David Boswall, director of alcohol studies for the pro- vince. presents a provincial Allied Youth scholarship in the form of a cheque for $200 to Theresa Gallant of Oyster AY SCHOLARSHIP PRESETED Bed Bridge. Miss Gallant, a former member of Stella Ma- ris Regional High School Al- lied Youth Post. won the sen- olarship as the Grade 12 stu-. dent member of Allied Youth in Dau‘ ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Benolt with highe st standing rade 12 examinations. Gallant. Miss Gallant is freshman arts student at Dunstan's University. a St ISLAND NEWS PAGE Western Ancl Central Districts 'EARLY WIN (Continued from page 11 where Goldwater strength was supposed eavy: But on the basis of the re turns in by mid - evening it‘ Llooked as though it could be a ‘landslide. The Guardian. Charlottetown, Wed. Nov. 4. 1964. 3 | : ASSlmV“ OF CONTROL And Contin Returns continue to pour into the United Fund office and at noon optimism toward reaching has now reached 82 per cent. y s It was pointed out that at the Regional High School same time last year the cam- way mark and that returns con- tinued to come in throughout the winter months. Campaign division heads giv- ing reports at the meeting in- cluded. Frank MacDonald. pro- chairman: Le MacDonald, Charlottetown vision chairman: Mrs. J. . MacKenzie and Miss I Arsenault (co-chairmen Charlottetown resi- dential; R.E. Seller, payroll di- vision chalrman; C.J. Flinn, Gordon Kerr, Urban McQuaid, Jo'in Evans and PC. Bower, all of the public relations commit- Alan Holman and Mrs. . Cudmore spoke on behalf of the herd of directors. Brig. W. .‘<‘ A report on potato marketing boards operating in Canada and a to marketing review were highlights of the annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Potato Producers As- sociation at the Basilica Rec- reation Center last night. The meeting opened with president and chairman George Howatt giving a run down on information about the setting .ip of the P.E.I. Potato Mark- eting Board following a meet- ing of the growers in 1958 which recommended it. He said efforts were made 'ast year to test the legality of the various aspects board and no loopholes been found. He said the idea is ready to be voted on and that a plebis- 2ite with the growers must be have held within the next six mon hs. He spoke briefly on what he. has learned about setting up a potato marketing board. OTHER CANADIAN BOARDS Minister of Agriculture An- drew B. MacRae addressed the meeting on potato marketing ards in otlciier parts of Can- one in the interior of British . Columbia and one in the west .s‘oast of BC. “.Mr. MacRae commented that 1‘ 40.000 acres and some - r growers of potatoes on the sland, the 20 odd turn out for meeting was rather poor. MacRae noted that in >1 e board controlled lanted and prices set e poin out. however. that he potatoes sold by the board 0 the domestic market hile P.E.I. sells to some 22 ifferent countries. M acRae said B.C.'s de- agriculture acreage should be on any board to add business influence. Mr. MacRae pointed out the main difficulty on the Island was finances and that there was little in common between the B.C. boards and the one here. The minister said one desk selling required a lot of capit- al and a lot of know how. He said he has been questioned who will manage such an oper- ation and what would be its terms of reference but that he has not had an answer to these questions ‘yet. PRICES FLUCTUATE Hon. E. D. Reid. guest speaker of the evening. gave a comprehensive review of potato market conditions at- fecting P.E.I. over the last 20 years, noting that the aver- age price for those so years per bag was 9] cents said prices fluctuate from year to year and some- thing has to be done about it 9 before it ruins the markets. He said the current week to week fluctuation also affects prices and a pool is needed no help the overall price situation. The prices over the past it!) years have been concurrent with those all over Canada a he United States as witnessed re- cently when P.E.I. prices rose only three days after the prices in the United States did. he said. STARCII PLANT SUGGEst Mr. Reid said there would ne- ver be a satisfactory price sup- port for potatoes. but that .Spud Plebiscite Seen Must Within Six Months Here dration plant would aid in tak- ing care of excess potatoes. He said he felt that the pro blem was not mainly marketing but that productivity could the key to success. He noted that the potato shipments should be kept moving during the season because a potato buildup could be disastrous. Directors appointed to the P.E.I. Potato Marketing Board as producer representatives are , Prince County. Wendell Myers. Carleton. and Lloyd Bell, 41- bany; Queens. Knud Jorgensen Fredericton, and Jack MacLeod. Fredericton: Kings. Peter Mac Auley. Souris East. and Leslie Underhay. Bay Fortune. 3’ Reid received the reports and urged eVeryone to continue the drive and make every effort to exceed the quota. MEET TODAY A United Fund board of direc- tors meeting will be held this evenings at 8 pm. at which time certain amendments to a meeting of the campaign com-ipresentatives from the regional mlttee in the Red Cross Annex yesterday expressed theimeeting campaign objective. The fund paign had only reached the half United EUnd Hits 82% ues lo Rise the constitution will be discus- sed. A suggestion to include re- .high school districts on the iboard will be put before t'ie It was also reported at yester- da ' meeting that Englewood District had exceeded its on the co-chairmsnship of 00d and Steve MacLeod. Mslpeque school district had doubled last year's amount col- lected and turned in $111. The captain is Frank MacNutt. Gr 10 students at Stella er Brent a o Maris turned in $8 collected by f their class. RESULTS TO DATE Five regional high school dis- tricts have s sssed eir ob- jectives. has reached the highest percen- tage, with 143 per cent of its quota. Following are the results of the campaign to date. Figures given are percentages of the irespective quotas: arlottetown, B4; Summ r- side. 94; Alberton Regional High 72; Athens. 54: Central Queens, 94; Charlottetown Rural. 143; Englewood, 101; Evangeline, 49 Kensington. 90; Klnkora. 110 Miscouche. 48: Montague. Morel]. 44; O’Leary, 55; Souris, 134; Stella Maris. 109; Tignish, 52; Tyne Valley. 69. o . v 84: urp m Charlottetown Rural f Democnats were assured con- itinued control of the 100 - seatl {Senate with 34 vacancies being! ’contested. plus one seat de-‘ cided by acclamation. 3 They also seemed likely to in- crease their margin in the 435- seat House of Representatives. The Democrats have con- trolled Congress slnce 1954, al- though this control has been hampered by conservative coalition of some Republicansi allied with conservative south- .ern Democra s Johnson's New England Win. while a record. yielded only a cluster of 37 electoral votes. The Republican plums of In- diana and Ohio. whose 26 elec- ‘toral votes Goldwater consid- red a key part in his victory plan, fell to-Johnson. Indiana was one state where the so- called white backlash — reac- tion against civil rights legisla- tion benefitting Negroes — had been fe red. The Jo‘mson march sprang mm a record vote of 71,000.- 800 or more from the 50 states. ,the RCNR and the Suttie Com- lDemise Oi HMCS Queen Charlotte A" Comes Alter Only 5 Years Service Surgeon~Captain Lemuel E Prowse, VRD, commanding ofII‘ cer of HMCS Queen Charlotte. was yesterday notified, by sig- nal. from Canadian Forces Headquarters. Ottawa that tne local naval reserve establish ment will cease to operate u 1! Dec. 31, 1964. Capt. Prowse was informed that the decision was reached following studies of the report. of the ministerial committee on mission on the Canadian Armv ‘litia. Although the action is regret- ted by headquarters. it was stat ed that the move was dictateu by budgetary considerations and that Queen Charlotte is one at the areas from which savings must be realized. The naval establishment '. cated at the western end of .hc Charlottetown waterfront we opened by Her Majesty, Quea. Elizabeth II, during her tour of Canada in 1959. Formed in the early 19205 As the Charlottetown Half-Company the Royal Canadian l\luvsl Vo- lunteers Reserve unit throughout its existence main- tained a record which has been equal to or better than most of the other 21 naval divisions in anada. BASIC TRAINING It was in its old location on Kent Street that hundreds of na- val reservists not only I r o In Prince Edward Island but also from several other provtnces received their basic training during World War II before ing transferred to Halifax “or sea duty and technical training. It has been estimated that In connection with the operation of the division more than $100 000 was spent annually within in- province. Also with its closing the future of at least six civil servants five men and one woman. will be in den bt until it becomes known what the federal govern- ment will eventually do with the building. 0 Johnson held Maryland. 3 key indicator state which issed out only in 1948 in fol- lowing the wlnner. plus Connec- Republican in 92 years to win Alabama’s complement of elec- toral votes—10. The slate has been split between different fac- tions in the past. the Kentucky. first state to Mayor Says Water Rates two firsts and one second rib- bon and a couple of others. ester ' and n Southport showed one first. two second-place animals and a couple of others. their reserve junior male championship was won in an exceptionally strong class of young bulls. Indeed the Junior champion was acclaimed star as reserve grand. Irving MacDonald. York had three firsts, one third, the sen- 101‘ an champion male and the junior champion fe- male that went reserve grand. George MacMillan and Tum- er Glydon and Son, Kensington showed the senior and grand champion male Monday. Yes- terday George had the serve senior and reserve grand '1 fl r WESTERN lBRIEES SUSPECT HELD A suspect in the $300 break a. Gaudet's Save Easy super ma- ket here Monday is being he'd by the Summerside police. Po lice Chief S.D.A. Wannamaker said the suspect was picked on yesterday. Investigation is cor tinuing. CHARGED IN ASSAULT Fred Sampson of New Glas- 30W. N.S, charged with as- sault had his case adjourned. Tuesday in Summerside Po lice Court until Nov. 9 The accused was 0 e of a trio in- volved in an alleged assault on Percy Ferrlsh of Summerside Oct. 31. The other accused are Leslie Chatsson. and Robert Gaudet starch plant or a potato dehy NAVAL (Continued from page 1) The food service platoon of 110 Company RCASC and the trans port platoon of the same com pany will be relocated with the parent company in Halifax. this means the end of these two pla- toons as far as P.E.I. is con- cerned. B and C Squadrons of the Prince Edward Island Regiment located at Montague and Sum merslde. will both remain in the order of battle and will not be affected. The reorganized militia orde» of battle for P.E.I. shows that the P.E.l. Regiment at Chariot tetown. 5 Signal Regiment. Medical Company and the P.E.I. adv‘ser. will all be sccommodst ed in future at HMCS Queen Charlotte. B Squadron at Mon tague will be accommodated in a leased lodge and dance hair. and C Squadron at Summerside in the armory there. In the announcement about the naval reserve it was revealed that Queen Charlotte is one ‘0' five units that are being closed the others being at Regina. Lon don. Edmonton and Kitchener. A total of 1.675 RCNR personnel are being affected by the reduc- tions and savings of $1.8 million annually are expected. in AMAZING (Continued from page D lan herd. two from Albert Bos- wall, Marshfield and two from Clark Brothers. New Wiltshire. he composite herd of Jer- seys took the male senior and grand championship and reserve senior and reserve grand female honors. Among them they accounted for six firsts. nine seconds and number of lesser placings. There were only a handful of Holsteins at the fair but cattle from the herd of Oswald New- son and Son. Kingston: Elmer Smith. Emerald; Eric Land and Son. North Milton and Al- lison Stewart and S. C. Stew- art and Son Dunstaffnage put up a fine showing. It included the senior and grand cham- three firsts. sec two thirds and two fifths for 14 ribbons in all. The Woods had 11 first rib— n 5" (D Keith Barrett. Belmont ad one first. three senonds and 15 others. Dan Jewell. North River had one first. five seconds and 13 others. Bar- rett had a reserve junior cham- pionship in the dual purposes a s c s. In the Angus classes the Dixons had four first ribbons and as many seconds along with 10 others. PASTURE TO SHOW Mermaid took senior female championship with his one- bud of Catalone. a cow he took off the pasture to show. Last year she was here but they took the calf from her. to let went down in flesh sharply and s in flesh at fair time. Judge Fred Major said yes- terday she's a typical example of hardwong cow. She i still nursing her calf. Leo had female. In acwm‘ uou osie R . He won the progeny of dam class. Was second in the junior herd. second in the breeders the dairy herd. herd and the graded herd. third in the senior get of sire and in one but government and mili- tary personnel. Last week the Wheaton Col- lege newspaper asked students to give up candy bars, soft drinks between-meal snacks to help raise money r a round- trip flight to Columbia so Candy could vote. Students collected more the tri than enough to finance 5 p. Still Not Set SUMMERSIDE — Comment~ ing last night on a news story which appeared in a Summer- side newspaper recently. Mayor . E enkins said that. con- trary to the news report “re- garding commercial meter wat- er rates for the town. I wish to at the town has not as yet received any official con- VISIT PAVILION More than 3,000,000 persons visited the Swedish pavilion at this year's world fair in New York City. n firmation on these rates . The mayor added "the town council is still awaiting offic- ial word of these rates from the public utilities commission in Charlottetown." fall to Johnson, was somethingiMonday night at Dixville and; of a surprise. It had gone Re-l publican in 1956 an ticut. Massachusetts. North . ‘ Carolina and West Virginia. Democratic column - With al In 23 western states. voting Goldwater became the first ban. continued well a r final re- and his wife. Lady the third and fourth Blanco ohnson Bird. were voters at precinct 4, County. in exas. 0 son sove himself to the poll at the Pedernales Electrical Co-oper- ative, a project he helped estab- lis‘i 30 years ago. Goldwater voted near his hill- top home outside Phoenix, with his wife Peggy. Democratic Senator Hubert Humphrey. vice - presidential. nominee. voted in the Minne- sota townsh'p of Maysvllle at the town hall. The Republican vice-presiden- tial nominee. 'liam E. Miller, drove 12 miles from Lockport, N.Y.. to vote at Olcott. ANTICIPATE RECORD The anticipated general vot- ing record of some 71,000,000 compared with 68.800.000 who cast ballots in 1960—but it still was well below the “4.000.000 citizens of voting age who for various reasons cannot or don’t bot'ier to register. The number of registered voters was 89,000,» Also at stake were 25 of the 50 state governorships. 35 of the JOHNSON CITY. Tex. (AP) While millions of Americans concentrated on the presiden- tial election Tuesday, Presi- ELECTION (Continued from page 1) amendment, ratified in 1961, get the dents. COLUMBUS. Ind. vote for capital resi- dent Johnson showed report- ers how to draw .water from a well. Relaxed and smiling after casting his vote in this cen'- tral Texas town of 500. the president and Mrs. Johnson stopped by his homestead for about 20 minutes early in the a . a. PRESIDENT RELAXED AS MILLIONS VOTED . .from judges to sheriffs. plus 253. front yard while reportersl d. Afte a lit- tle difficulty untying the knot e rope bucket. Johnson drew it up- wards. thing every morning. 5 pointed to what he was a stone fort his grandfather had 8505 describing how his! father used to do the same :1 1 senators. and the 435 seats in the House of Represent- atives. Candidates to t a ll 1 .State ballots also contained. contests for other positional referendums in 40 states. ' Isolated small rural polls quickly delivered complete re--. idian border at the New Hamp- other New England points and d 1960. buttremained Open until as late as Jo'inson brought it back into the i2 a.m. today in western Alaska. POLLS FAVORED JOHNSON 64 ended Monday with final ora- except Maine and Vermont. turns in the east had been re-l ported and broadcast. i Polls called Johnson ahead by per cent to 36 per cent for Goldwater as the campaign tory. The situation recalled the 1930. record victory of Franklin D. Roosevelt over Republican Alf Landon. Democrats har- vested 60.8 per cent of the pop- ular vote and all the states The tightest vote in American history was in 1960 when John . Kennedy beat Richard Nixon by a 118.000-vote margin al- though his edge in the vital electoral college was more de- cisive—303 to 234. * The climate of a landslide for Johnson resurrected the upset of 1948 when Harry Truman, another interim president seek- ing a full four-year term. over- hauled Republican Thomas wey at the wire. CAMPAIGN DULL i The campaign, unusually bit-r ter but also unusually dull. be-i gan taking shape almost as soonI as Lee Harvey Oswald had mur-y dered President Kennedy in. Dallas last Nov. 2. ; Johnson. who had fought Ken-l nedy hard for the 1960 nomi 8 tion, became ‘ catapulted into fWhile House. ‘ The shock of the assassina-‘ attached to the lturns—the first near the Cane-.tion might also have had some ' ’part in the 'h ease with shire hamlet of Dixville where—Goldwater. captured the Repub- as usual—the Republicans en-II oyed an eight-vote sweep. I This was quickly countered{ by similar traditional returns; elsewhere in he Democratic I ledger. i Polls opened at midnight‘ lican nomination in July. over- riding weak and tardy attempts by moderates to halt ' . Goldwater's campaign for- mula altered little from first to last, although emphasis s‘ilfted on some parts. -" l1 '1.- the eighth Vice-, “1le There has been some sugges. tion that with the demise of the naval reserve. the building will be turned over as a new arm. oury for the local militia units. who are now housed in a build- Ing which was considered d . 1% which has been considered ‘ unfit for several years Beside displacing the civrl ser. vants, and terminating naval training for some 60 officers and men of the naval reserve. more than 100 boys, between the ages of 12 and 16 years. members of two sea cadet corps, will also be left without training facilities Town Police Investigate New Breaks SUMMERSIDE — Town police are continuing their investiga- tion into a series of breaks here which started Sunday night. The latest were breaks into the premises of Thane Ellis Ltd. and El. Produce Ltd., Mon- day night or early Wednesday morning. Both firms are located in the DeBlois Bros. building in Summerside East. Monday night‘s breaks netted the thief or thieves little or noth~ 'ing and spokesmen for the firms said that as far as they could determine no money had been taken and only minor damage was done. The breaks were discovered at approximately 8 o’clock yester- ay morning by an employee of Thane Ellis Ltd. The thieves had gained entrance through a base~ ment Window which had been covered with potato bags. After gaining entry into the building the person or persons involved entered the offices by breaking the glass in the doors and unlocking them from the in- side. Both offices had been ran- sacked with papers strewn over the floor. desk drawers upset and vaults tampered with. Police Chief S.D.A. Wanna- maker stated yesterday that a man was being held for question- ing in connection with the break into Gaudet’s Serve—Easy super- market on Granville Street which resulted in approximately $300 being taken. The Power Women Have Over Men. simply the power to say O!”—as one man claims? lIs giving praise the secret of women’s power?...0r is it solely a matter of sex? Here’s a symposium of letters from Digest readers, provoked by la previous article which con- . aidered “The Power AIEN lHave Over Women”. Don’t {miss the November issue of [Reader’s Digest. built in the l . PAID $6 AN ACRE Democrats used a plane and a helicopter to whisk a retired farmer more than 100 miles to y porters got a brief dem- In the house, the prestdent onstration of how to brin put on his glasses to admire we r up in a bucket from a assure one more vote for dent Johnson. in Rochester. Ind.. an Columbus to vote, Don Thompson. county Demo- . nett and fly him plane was sent to pick up Ar- ' to Franklin. north of here. and a waiting hel- on r The helicopter. used for cam- paigning. flew Arnett to a farm near his polling place. COLUMBIA. 'S.C. (. Candy Vaghjian voted day, but it wasn’t easy. 5 l .. Tues. Candy. 21-year-old met! at Wheaton College at Norton. Mass. and a resident of Colum- bia. had to return to her na- tive state to cast her ballot be- cause South Carolina has no ab- sentee ballot provisions for any- A. L Arnett. 86, was visiting as un- able to return to his home near cratic chairman. said a private well, a rambling history les- son on the homestead and the hill country around it and a personal tour of the unoccu- pied white frame house. Johnson even defied super- stition a bit. posing with Mrs. Johnson in a swing on the porch of the house. where e said he closed his 1941 cam- paign for the US. Senate. the only political race he has lost. But that was by only 1,311 votes. he said. , Johnson. behind the wheel of a white limousine. drove to the homestead from the Ped- ernales R ura Electrifica- tion Building. where he and Mrs. Johnson cast their bal- lots about 8:30 am. It's drive of only a block or two. Walking t‘1rough the gate of a white split-rail fence. John- son stopped by a well in the GOLDWATER PHOENIX. Aria. (APl-sSen- ator Barry Goldwater walked in solitude across the Arizona desert in a mid-day sun Tues- day after voting — a split ticket. he hinted as re reached the last lap of his race against President John- son. The family of the Republi- can nominee sssemblcd a his hilltop home to await the judgment of the voters. And Goldwater said he will live with that verdict—"what- ever t’ie Lord wants. . . . DEATH NOTICES Received too late for Classified death notice column ROBERTSON — At the Kin” lower ohm United Church Thursday. Nov. . at 2 p.m. Interment in Lower outague cometary. Goldwater's p re s s secre- tary. Paul Wagner, said the senator str alone amid the cactus for an hour and a halt between his home and rugged Squaw Peak. hamburger and transplanting cactus plants. Earlier in the shielded by the curtains of I Phoenix polling booth. Goldwater had cut his mpvoto. a ‘Iis vote hadn’t been Republican across the board. TAKES WALK ALONE I'N DESERT "I always do," Goldwater said when a reporter asked whether he had spilt his ticket. "Well." he said of the pres- idential battle. “it's a horse race. You n it or you lose it. Whatever the Lord wants. I'll live with it." Goldwater waited for I!) minutes to vote. then retreated to top home with a final optimis- tic forecast nn the outcome: "1 never worry on election day. Right now it's going my way. PREFER PRIVACY Goldwater and his wife made that single public out- ing. but they chose the pri- vacy of their home to await the verdict of the nation. The Arizona senator stood in line cast his his hill- In a blazing mid - morning sun. chatting with neighbors to cast his vote at a private s c b 0 01 within sight of his home. He spurned the offer of poll- lag officials to on him at the head of the line. Interested persons A CITY~ OF CHARLOTTET OWN APPLICATIONS are Invited for [OW RENTAL HOUSING to be erected in the City of Charlottetown The City of Charlottetown is Investigating the need for Low Rental Housing and to complete the initial survey. invites to make application. The proposed housing Is Intended for families of low In- come and rental rates will be based on total family Income. Iication forms may be obtained from the office of the C Comptroller and are to be completed and returned by November 16. 1964. JOHN J. BUTLER' a display of glassware his . mother had ollected. en. j stepping into the kitchen, fie ' out a 30-year-old scene . where he said his father ha told his mother “boy” ‘ didn’t have better sense than i to pay $6 an acre for some § land in the area. “It’s worth about $75 $100 an acre now.“ he sa From the kitchen, the pres- 3 ident and Mr. J son: moved to the front porch and i a wicker swing. Wi ‘5 arm 1 around Mrs. Johnson. . mentioned the one election which he lost to former gov- j ernor W. Lee O‘Daniel. 3 There was another picture- 3 taking scene at the fence, ‘t where he president bugged . and introduced his sister. . to‘ i Mrs. Birge Alexander of Fort ‘ Worth. Tex., as "the sweetest 1 person In the world." i Comptroller $1,000 in cas in cash. Mrs. Cecil Fulton. Slope Road. Amherst. N. S. met-long Allstate Tire Contest. eligible to enter. "I chose Allstate tires because possession of the winners. Mr. Norris Palmer. Kingston. N. S. R. R. No. 4. Middleton. S. Mr. Vincent E. Stewart. 11 Haliburton St.. of the clarity and originality with which . . .“. All prizes should shortly be (or are already) in the ANNOUNCING!’ Atlantic Winners in Simpsons-Sears Canada-Wide Allstate Tire Contest , FIRST PRIZE winner: Mrs. Katherine P. Smith. Port Mouton, SECOND PRIZE winner: Mr. Gerald D. Coombs. Milton. Queens Co.. N. S. Who receives h. THIRD PRIZE winner; Mr. Archie Banks. Black Rock. Kings Co.. N. s. who receives $250 Ten Other Winners Who Receive 8100. Simpsons-Sears Gift Certificate are; Mr. Leonard M. Ogilvie. RCAF Greenwood. N S Mr. Raymond Minto. N. B. Mr. George D. Murray. 203 Edgett Ave.. Moncton. N. B Mr J. A. MacMillan. 6439 Cloverdale Road. Mr. Lee Foster. Halifax. N. S. Simmons-Sears would like to congratulate all the Atlantic region winners in the popular sum- All purchasers of tires between April 3 and August 31 were ze winners were impartially selected by the judges on the they finished the sta SIMPSONS —- SEARS LIMITED West Riverview. N. B Mrs Arch Tracey. 7 Centre Street. Bedford. N S Mr Norman Caughey. Shannon Park. Dart- mouth. N. S N0va Scotia. shown above receiving the keys to her new 1964 Studebaker Commander from Mr. F. Kernaghan. general manager of Simpsons-Sears. Halifax. Queens Co.. Steeves. 227 Ogden Drive, tement (in 20 to 50 words): I «iii. 4. .m ..