scene: were worried about snirthei'nl par. of the Alabama don,“ ' delegates Sunday on the eve of ; m," Manned m W“. {Dr their their national convention and gsfgregationis| governor. George .C. Wallace. for the presidential 1nomination even though acced- {ing to his request that his name- son may be denied a unanimous vote for the presidential nomi- nallon- I ,‘not be placed in nomination. Southern delegations we re 7hr... planned in. mm 15‘ [micsh called to a combined caucus. . lthey were thrown our of the The convention creden- tials committee was summoned ‘wnik into session earlier to decideEdowm whether to recommend the sear ' iNSlDE TODAY out. or were gavelleo‘ ing of all. part, or none of the Alabama and Mississippi con~ tingents The possibility of a floor figiil l and a ossible wpykom hu Births. deaths ...... I. II on the ofifcome. n“: Classified . . . . . . . . . . .. 10, H The Southern session was on; Comics s and off. on and off. It was can-' 8”” “v ‘2 celled finally “v11?” about 3" "W Women s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 6 pie turned up, whereas 300 m. Editorials .. . . . . . . . . .. C ‘so had been expected at one Kings. Queens. City 3 .nt. ; Summer-side . 8 In advance of cum“, “my Prince C __ g on and deflated-making am... i Democrats Are Worried Over Southern Delegates Platform (trailers hammered together planks on defence and foreign policy but had more trouble figuring out what to say ion domestic qUCSIlOns -- civil lriglits among them. l Negro leaders starting a giant civil rights rally billed as one let their speakers Senator Hir- bcrt H. Humphrey of Minne- lsota, who will accept a call to loom-ominn first. or decided to it» Johnmn‘s running mate but ‘docsn’t know whether it will lCOmP. The president said Saturday ‘in Washington he still had new leral persons under considera- tion but would make up his .mind early this week. He still ‘could wait unii after be him. self is nominated for the pi‘fai- dcncy Wednesday night. This last day before the con vention opening was the big on. y for delegates to dawned on t ‘ seaside resort. and what it bills ‘as the world's biggest conven- ; tion lid. \.‘ I . t .l t l .l