4 ad and ca os if It’s Good Foi -_ The Guardian Is. For it a VOL. LXXIX NO. 188 The Ilan =) 7 Authorized as Second Class : Ottawa-and for payment. ef i ct. Mall br°the Fa ALBERTON EXHIBITION | - VeteranJudge Is Pleased es! p With Quality Of Animals sy ALBERTON BDREAU ‘the best progeny of dam and the ion male and Mrs. Gamble the reserve champion. The O'Leary | Farmers..Co-Op_.special.prize_for | Judge Guy Rodd expressed the grand champion female went to! opinion that some excellent cows Mr. Gamble; The reserve cham- | were shown in the Guernsey pion was shown-by Mr. Barrett. Barrett showed the best average, the. younger cows were junior and senior herds, the best of the best OF THE GUARDIAN _.._During_the second day_of Al- berton’s Prince County Exhthi- ta interest. centred on the judg- ime of horses ‘and ponies, and d-stry._caitle. Veteran forse judge, George Kitson, was pleas- ed with ‘the quality’ of. horses shown @fouch they were few in numbe: Freda’; Ramsay received. the award -+6r best. horse. in the show. He alse received a special *™ ; J prize forthe best progeny of Smalinian. showed the best jun- ion. male, the dam in-the draft horse class ee nerd: eer ae farm ck ae : = showed " grand champions eaigneveve, = MacAuslant £6 gd beth reserve champion’. the best roadster. Prize winners in best senior herd, th» best group the -ponyclasses were Robert E. rea Campbell and Son, Gordon = proces y-of oan eee the Campbell: Douglas and Colleen - i pore On. * Hayes, Brian Dewar and. Rich- ard Gallant HOLSTEINS “ The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Rose Bowl, offer- ed for the best three dairy fe- :_ males_of the show, was award- ed to Elmer K. Smith of Free- town. well known exhibitor of Holsteins ae Judge Attison -Profitt—-stated that he was greatly impressed by the excellent quality of the Holsteins shawn 5 The was man grand champion” male shown: by Arnold Small- the reserve champion by - Clow Brothers The O'Leary. Farmers Co-Op special prize for the grand champion female went to Elmer K. Smith The reserve champ- pion was shown hy Erskine Forbes and son. Clow Brothers showed the best junior herd. El shown -by Sanford Phillips. — -mer K. Smith showed the best senior herd. the best group of. three and the best get of sire. .GUERNSEYS best two females on ROP. class but he doubted if, on the of the same calibre as the older ones. % The Maiden Hill farm from Kensington captured most of the awards. Elwood Sma'!man was excellent quality; Herman Small- the. second largest exhibitor. Mr. man _ showed ‘the grand champ- grand champion landrace ~ class, AYBSHIRES “Edinund Bernard, lames mer, and Tom Henderson Son were the only exiib: ‘Ayrshirés.. Mr. Sernazrdwon-the O'Leary Co-Op special for his grand champion female. He. also showed the best juntor and sen- ior herds, the best group of three and the best progety of dam, Mr. Palmer; showed the best get of-sire and won-a-niimber_of firsts for individual animals: The. Hendersons' won a. number of second and third prizes : “Judge Don Wood had words*ol commendation for th Bernard herd and expressed tie opinion that the quality of animals exhi- bited in the Ayrshire class*show- ed considerable) -impro.ement over last year. JERSEY : : There were only two animals entered in the Jersey class, both Pal- and ws Alden Gamble and: Keith: Bar- rett_ were.the niaim exhibitors of dual: purpose_ shorthorns. Mr. Arnold) Smaliman exhibited aaa ~ 4 ths Jean-Claude —faca?- Roy (left), and Jacques (Sonny) Coe. both being-held in Mon- treal’s Bordeaux Jail _in_ con- WITNESSES -into-the death of a Montreal Barrett owns the grafid champ: | The. best pen of four market nots oe Ay woman. The discovery of her * body in a shallow-lime-filled grave 75 miles north of Mon- nection with a robbery, will “treal_was_linked—by~ police to at a week be the main witnesses coroner's inquest next Chairman's a Montreal ‘‘killers-for-hire”’ ring. thy Mr. group of three, the best get sire (3 animals) and two females on ROP. Swine shown this -year were of female the and the best senior herd. in The best sow under.18 months, with litter; was shown’ by months, with by Lloyd Sharp. Hillard Pridham showed “ the the Frank Bryan af showed the grand champion best progeny: of -dam. In Yorkshire class male and Louis Dunn the grand champion female. The best bacon hogs - were shown by Aubrey Pridham. and Robert E: progeny of dam was shown by Hillard» Pridham. First prize for the best bacon hog shown bya boy-or girl was awarded to Aubrey Pridham. SHEEP °* a f The number of sheep. entries was decreased this year-due, it is believed, to the fact that a number of breeders are going © out of business. When queries as to the.reason for: this man attributed it to the. difficul- ty of fencing and. the worrying of flocks by dogs. First prizes for flocks pwere awardéd to Syl- +vere-F. Arsenault for Chevicts, to Edwin Hansen for Suffolks; to Edmund Bernard in the section for Oxfords and’ Shropshires. lambs was shown by Horace 0° - | Brien who also showed the best ‘pen of two market lambs. The MacAuslapd Woollen Mill \.prize for the best flock of sheep was won by Edmund Bernard. ‘ (POULTRY ~ = "| The best adult breeding pen of S-<fight’ sussex poultry ‘vas shown by Chester Adams and of Sar ‘red Recks by _Royden Stetson. . {Ewen Stetson and Mrs. Heber i\Gamble were the only exhibitors iof New Hampshire Reds. In the Leghorn class ihe best iby Mrs. Lloyd Sharpe: In crossbreeds the best hen, was shown by Mrs. Lloyd Bar- Brendan Wallace and Son. Prizes for bantams were won Heather — MacWiliams——fer cock: by Raeburn Dunn for hen, by Heather MacWilliams fot cockerel and by Mrs. Ivan Bow- ness for Pullet. The best pair $f geese tinder one year was shown by Archie ‘Continued on page 3, col. 1) Reportlssued OnCNR Wage Deadlock OTTAWA (CP! A -major wage dispute that threatens. to halt the nation’s” railways passed last. legal hurdle ‘Thursday and now drops into the lap of the federal for..a final solution. , A ‘conciliation board | chair- man’s report was issued on‘ the contract .deadiock bhetween the CNR-and-24-00-members_of_ the tts Canadian Brotherhood of Ratl- way. Transport and General Workers. It turned down the union's de- -thand for an immediate %-cent hourly pay boost and suggested 40 cents spread over two years CBRT President William’ J. Smith of Ottawa promptly re- jected the proposal as “totally unrealistic in the licht of ‘he so- cial and economic climate that exists today... His members now average $2.13 an hour. The CNR declined immediate comment. .. CAN LEGALLY STRIKE Mr. Smith has called a meet- inz of CBRT. leaders real next Wednesday to discuss “ strike action which already has been approved. by union mnem- hers. he union could legally strike at midnight next .Wednes- day but is expected to wait for other rail unian groups to com- plete their pre-strike proced- ures ‘ The creport by Mr Justice 3.C. A. Cameron of Ottawa cop fed almost exactly the decisions given last month by Mr. slustice Craic’ Munroe vol Vanéoliver in a conciliation répor Rroiving about. 77.000 other non-onerating workers on all railways * In the Munroe case, 1 17 unions unanimously rejected the report " a strike vote which ls fo ap amaptated hy Aug: 22 These unions. had demanded taises ranging from 95. cents an hour for clerks to more than $1 In skilled trades ‘The two conciliation board chairmen proposed tojal wage increases of 18 per cent in four in Mont.) stages: four per: cent retroact- ive to. last Jan. 1; four per cent retroactive to July 1; another four per cent next Jan. 1 and six per cent next July 1. This cabinet=sworks out to 40 cents an hour for the CBRT; 40-43 cents for the others. i In both cases’union and man- agement nominees to the boards filedminority reports, the —un- ion man calling for higher in- egeases and the railway repre- sentative for lInwer ones. But the reports of the chairmen will form the main basis for cabinet consideration. The so-called ‘‘non-ops" are those workers who do not actu- ally operate trains but handle such supporting tasks” as shop repairs, track maintenance, ON OCEAN FLOOR. clerical work, telegraphy, loading and the like. Taken as a single group, their pay rates now average $2.22 an ‘hour. : All. non-op unions now are ;working on a joint strike dead- jline, probably in the period be- tween Sept. 1-6. They hoped to be joined by the Brotherhood of ;Railroad.Trainmen, _represent- ing 20,900 train conductors and brakemen, which is awaiting a report from its own conciliation board If strike starts—and just about everyone in the. labor movement expects it will—the cabinet likely will call a spe- cial session of Parliament to force a settlement through com- pulsory arbitration: car- } ' } | NOME. Alaska (AP) The lute” of -a_ soft. vellow metal which once transformed. placid iNome into’ a ftusty, shooting-a- night »Soomtown again is draw- ing prospectors to the shores of Norton Sound Early this century. thousands of ragged. brawling prospectors scuttled ‘over the black sand beaches and rolling hills outside Nome in a frantic search for gold. My : ‘Some found it: others died trying. Bat. for most of them’ it \was a back-breaking exercise in futility. . ‘ The ‘new breed is different. | They’ are” scientists? and thetr search for gold has taken them ‘imto’ a new field; the ocean ftoor-: “While there has been some work along this line in diamond exploration off the African Y New Breed Of Proswectors _ Are Searching For Gold coast, it's a relatively new con- cept in mining, with a host of problems — still to out,” said James imthes and minerals In Nome's heydey, prospect- jors found. the greatest bonanza on three heachlines, where gold jand > gold hearing ‘sands had ibeen washed from the surround. | jing hills.~One of these concen- trations, called paystreaks, was at the water's edge, the fabled \distance inland, where land up- heavals or. receding shoreline jhad: left them high and diy. |_ ‘Since those varly idays,” Williams” said, “‘geolo- gists: And prospectors have _al- ‘ways felt thére ‘must be concen- itrations of gold or gold-bearing sands below ‘the | sifrface iNorton Sound,” IFS of three, the best get of sire, the Bryan, and the best sow over 18 litter, was shown Campbell.— The— best~ one, Indonesi With ce Edward Island Like The Dew” 3S ‘ ALWITETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1966. a Ma ae la a. TRA NOT MORE es WEATHER chance of thundersh night. Low. high, 60 N ‘ Mostly cloudy scattered showers and a neh owers, clearing to - 45. + “12 PAGES ~ Peace Sd McGuigan \s Chosen “SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) Lorne McGuigan jhigh school teacher, idate in the Sept. 12 Saint Jobn city provincial byelection. |. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ac, Wise, the best pullet by Ewen itmmett McGuigan. of 5 Windsor Stetson and the best cockerel by street, Charlottetown and is a graduate of St. Dunstan's Uni- NOP Sity ~ Mr. McGuigan, president of jthe New Brunswick Young Pro- igressive Conservatives, .won ielear majority over. £.A. White- bo: irman of Simonds Par- ish Councillors, at a PG nomir- ating convention here. > | Atlantic Provinces Regional \Director of the young PCs, Mr. McGuigan promised a stiff fight in the byelection, “We can win — win on Sept. and we. will ment spends in: this campaign,” hecadid FE fill a vacancy created by the re- 4signation in January of Daniel A. \Rilevy, lands and mines minister jat the time in Premier Louis J. Robichaud’s Liberal Govern jment. | The New Democratic party has named Gilbert Soucy, 26, busin- ess agent for local 502 @ the In- ternational Brotherhood of Elec- \trical Workers, as its candidate. |The Liberal party has scheduled | | lits nominating convention — for next Wednesday: | Present house standings: LI- \berals 30. progressive conserva- tives 20, vacant 2.00 ‘Armed Forces Are Depleted By DAVE McINTOSH | OTTAWA +(CPS—The strength of the armed forces sagged’ to 106.186 at the end of June, a loss’ of 920. servicemen in two months. alee ; The defence department said Thursday that at Jime 30; lat- est date for which figures are lavailable, the strength of the \Navy was 18,182, of the Army be . worked /43.330 and of the RCAF 44,674. | A. Williams, | idirector of the state division of The ‘oss since April |been 193 in the Navy, 394 in the |Army and. 333 in the RCAF The strength has continued tojat its roots through: carefully decline despite. slightly im- jeontrolled growth j Thursday” money » hen was shown by. Brendan Wal- | night-was-chosen-as the Progres- | jlace and Son ahd the best cock sive Conservative pariy candi- 30 has | THE: GRAND Chanipion: Hol- | stein. male. was shown by a Arnold on the concluding day- of the Smallman of Knutsford’ terday at Alberton. The reserve champion went to Clow Broth- __Prince- .County- Exhibition. yes- ers. Ae : a ox /mesia Pledge JAKARTA (Reuters) Indo- Thursday. ended three | years of undeclared war against Malaysia and pledged itself to keep the peace with: the federa- | tion it once set out to crush. j | A peace treaty restoring re- | Hations .between_ the two coun-.; tries was: signed here hy Ma- \laysian’-Deputy Premier Tun Abdul “Razak - and “Indonesian Foreign: Minister Adam Malik. The Malaysian leader after- ward interrupted his official |program: to play a round of golf |with .fndonesian strongman, :Gen. Suharto. : Malik said ; after the cere- mony. Indonesia _and_—Malaysia+ had opehed a new and clean? jpage in their history: No one) was the victor and no one the vanquished, and the. agreement | proved -that Asian _ problems | could be ‘solved by Asians, hé'! said. sa ‘}CALLED CONFRONTATION . Indonesia- had called the un- declared. war-—mainly a’_hitter campaign in the jungles of Bor- neo that cost about 700 lives— “confrontation.” It_ was | LONDON _(CP)=The chancel- lor 4f gentle plea Thursday for British public to the | to | treasury. |. Chancellor. James said in a press release that in- vestments inthe various forms of government - run Savings |plan ‘‘would be a-perfect way | }penditure.”* ~~~ | |Spate of contributions to the nomic woes. : | Callaghan said cash. contribu- | jtions are still coming in “from | |individuals who wish to make a | |gesture of self-sacrifice.” i |. Mary Manuel, a retired! ischoolteacher in Newcastle 12, no matter Upon Tyne, sent £64 ($192)—a flood of similar donations. how much money the govern- Pound for every year of her life Widower George Parr, 94, ,—with a note saying she could —not_sleep—at—night—because of | : The byelection was called to worry about the country’s (reasury said Thursday debts. ; ! exchequer made a 3 invest in na- | tional savings schemes, without | < — {altogether discouraging those a 30-year old|who just want to-give some © the hard - pressed | © jto identify oneself with the coun-| %& try’s need for Testraint’ in” ex- | His statement followed a. ltreasury from citizens con- | jcerned about Britain's eco- | Chancellor Of Excheque 1) LINSUI Makes Plea To The Public ByPC Party \ - from numerous people, “old and young. : Workers have sent :-man_ asked that some how much =~ be deducted *|from his weekly pay. Callaghan... MR. CALLAGHAN Her gesture started a small . | the | Callaghan said only that “‘these | gifts are best | spontaneous | Without turning his | outright _an_investment in national sav- ‘ings schemes. f jis calculated at ($91,350,000,000), and a treasury igs spokesman’ admitted that a “don't thousand pounds.” Callaghan said: most= of those who contributed have suggested ‘that he encourage an organized }appeal for contributions. “With heroic . restraint, given treasurty’s predicament, when they are and_ voluntary. hose up at “suggested” gifts, he debt in Britain £30, 450,000,000 The_ national 1 the contributions amount 1 to date to even a few launched in January, . 1963, by |President Sukarno. | He-had claimed the federa- jtion of Malaysia, linking former ~|British territories and formally ‘jset up the following September, |day by. West Germany that the was a neo-colonialist structure | that had to be crushed.” ~~ | Moves came after Sukarno handed ‘military following the unsuc- cessful. pro = Communist coup. JS. Co | WASHINGTON: (AP) — “The |merce committee defeated a |\proposal* Thursday for govern- Is Made To Keep Peace. The pact said the two sides agreed to end hostilities and es tablish. diplomatic relations tm mediately. Malaysia, -it also de- clared,—agreed—to—give—itsRor- neo territories of Sarawak and Sabah—-the..chance.te—-reaffirm as soon as possible their post- tion in the: Malaysian federation through independence and-dem- ocratic elections. Tun Razak said general elec- tions would be held in Sabah ‘and Sarawak next: year. West German Ambassador _Is Summoned NEW -DELHI (Reuters)—The West India, Baron Dietrich von ‘Mir- bach. was summoned :to the ex- ternal affairs ministry Thurs- day part in the transfer of 99 Cana- diap. tan. official sources said. skeptical of a statement Tues- bought from Canada im 1957 and to end confrontation later ‘sold to Iran, “were sent by jIran to Pakistan -for- repairs. jover executive powers to- the| The officials claim_ Pakistan | was unable, owing to the United States arms embargo, to obtain along |Artmy commander Suharto de-|spares for its own Sabre jets [sums representing recent wage Cided it was ruining Indonesia damaged in the Indo-Pakistan- : increases. they have — received, ‘economically. ‘| One Eee ms |money — the treasury wouldn't | | say |war last September. mmittee Defeats Proposal Divisions: within ‘the commit: »| House of Representatives com-|tee on the hack-to-work legisla- tion, doubly sensitive in a’ year when all House seats are up for | ment seizure of five U.S. air: jelection, broke out into the open The committee then. went ahead chanics back to work. Chairman Harley O. Staggers (Dem. W.Va.) said *the. commit- tee expects to approve a bill to- day and send it to the House. Political Pugilists Leave The Ring Today - By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (CP) Britain's _ political pugilists leave the par- liamentary ring today for a be- lated summer rest after a W- week first round that has left the Labor government batteréd and somewhat bowed. Prime Minister Wilson, per- sistent in his use of activity as “a weapon against adversity, has offered a diverting huffle of! top cabinet personalities to give Parliament's adjournment an up-beat touch of the old Wilson- iam dynamics, ' But the government's _ job- trading. Wednesday night was follawed with. morning after trade figures that showed Brit- ain is still spending more i jabroad than” she ° earns al troubling reminder that Labor has failed to find a cure for, the country's economic illness ie Labor's determination to_ at- jfack Britain's. economie malaise * of | | : But Representative John D. London sent along £84 and the, INSIDE TODAY Dingell_(Dem. Mich.), author_of that Island. news... ee 2 the unsuccessful seizure amend- smaller donations have come in} Summerside .............. 3 | ment. said’ it is by no” means - : eats 3 (certain the committee will ap- : ina 4 \Prove the Senate-passed bill, un- | . Pe eeae aes cee taeees ae der which Congress would send Kings, Qneens, Cliy ...... 3 : the mechanics back to work for : |30 days and authorize President 9 |Johnson to keep them on the’ 4 \job for another 150 days: Women cae 10, 11, a | The vote against Dingell’s Paauiber Rana ia eR ace ;seizure amendment was re- |ported as 20 to ll. lines” strikebound since -Juty—8—| Thursday-— : _ Despairing ,of bringing. about with consideration of legislation|a quick voluntary settlement of to°order the 35,000 striking me- the dispute after failure of an arbitration proposal it advanced Wednesday, the committee |moved ahead Thursday with its jversion of the measure already \passed by the Senate.. It: ap \proved the main outlines | Even _ if the committee should complete its shaping of a bill jtoday there is no prospect of House aotion before next week: Meanwhile, House members jreported a rising tide of. tele- jgrams and letters on both sides jof the controversy. A vizorous \debate ‘and many attempts te jamend the bill from the floor jare forecast and there, are few wit } ‘outright predictions that tt tof 27.900 seamen that dragged | from. May through June. Frank Cousins, union boss turned minister, quit the gov-| ernment early in July™in Pro- | test against wage-control legis- lation and moved into open op-} © position. Wilson's deputy, | George Brown, almost resigned | two. weeks later when austerity wrecked his national plan for expansion. . | Mutiny among the 362 Labor | MPs has _ ranged in_ strength | \from the 54 who voted against | east-of-Suez defence expenses “In | ‘Party caucus in June to. as| ‘many as 30 who withheld. sup- |port in Commons votes on | jcomes control this week. (POPULARITY DOWN Since this Parliament assem- ibled April 21, Labor’s popular lity. has plummeted to ‘the point! the Tories. La- |} ‘party trailing jbor's vote in a July byelection |. & fat. Carmarthen fefl by . more’ than one-third from the level cat}. ; “where opinion polls show the| © * | proved ‘recruiting, re - eng iment honuses announced |February and a substantial lincrease promised for Oct. | . The department: jthe increasing number. of jond World War: veterans pare reaching retirement next few vears, said 4 The number of recruits in ‘\first six months of this ithe same period last year. . attributed the 630-seat House ‘of Commons. Nome beach. Two were a short |the continuing decline mainly to age, mining |This exodus will increase in the the department year of jwas 4,340 compared with 4,135 In was “funda- | the general age-jmeatal to a .policy that won maviee Ane in overwhelming approval at the Welsh natie pay |general election March 31, when ; If Wilson attention’ fr his cabinet 1. 'Labor won a.majority of 97 in * Just 34 days later, ‘the policy partly successful. Sec- jis in tatters and the victorious. George Brown's miove to for- who |party in disarray. eign affaits from the heleag- | * ‘The harshest austerity ‘meas jures since the Second. World |War--including a statutory. relations freeze on prices and incomes. Michael jrammed through a protesting |Brown was. Parliament under closure rules promotion followed the Chiggest strike |assignment isince the war, the 47-day strike ‘left of the teh pen er “the election 14 weeks gave the seat to a/ nalist. was trying to divert | by, om his troubles shifts, -he has been uered economics department was .expected to loosen external from : Stewart's ‘switch -with |. seen variously as a} Wilson's — grip. and an unenviable to patch up what's national plan. % Special interest groups add workshops -have heen. a_ fea- ture of the Liturgical Institute which closes a. three-day pro gram this morning. Mrs. Margaret Bridgeo of Halifax, ' who with het husband assist- __ed_ with the Family Life Work-_ shop, here talks with Father Gerald Steele, chairman — of the ‘clergy’s specia! interest grpups and. Alaa Frick, direc- WORKSHOP CLOSES TODAY ~~ learry in the House. tor, of the Art and Architee addressed the delegates Wed neSday' night on “Architectural Demands of the - Rerewed Liturgy. (See story page 5.) F-86 Sabre jets fh -Pakis- aircraft.. which West Germany . German._ambassador_ te __ to. explain his “country’s _~ “Indian officials were reported . tare Workshop Mr Fricg