Two Arres b8e2 In Escape . Z If It's" Good The Gua VOL. LXXVIU. NO. 233 For The Island 3 rdian Is For It ; ¢ ww Authorised es Second Class Mail by the Post Office Denartment, Ottawa, ~ ed Oh joy dy and for payment of postage in cash | ay” ame From Jail In Miami, Fia. MIAMI, Fla. ‘AP)—Two men were arrested Wednesday and charged with taking part in a $35,000 plot that. freed from jail Canadian Georges Lemay who {s accused of a spéctacular bank burglary in’ Montreal. One is a 27-year-old jailer, who conveniently left a cell door open in the county jail, Sheriff T. A. Buchanan said. . One or two other persons may be arrested later. the sheriff said. He added that police were working 6n some promising leads to catch the slippery Ca- nadian. ° 2 The sheriff said the $35,000 was offered as the price for lib- erating Lemay, who scrambled 9 feet down a cable Tuesday night from the seventh floor of the jail. But the sheriff said the money apparently has not. changed hands. He also said he did not | know how the money was to be divided up : The wo arrested: Harold Al. gar, a security guard at the jail, and Earl Mixon, 31, a for- mer county policeman who now . {s a jail bondsman. The. sheriff said Mixon also is a friend of Lemay’s wife, Lise. - : If convicted of. the charge a” aiding the escape ‘of a county prisoner, the maximum: sen: tence would be a $500 fine and a year in jail. The sheriff said Algar took Le- may from, his fifth-floor cell tp a “hold (cell on the’ grouj flodr-about 11 a.m. Tuesday. and left the: door unlocked. : . Lemay then|made his way to the 10th floor, picked up the 114- inch cable, went down to the - seventh floor, lashed the cable to a plumbing fixture’ and’ low- ered himself out the window. ACCUSED OF THEFT | | t } { } } | i GEORGES LEMAY : “a pid off his dockage fees from ja fist-sized wad of $100 bills. ~ ;He had been in jail since while fighting proceedings to deport ‘him to Canada.» At least three persons watched ‘in amazement as Lemay nimbly ‘descended the cable to the roof of a shed, jumped into bushes on the ground 15 feet below and tumbled into an automobile oc- ‘cupied by three men. The eye- witnesses rushed to tell authori- ties as the car raced northward in a clean getaway. . Earlier police reports said a fd woman was’ waiting for Lemay and drove the getaway car, but me lit, y police satd later this was iP correct. There wag Lemay, perhaps “accompanied by his wife, Lise, would hole up ;on' one of the hundreds of boats jon South Florida's coast and | perhaps flee the country aboard ‘Lieut. Hank Selsky said: ‘We . |are making a check of ali rec | ords—sign-out checks and trans- fers of prisoners.” _. Lemay had_been -confined in _ |the fifth-floor cel] with 15 other | prisoners. : “Naturally, none of them saw anything,’ Selsky said. ‘They never do.” : | WARRANT ISSUED | A’warrant has heen issued in ;Canada for Lemay on charges jof breaking and entering and theft of $300,000 in connection with a theft at a Montreal” jbranch of the Bank of Nova ‘Scotia in 1961. | A total of 377 safety deposit |boxes at the branch were broken linto, but the exact amount never was established because of re jluctance of..the. box owners to ‘talk. A gang, apparently gained ‘entry to the bank by tunnelling under the building. There have been €stimatés that between $500,000 and $4,000,000 was Lemay was hunted all over the world for four years, then became the first fugitive to be undone by a space satellite. His photograph was flashed by ' (Continued on page 3 Col. 3) Kings PCs‘Nam e he speculation that ~ M.J. M id Lemay was beeing held for fed- ® ® Cc Q U a i eral authorities who had ordered - : - : ae tum deported to Canada, where’, MONTAGUE —- Melvin J. Mc- cial, treasurer and attorney-gep- | “We is aecused'in connection with jQuaid, Souris barrister; 1ast-leral in the Shaw Government, a big Montreal bank theft in CEES a \contest the riding of: Kings im |Reddin, Montague harrister. fe The stocky, five-foot eight-inch ithe Nov." general election for | Result of the vote was not an- Lemay was arrested last May the Progressive Conservative | nounced. : aboard a fancy yam. heceeate. we Sea ME ce, i atm McQuaid sede a Cecil fined at Fort 1 . He. - MeQuaid, former provim-|to allow Ris name to come be. = : : = iforé the convefition only a short |time .before the balloting. He hard to get, but had to take into said he was not trying to play | No After-Effects Seen 22 esse —would—d6,_his ‘night was nominated here to |was opposed by William A. ‘best, starting immediately, to | (Continued on page 3 Col. 7) | In Grand Banks Quak HALIFAX -(OP)-“Fisheriea of" Tt was. not ‘immediately kno Vednesday if there were any vessels in the vxaiA ORG... have—been:..no.. apparentarea. of- the quake. Fisheries. of-— an earth-ficials said more information ‘quake recorded Tuesday about might be available when fishing home = ficials here said . W after ~ effects 500 miles off Newfoundland. R. E. Homans,. administrative | officer of the fisheries depart-. ment, said preliminary checks had revealed no injuries or d-m- ', age to fishermen or boats in the area. é ‘In St. John’s, Nfld:, fisheries! officials said a major windstorm | Friday drove many vessels to’ port and few would have had time to return to the Grand Banks, where the earthquake is believed to have been centred. ’ Dr. E. R. Denptsch, : geophysic- | fst at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. } vessels near the Grand Banke returned to port.” : The quake was recorded in St. John's at 12:27 p.m. ADT and) here at 12:29 p.m. An observa. tic. tory~at; Weston, Mass:.~ placed)“ ks | WS @ Huge Waves Hit French Liner Wednesday: -from. New |York, reported 19 passengers and a crew mémber were in- ijured when the ship was hit by- three huge waves in the Atian- steaming off - Newfoundland LE HAVRE" (APY = The |French liner- France, arriving » CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1965. ; Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew”: iy Drought Hits — Potato Crop — In Valley | | KENTVILLE, N.S. (CP) Drought conditions in the An- ~ napolis. Valley have cost potato growers about $250,000, Dale Ells, a Nova Scotia marketing official, said here Wednesday. Mr. Ells said drought condi- tions recently have been the worst recorded since 1914, when! temperatures, here hovered > around the 90 degree mark for: several days without rain. | Tuesday's temperature- at) : nearby RCAF Station Greenwood | was a record high 87 for Sept. 21. Rainfall here this Month has been .41 inches. far below ayer-' age. : Roy Layton, a federal govern- ment potato and seed inspector | said that about 10 per cent of the potato crop has been har- vésied, but. digging operations ‘have turned. parched fields’ into dust: He said irrigated fields were | ‘in better condition than those | not irrigated. Potato acreage this | year is down from 1964. The in- dustry is_expetced to yield $1.500.000 to Nova. Seotia farm- ers, : 5 DOG LOVERS | GIVEN SHOCK WINDSOR, © Ont. * Dog. lovers here more than . they. had bar- gained for when they at- tended a meeting. The printeé.d program Primised that as this week is National Dog Week, the | Speaker would be Dr. Regi- - | Bald Doidge of the Western | Ontario Agricultural School | | in Ridgetown who would lec- | ture on ‘‘changes in the field | Of veterinarian medicine.” x Ae | (CP) — learned rR There's a myth often heard ~ from. the lips of Islanders and | visitors to the Island that | ‘When he rose to speak, summer here is over when Old Dr, Doidge said: > | Home -Week ends. Yesterday. ; | put the lie to that one! Tem- . ties went over the 90-degree | | -, "My topic was only given a yt three minutes. vago. I ‘wasn’t even aware that this is National Dog Week. As a matter of fact, I ‘don’t particularly care for dogs.” adi. a--hushed.--silence, - he-- spoke on/' “‘changes in the field of agriculture.”’ : see ee ee ‘More Edu to mea By DON ANGUS penditures at both provincial FREDERICTON (CP) —. The and federal levels. po Canadian Educ ation Associa- He said that since the end of tion's annual convention moved the Second World War, a through its first full day of gem |greater percentage of Canada’s sessions Wednesday - and ‘grogs national product has been Shipowner Fine: Made Smail Dent wa ASCOT, England ‘AP) — eral ros ‘Livanos had ‘his drivers’s spending and increased national e-ountry is unsuccessful in the quake-in the Grand Ban . : : i ibility - dominated ievi i jected tial afea abdt : ‘ Saturday when, giant waves hit. licence suspended for three responsibility Pfo-. achieving its projected potenti of Cote ae heaitoe orks | About 60 “passengers and crew~ months and was fined £25 ($75) ceedings. -. for economic growth “‘then the vatory in Ottawa recorded the quake and officials placed it a few hundred miles southeast of the’ Grand Banks, Dr. Deutsch said readings in- | epicentre | John’s, was ‘‘close to the’ outer Grand | said seismographic instruments Banks, but perhaps inside the | dicate the quake’s members took bad falls. Twenty were treated in the infirmary for, fractures, dislocations and bruises. Secret Deals Said Possible | by a court here Wednesday. Lil-; J. Pp. Francis of Ottawa, di vanos, 30, whose shipping fof rector of the labor department's tune is estimated at £100,000,- economics branch, told dele- 000 ($300,000,000) pleaded guilty gates attending a panel discus- to driving his Ferrari jsion on the national problem of rene ree Tha. a to an (financing education that educa- Ascot week party. His cag (tion must. be given a higher struck three. parked cars. | priority among government ex-' ¥ expected needs of education can only be met by giving it a ious objects. of government ex- penditure or by increasing the appropriate ‘rates of taxation. Msgr. Donald C. Duffie, presi- dent of St. Thomas University cation Spending Ww j | eiier | | | SUMMER ENDS WiTH HEAT WAVE joyed a pleasant day on the beach.at Brackley, while most Islanders were sweating as. they put in their regular work- ing hours. More of the same weather is forecast for today as fall arrives officially: Urged At Ass'n Meeting | here, said in an earlier address education -has become more de ‘manding- in: 1965 because of rapid and fundamental changes. He said money is needed for adult and university education, > spokesman_said__the_-liner__Greek.. shipowner "George. Stav-| appeals _for- greater _ education _deyoted_to_education._But-if the but ‘‘what are our priorities? i. -. . We have neither the quali- | ‘fied personnel nor * the financial | means to do everything at the same time.” : CEA President Dr. W. C. higher priority among the var- Lorimer of Winnipeg said it is tary-general.’’ difficult and expensive to pro duce significant education im- provements in areas ‘or rural and urban poverty. ‘‘We must make a concerted attack on these problems with money. and new approaches,”’-he said. wor MORE SEVEN CENTS. jWednesday) in the India-Pakis- jtan war that had threatened to Pakistan to stop the. shooting in | ‘serious | gious raids. indicated the quake took place | banks.” “about 520 miles from St.| The banks, one of the world’s | MELOWNA, B.C. (CP)--T. C. John's, probably to the south-/major commercial fishing areas, | Douglas, national leader of the’ east. But~ this figure couid~ be are located” on” the continientat | New Democratic - Party, .-Wed-- Mr. Francis said -if the pro portion of government spending devoted _to.education is to be in-” creased to any significant. de- WEATHER Mostly clear, cont hot and humid; - winds becoming southwest 15. Low-high 60 and 80. Friday: sunny, very warm. 20 PAGES y Relief Feeling Sprea ds . As Guns Become _UN Truce Team Flown Tc Scene | | ': By THOMAS~A; REEDY world capitals at the ‘belliger- | NEW DELHI (AP)—A cease- ents’ acceptance of the Security _ fire took effect at 3:30 a.m. In- Council order. But China con- dian time today (7)p.m. ADT ‘tinued its verbal attack on the. 'United Nations, the United States and the Soviet Union. President Johnson promised in ja telephone talk with President ‘Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pak istan that the United States will fully support with words and deeds otis by United Na- tions to achieve a final settle: ment. Diplomatic sources in’ Moscow | said Indian ‘and Pakinstani ac- ceptance of the ceasefire en- hanced prospects of top-level India-Pakistan. peace talks. on Soviet territory with the pro ferred good offices of Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. India’s Prime Minister Shas- tri accepted Kosygin’s offer in principle in a speech in New Delhi. Ayub's government ear- .lier had welcomed the offer, but said the question of the cease- fire must be worked out first. WANTS SOLUTION ~ oe In a broadcast to the Pakis tani people, Ayub called the Se curity Council's -order ‘“inade- quate and ‘ unsatisfactory’ be- ‘cause ft did not lay down a spe- \cific solution for Kashmir. But jhe said Pakistan would comply in the interest of international peace. : He thanked nations that backed Pakistan's stand in_.the conflict and gave special thanks to ‘‘the moral support of the © Chinese government,” Continuing its attack on the. engulf Asia. : : Hours, before the scheduled time for the end of hostilities military radios crackled out or- ders to troops of India and accordance with the agreement reached by the United. Nations Security Council in New York | early Wednesday. There were no immediate re- ports of violations of the cease- fire, But a few hours before the deadline, India accused Pakis- tan of bombing the Sikh holy city of Amritsar early Wednes- day anc killing 42° civilians there: anesee! eee In a letter to UN Secretary- General U Thant, Indian Am- bassador G. Parthasarthy termed the reported attack a and dastardly viola- tion” of the t agreement. Amritsar, the golden temple | city of the bearded Sikgs’ reli- | sect, is in Punjab state | near the Western front. The Indians also reported two other pre-ceasefire Pakistani air SEND SUPERVISORS | As the truce hour approached, |the United Nations rushed about 30 ‘military mento India and {Pakistan to supervise the agree- jment and the, requested with- idrawat along the line where the ‘fighting ‘has raged since early August over control of the di- United Nations, the Chinese ‘vided state of Kashmir. lealled today for a thorough re’ A wave of relief swept pany | (Continued on page 5 Col, 1) ie Canada Answers Call __.+For Peace Observers. = UNITED NATIONS (CP) —ja_ Security Covacil resolution Canada answered U Thant's ur- passed early Monday and. wag aidentak a the. United Me kan re wiiing a | as Uni 'a- | Pakistan ordering fightin tions secretary - aaae. the task-of putting together -a day: One OF Dene Vere 10 Spetviae The _ Security : f Council origh®. 2 the-ceasefire between India nds cally had ‘piven the two ae Eexiaten: tries until 4 a.m. ADT Wedneé, External A.ffaits Minister day to order a ceasefire but the Martin announced here follow- deadline was extended until ‘7 ing a series of meetings that p.m. at the request of Pakistani Canada is sending immediately ‘Foreign Minister Zulfikar All 10 additional observers to the Bhutto during a pre-dawn extra- UN military observer group in -ordinary council meeting. tween tia’ one Kashiie” eal The. secretary - general said : : that 100: military observers, plus Martin said Canada’s agree- 60 civilian personnel, would be ment ‘was in response to am required to supervise the 1,000- urgent request from the secre- mile border between India and‘ Pakistan—the scene of the fight- He said these additional Ca- '"€- ~ nadian observers are required Canada already has nine mill- to meet the increased responsi- tary observers serving with the bilities placed on the UN to su- 40-man, il-nation UN team in pervise the ceasefire and the re- Kashmir since 1959. She also hae turn of all armed Indian and heen making available to the Pakistani personnel ‘to theposi- UN an RCAF Caribou aircraft tions they held before the aut- with an RCAF crew of eight. to break of hostilities: Aug..5.. provide the -local transportation The ceasefire was ordered in needs of the UN observer group. ilent Noy 8 \ - out by perhaps 10 per cent or shelf off the coast of Newfound- Nesday night demanded a full- | land. J “ QUAKE NOT SEVERE more either way."’ Scientists at Dalhousie Univer- | .the earthquake was in the inter- mediate range, about five on the Richter scale. The main tremor of the disastrous 1964 Good Fri- day earthquake in Alaska had a reading of about eight on the acale. Tuesday's quake took place in an area where only one or two have been recorded in the last flecade. The scientists said it was not connected with frequent quakes recorded in the mid-At- lantic ‘ridge an undersea moun- tain range that runs through the Azores. i The last major earthquake in the Grand Banks area was Nov. 18, 1929. It shook buildings in mainland Canada. A tidal. w°ve struck about 242 hours after the quake all along the Newfound- land south coast: Especially hard-hit wa: the Burin Peninsula; a 75-mile-long hoot-shaped promontory jutting | scale investigation of possible. “secrét deais’’ involved in the Canada-U.S. auto: pact. ie said prominent Liberals have contradicted one another about what it will mean to the car buyer. Mr. Douglas told a rally that the U.S. tariff commission has suggested ‘‘secret deals'’ be- tween the Canadian government and Canadian cat manufcctut- ers. | “The Canadian people have a/ these deals,” said Mr. Douglas.’ “Why weren't they included, in the agreement, what behind-the- | Fibarn arrangements have been, * \made with the auto manufac | turers concerning the $50,000,- 000-a-year handout granted them by the Pearson government?” Text of Mr. Douglas’ remarks was released in advance of de livery. Tight to know the truth about -° out into the Atlantic, where the os —— sgaeeeee 16, js wave reached 30 to 60 feet in ; s oreups os ow Te ‘some areas. Twenty-seven co RE-ELECTED Deaths ge ews eS - ees and battered to Mrs. Elizabeth Rand of | Sport... \...--. i death. Dathage was estimated Port Williams, N.S., has been Finance, markets ....... 12 at $2,000,000 as houses, barns, re-elected vice-president of Women's sescreccees’ 6 wharves and fishing boats were the. Associated Country Wom- Rural churches ...... oo 7 swept but to sea. - en of the World. She was el- Editorials .........++.+++ : NO TIDAL. WAVES ected unopposed at triennial Summerside _........ -; There were. ne reports of conference of body at Dublin, | ‘ Kings. Queena, City .....- : tidal waves in Neéwfoundiand| Ireland, Tuesday. eu Prince County = = -: -- t (CP Wirephote) \ A ARRESTED IN ESCAPE PLOT _ 4 Thé CEA president gree, this will. have to be ‘‘at . the expense of ‘such fields as national defence’’ and other gov- ernment expenditure. STRESS FEDERAL. AID ; Dr. Lorimr and Canada’s 10 | jprovincial education Ministers, | 'placed the greatest emphasis so | ,far during the convention on the I coe for . greater fedral parti- |cipation and national co-ordina- tion in ducation spending and development. - told the more than 600 delegates here F | the organization needs to be |Strengthened ‘through adequate financing and - adequate staff and that it should fill the -role that is filled in most other coun- tries in the world by a national or. federal ministry or office ‘of education.” The education ‘ministers also announced approval in. principle of a university admissions board and acceptance of the ‘constitution for a proposed com- ‘Mission on school broadcasting. Royalty Plans SURVEY MADE NB. Storm Damage MEDFORD, N.B. (CP) —Civil defence officials from Frederic- ton Wednesday began assessing damage unofficially estimated at more than $100,000 in the wake of a brief but fierce gale that swept through a seven-mile area of western New Brunswick Tues- day. ; J. A. Murray arrived. on. the scene early Wednesday to sur- .vey the damage. He was joined “OMmMunities A. Laid- Ulement, -Limestone Siding, -Por- Wednesday night by J : law, assistant director of civil defence. for New Brunswick. Municipal Affairs Minister Norbert Theriault said - their Exceeds $100,000 © sheds and flattened hydro and telephone poles. Wilson Baker, 28, was taken to hospital after being . injured at the home of his parents here. He was treated for cuts received from flying glass and later re- leased. After creating minor damage in iimestone..Me- tse 9 winds ripped into a series of small Califorma Set- tage Road and finally Medford. All are 12-15 miles south of -Grand Falls. N.B The storm -7ig-zazeed along a B | ° Vi . : findings, are to be studied | path about 200 feet wide before — gian- Is “The provincial government. = tee ty vale oot a ee BRUSSLES (Reuters) Queen The Yale, which lasted only Electricity Elizabeth and Prince Philip of three minutes in most dreas if tione were ‘Britain will pay an official visit struck, crossed into New Bruns- more and communica knocked. out for than four hours. os . ixen, 31 form- Wednesday in Miami, Fla. Dade county jail Tuesday to Belgium May 913. 1966, as wick from California Settlement Weather office ; . er pre agentes now and changed with taking part night. Sheriff T.A. Buchanan guests of King Baudouin and on the Maine-New Brunswick said the storm was coment , Harold i 2 $35,000 ‘plot that freed said the money was_ offered Queen Fabiola, the Brussels border. Refore it ‘suddenly died, heavy —thunderstarm ‘eloud@ | A hail bondsman, and Harold iged Canadian hank rob- for Itherating Lemay. royal palace announced Wed- * had desiroved and uprodted which being hail, rain and aoe y Algar, might. were arrested ber Georges - Lemay - trom ~ AP Wirephote) nesday. (homes. smashed barns and ‘vere winds im e-small sree i , _general faced te:stop_at_7.p.m.. ADT. Wednes.---| Neth