If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It ee Dr. Guy Marcoux. MP for son’ the 24-pages booklet in which © he says Transport Minister John Pickersgill. and Finan- cier John Doyle participated in transactions which led six creditists to support the Pear- son's Libeeral. government af- ter the 1963 general election. The book is entitled ‘‘Dans le meme sac” meaning “In The Same Bag'’. It was released Wednesday. Dr. Marcoux said the pamphlet contains only some extracts.from a book that he is writing and will be published within a few months. He said the affair of the six was the shadiest usur- pation of political power in the y of Canada. (CP Wirephete) Speculation On Cabinet Shuffle . i meeting scheduled for Tuesday ie T heave: too much - to ‘ > a ; Ome particwar report stands jout among all those now circu- lating about the next Quebec cabinet reshuffle. It is that Rev- enue Minister Eric Kierans will become minister of health within Lesage as called a meet: |@ few months. his cabinet for today. The minister of health, who Qn his retarn last week from [runs the hospital-insurance pro- his three-week tour of Western gram, oversees the biggest de- Canada, he said he would have |partmental budget—about $400,- te put back to today a cabinet '000,000 annually. Demonstrators Stone, Sack, , Jakarta Red Headquarters JAKARTA (AP)—Young dem- jquarters of the Indonesian Com- onstrators stoned and sacked a (munist party (PKI) here last Communist youth headquarters jerid a-y, the demonstrators here Wednesday in support of shouted for destruction of the the ‘Indonesian army's anti-Com- {party and the death of its fugl- wen ere reputed now |tive leader, D. N, Aidit, ‘have approval of “Hang ” President Sukarno. “Crush as ao ee About 2,000 strong, the mob | : smashed windows, seized docu- They made a bonfire of the and broke furniture in the unist youth hall only 100/pISPERSED MOB from Sukarno’s palace.| Troops posted nearby watched hall has been,a traditional |without interfering. But palace gathering place for anti-Western | guards moved in with fixed bay- atreet demonstrations. jonets and broke it up when it As in other such raids since seemed the demonstrators Moslem youths burned the head-\might get “out of hand. mpant In Quebec. Circle : Questioned the cabinet documents and broken furniture. | as an excelent Other sources say Mrs. Claire Kirkland-Casgrain, present min- Che uardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1965. PM Deni — nor MORE SEVEN CENTS By STEWART MacLEOD — LETHBRIDGE (CP) — Con- servative Leader Diefenbaker trode on towerd the Rocky Mountain foothills Wednesday, mingling with farmers, Hutter- .| ites and Indians and driving for the first time in a motorcade decorated with maple leaf flags. But the flags didn’t last long. While the Conservative leader ayhet waits is rhe 2 ; z i g rf - 8 bade ge i primar tster of transport, will be next of the family and social This portfolio involves an an- nual budget of more than $200,- 000,000. reshuffle, Claude Morin, deputy minister ‘of -fed- eral-provincial affairs and presi- dent of the new Quebec Foreign Relations Committee, said: “This. shuffle. will- indicate the image the premier wants to give his government.” From good sources it appears that the Quebec government will put the accent on social matters in' the coming months. As for a successor to Mr. | Kierans in the revenue post, two |mames are being mentioned: Guy Lechasseur, already par- liamentary . assistant to Mr. Kierans, and Richard Hyde, Speaker of the legislature. | MASTER PUBLICIST, TORY ADMITS “Wilson's Dash To See Queen. “Takes Spotlight From Heath — '4ONDON (CP)—Prime Min-|new dynamic brand of classless Wilson, a political strate- | conservation, delivered a pro- without equal in Britain, /saic speech that failed to strike itched the limelight Wedres-| with a dramatie dash to) see the Queen in Scotland, ef. | fectively upstaging rival Ed- ward Heath's debut at ‘the Con- | servative party convention. Tory delegates at baffled and infuriated by news-| television broadcast on Rhodesia paper speculation on Wilson’s|Tuesday night, in which he trip—could he be about to call|iaunched the idea of a Common- a general election?—heard one} wealt:: mission to the simmer- of their members of Parliament | ing central African colony,, describe the Labor premier as/ sudden’ dash to Motmnersh ‘kept “the | master publicist. of the | public attention riveted on bret the Queen onthe INSIDE TODAY Boeten brief ‘the Queen on the! Classified ............ 20, 21 Wilson's skilful strategy seemed likely to impress a wider audience—white Rhodes- an crisis and give her a full account of last week's dead-| locked ations with Rhod-| ésian Premier lan Smith. But} the mystery and drama ~ sur-/ rounding the 1,000 - mile jet) flight to Balmoral Castle and| back eee protocol : disap- | Proves ance publicity on) audiences—kept its flavor long) oe oa interest 's ; SPEFCH DULL To add t @-year-old 0 Tory troubles, their, leader. symbol of the | sparks from the party faithful. | the Wil | |8on’s determination to solve jwhat he called “one of the | greatest potential crises Britain had faced for many vears."’. The master-stroke of all was that Wilson” whose precariously- poised government has lurched ians worried about a break with! from crisis to crisis in the last| the, Crown. Coming on top of | year, was apparently riding high | prime minister's dramatic|in popular approval as he ap-|GROUND FIRM proached his first anniversary | in 10 Downing Street. A public- j opinion poll last- week gave la- | bor a clear lead over the Tories. | FACED PROBLEMS | Time and- again the pipe ling Yorkshire premier with joutting wit has faced “gruelling enough to government, let alone one with a two-vote majority in the 630- t_ Commons. __- ~ When he took office last Octo- then on the verge of rebel action—was the his desk. Hav- the mediately .Nerve-racking |erisis over the pound, when 11 to save the British cur- on..the.. subject —of- problems| Maritime teams include Roy shake any Plow th Ope By Hays By IAN MacLAINE | MILLIKEN, Ont. (OP)—Harry |Hays, federal minister of agri- Wednesday urged further co-op- jment to offset possible food | Shortages as -16 competitors). completed their opening day fur- tows in the Canadian Plowing championships. Mr. Hays was speaking’ to a frock - coated crowd beneath cloudy skies at the official open- ing of the matches in this ham- let“of 200 persons on the north- > - fringe of Metropolitan Tor- On The Canadian championships ‘are being held in. corijunction with the: 52nd International | Plowing championships that will decide an Ontario champion by , Saturday. | “The two-day Canadian chant | pionships, with team represen- tation from every province ex- |cept Alberta and Newfoundland, | Started with contestants plowing stubble in 60-foot wide olots and, ends today with sod plowing. | | Plowing conditions were idea | for opening day as the claytoam ; soil, saturated by several days ‘of rain, was firm and closely |packed and competitors were | better able to control their trac- 'tors and two-furrow plows. | Allison Hoeg, 42, and Aubrey C. Smith, % both of Athol, N:S.; Barry Wilson, 2, of Cornwall and Eric Phillips, 23, of O'Leary as the P.E.I. delegates: and Al- lison M. Briggs, 28, of Plaster Rock and Gary Gray, 22, of @ Brunswick Midland, the New team. . | Last year’s Canadian cham- pion. Donald Dunkeld of Clare- mont, Ont., and Cari Willis of) Charlottetown, runner-up, com- (eee at Oslo, Norway, ie +-§ , was delivering a 20-minute talk | passed culture’ in the last Parliament, |- eration at all levels of govern-| - Canadian Flags Disappear From Diefenbaker's Cars classes by the time at the auditorium. ‘Maybe we're ‘at the wrong place,”” he said, surveying the empty school, ' “Clear the decks, they are coming,” warned Mrs. Diefen- baker a* a stampede of students headed back for the auditorium. Because of the delay in the schedule, Mr. Diefenbaker by- a visit to the Taber sugar beet factory.. Earlier he met. about 150 peo- at Bow Island. He and Mrs. he arrived ; Siciticass shook hands ‘with Virtually ali of them an hour after the special. train Jeft Med- jieine Hat at 7:30 a.m. .. In. 1957 and. .58,"’ he said, “we averaged about 45 people at whistle-stops. Much greater e- crowds this time.”-- Smith, Cabinet Discuss Issue Prime Minister Jan Smith met Wednesday.on the sive fs. ' Rhodesian would_say--whether they. reached indication . Nor was ther® any dramatic appeal by British Prime Minister Wilson. In a radiotelevision speech to with Britons. — and to Smith, REQUIRED before ‘ 6, finds his mount a massive rescue op-|peted in the 1965 world.cham-| name up there, but there's no Itt be a few years ‘Damir Djoric, harm in taking an advance peek. To reach the height of SALISBURY (Reuters)—| former rancher, who said he! never voted anything but Con-| #7 servative in a federal election. |% Arthur Small Legs, Conserva- tive organizer for the Peigan tribe. said he could deliver 500 Conservative votes. | fe Along the railline, on which| § Mr. Diefenbaker travelled to- ,ward the rally in Lethbridge, school children dominated the crowds. Their teachers gave them time off to see the Con- | Servative leader. More than half ithe 200 people at Clare-holm! were..school children. They wel-| comed Mr. Diefenbaker with such placards as: ‘Your vote) for Honest John will get |Rivard’s friends out of. Ot- fawa. ; } | He met some 30 people at ; Nanton .and. more than. 150. were | | out at Highriver for a 15-minate ‘Pearson = Wilson Offer. | TORONTO (CP)—Prime Min-| ‘ister Pesrson Wednesday ac- claimed as ‘‘a wise and imag-' jinative proposal” the suggestion | lof Prime Minister Wilson of, | Britain that a mission of Com-) |Mmonwealth leaders attempt to| + -cultation Airport | vent—a step which T think would jen - for Rhodesia. Mr. Pearson, interviewed Toronto ‘International « at eral , fied of the proposal-in 2 . gram.from Mr, Wilson } , Following a threat from Rho- ian Prime- Minister Ian Smith to declare i e from Britain without the United Kingdom’s approval, Mr. Wilson suggested that a mission. of senior commonwealth premiers try to see whether agreement ean be reached Mr. Pearson said: “I have wired back that 1 thought this was a wise and imaginative proposal and we -would- give it our full-“support READING his political ambition, Damir enlisted the aid of two of his Vancouver playmates. (CP Wirephote) * | Quebec City businessman, has ‘out to $70 a car. Pam arene campa . 8 gen-| a elected ie was -notle| _tmonth.in Montreal harbor with Kay made the statement at the 3 rescued by membeers . crew. : Price Cut Guelph Au By BEN WARD “complete nonsense” Wednes- » ewe /United States auto agreement firms and ignores consumer | benefits. “The automotive {400 persons at a |sandwiches_ election ‘reception here. ‘‘The facts now | show it.” FRAUD, ARSON # |job! - creating. agreement. work |all of the World Series on tele- Moise Darabaner, 43, been charged with fraud and | arson and conspiracy to com: | 1966 price mit both offences.” . (CP Wirephoto) Hails “The first company to publish the equivalent car last year, by | an average of $73. In other | has been passed to the con- | sumer.” — | He. said Conservative and New Democratic Party critics | become remarkably silent :|gives $50,000,000 a year to auto |from lists was General |Mr. ‘Motors.” he went on. “It has two-storey brick .manse - where reduced prices, compared. with |he once lived. It now Is jeupied by -Rev. minister of Norfolk» Street words, the full saving in tariff | United Church. WEATHER Sunny, little change in temperature; west winds 15. Low Friday: sunny, cloudy 35 and 55. in day. 22 PAGES s Auto Deal Ignores Buyer Benefit ; Is Evident, diencelold jing a 1953 visit while he was GUELPH, Ont. (CP)—Prime jexternal affairs minister n the Minister Pearson dismissed as St. Laaurent government. During his speech to the chi!- day allegations the new Cana- dren, Mr. Pearson recalled liv- jing in Guelph after his return overseas in the First World War when his father was minister of Norfolk Street Meth- agreement jodist Church. He had played is reducing car prices,"’ he told |semi-pro baseball then for a coffee-and. |\Guelph team, campaign |ball club?’ “a pretty good “One. of. the. disconcerting |things about this election,”’ he The prime minister said the said with a grin, was that it jtariff rebates contained in the |prevented him frou watching sion, Just before leaving for Orillia; Pearson stopped at the oc- John Witzel, Inside the entrance hall he stroked the dark wood of the bannister and told Mrs. Witzel: "I used to slide down these of the adto pact “have lately |stairs. I see that the post I on (knocked off at the bottom hag: the issue,” and- singled out Con- |mever- been--replaced.” servative Alfred D. Hales, seek- lWAS ON PHONE and complete approval; We will ing re-election here in Welling- do anything we can to help in|ton South in the Nov. 8 vote. | this matter.” pari | DROVE FROM TORONTO The Canadian prime minister | a : added: ‘I hope that a mission} of this kind, if it could be sent} and received by the Rhodesian government, might through con- e—if not pre- of flag - waving schoolchildren. ‘The youngsters, driven to the square in -huses during \school _ lunch break, blocked traffic as they raced around the | j minister’s car, shouting and thrusting out their hands. .Two provincial ‘policemen in Mr. Pearson’s highway “escort estimated that 1,000 persons were in the square when Mr. Pearson and Liberal candidate Don McFadzen arrived in an open car behind a pipe band. Mr. Pearson spoke briefly to the children from the back of a truck, then drove through the throng to a hotel nearby, where the reception for adults was held. - After his speech about the auto agreement, he shook hands for about 10 minutes before go- | he disastrous for Rhodesia." Asked whether he would be a member .\.of - the --tiitsion,.-Mr/ Pearson said: : “T fiave no reasop.to believe # would be asked to take part in it, but if I were asked to take part and it was. considered important that I should be a member of the mission, well, of course I would go. Ship Said. Unstable - the {serve on Before setting out on his dag jof campaigning Mr,. Pearson \spent two hours in his. Toronto Mr. Pearson drove here from hotel suite, talking on the tele Toronto and was mobbed’ in a [phone to Ottawa and London downtown square by hundreds |about the Rhodesian situation. He told reporters it is “highly unlikely” he will be asked ta the Commonwealth prime ministers’ missf{on te Rhodesia proposed by Prime Minister Wilson of Britain. . However, he said that' if he was asked to join the mission he - would- go: - . Mr- Pearson told his adult audience in Geulph he had spent a good deal of time on the Rhodesian problem because it would be a catastrophe if the white government of that: Afri- can nation seized independence ion its own terms. “Rhodesia may seem to be far removed from Guelph, but {n-ouf-modern terms it is: not very far at all,’ he said. World | problems were on every- body’s doorstep. ‘On Voyage — MONTREAL (CP) — Counsel for the transport department said Wednesdav the freighter Fort William, which sank last ing to a private meeting with area candidates. He also paid a brief visit to | Mayor Raalph Smith at city hall which had 13 large Union Jacks fluttering outside its front win- | dows. A lone: maple leaf flag, | {badly faded and its edges in | tatters, flew. on_top of the build- | ling. SIGNED BOOK i Pee | Signing the city guest hook. opening on an official. inquiry |he leafed back tnrough its.pages into the sinking of the Caanada jand discovered the first name Steamship Lines freighter. The Fort William, pee | the loss of five lives, had insuf- ficient stability all the way down the St. Lawrence Seaway from Hamilton, Ont. The counsel, Kenneth C. Mac- with 300 tons of calciugn car- | bide, steel and other g0, ex ploded just after berthing here Sept. 14. , The department of transport | is calling 22 witnesses including | the ship's captain. Sam FE. Wil- kinson. Capt. Wilkinson was trapped in his cabin following the explosion and had to be; of” his; By_ CARL, MOLLINS Mr. MacKay said the ship had! BRIGHTON, England (CP)— _idoors . in its. side. for..umloading | Edwar.”.Heath..served—up.a-fish-. cargo. The doors were opened and-chips speech Wednesday to when the ship docked here and (a Conservative party conference while trying to lighten the ves- | hungry for an exciting new po- gel. he said. it became unsta: | litical menu from their chief. ble and started to list. | Heath. elected leader last July | At this potnt water rushed In {as the up-to-date Tory answer, the’ cargo doors. He said the ex- | to Prime Minister Wilson's mo- ‘dents The only unsettling incident of |the prime minister’s day came when two youths in the crowd of school children shoved small placards fh front of him, lettered: ‘‘Is honesty, Liberal policy?’ and ‘‘Lester, you. stole our vote.” 3 Mr. Pearson smiled and walked past the youths. who told reporters they were stu- at the University of Geulph, but refused to give their names. One of them ad- mitted he was too young te jin it was his. own, written dur- vote. Heath’s Speech Lacking In Fire over the Conservatives in a public opinion poll last week. The. address..was- interrupted ~ twice by shouts from gate. crashing empire loyalists, a rightist fringe group apparently angry because Heath has = ported ‘Wilson in denying Rho desia independence under white- minority rule. || Leaders On was sinking. More Refugees Reach Key West KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)—-Brav- ing angry seas in small craft. 102 more Cubans crossed the Florida Straits Wednesday be fore bad weather temporarily stopped the flow. At the same time. a possibility arose thatt Fidel Castro might set free tens of thousands of po- litical prisoners who are in jai! Hustings By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY Pearson—Ottawa. Diefenbaker—Calgary, Deouglas—Galt, Ont. Thompson—Saskatchewan. Caouetie — Terrebonne riding tm Quebec. plosion occurred while the ship because they oppose his regime is to strengthen the British a ———=— economy. get out of debt and jern socialism, addressed his) The Rhodesian issue is sched- |party for the first time with a uled for debate Friday—but un + flat recital of how Britain should | der careful control of the party “build up one by one our leadership. The chairman, Sir | achievements as a country.” Max Bemrose, informed the con- His 40-minute speech was a Eee on ne ie = ion te > . Fo eee ae chad ng «tty executive will be debated Tory manifesto publis 8 as the last item on the agenda. week ago, a subject already ex- One - time foreign secretaty haustively praised by a two-hour Selwyn aa mesons, ‘parade of conf k leader, Sit Alec Douglas-Home, \Who preceded Heath Will have prime time in the The leader repeated his pledg | scheduled 50-minute debate. that a Conservative government would trv again to join the 'Eiropean Common Market. But he added that the first priority Fulton Planning Leadership Try. once again be able to hold eur) - vancouvER (CP) — £. Da | heads high in the world and use| .. : ; re vie Fulton said Wednesday he ; our influence for good. expects to Ge a candiate ‘tor POLITELY APPLAUDED leadership —of the ve - The 4,000 party delegates, |Conservative party “if and | crowded on canvas chairs into |when a leadership convention a decaying hockey arena, gave (takes place in the proper ctr- Heath a polite standing ovation. | cumstances , But there was none of the spon-| The former justice minister ts |taneou » cheering that: greeted the (Diefenbaker zovernment, Wilson's major address to the told a press conference it has |Labor party conference two never been any secret that on a weeks ago, a speech credited lomg-ramce >asts he ts 2 potem {with stretching. Labor's lead tial leader shin candidate.