It It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 250 Washed Out...endezvous May N Not Delay Moon Trip * By JOHN CAPE SENNEDY. Fan Fla. (AP) Two dejected Gemini space hunters were stymied Monday before they got ee in- tended space target lost some ‘where short of orbit, broken and perhaps burned to bits in its fall from the sky. “No joy, no joy,” was the | epitaph sounded by the radar| men scanning the orbital path intended for the Agena target vehicle. The 103,000-mile : space | chase ~ a rendezvous-and-dock- ing mission—was postponed un- til probably early next er w4 “Disappointment"’ echoed every statement from U.S. space officials, Still in the Gemini 6 Hunter spacecraft on the ground when | the scrub was anrounced, com- |. mand pilot Walter Schirra said; “Gee, I'm sorry.” Later on the und, he told the launch crew: was a beautiful spacecraft ee "hag conditions been other- wise, we're confident we could have gone without, a sweat.” . SEE NO DELAY But both Robert Seamans, as sociate director of the U.8. Space Agency, and Robert C.. Gilruth, head of the Manned Spacecraft Centre, saidithe fail- | ure would not hold up the U.S, man-to-the-moon program, Asked whether the would give the Russians a lead in the race to link up vehicles in space, manned chief George Mueller said: ‘'Clearly, they have a better than they had this The failure of the get vehicle Monday could an earlier firing of the 1éday Gemini 7 5 j il "1 Astronauts Schirra Thomas Stafford were laguch im their Goutal € spacecraft’ on launch ‘vod when the Atlas booster rocket with a brilliant orange fire-trai) shot up from pad 14 more than a mile away to lift the Agena space target tewaards orbit. . failure | bring | sth: yest wee i — Pra —_ a 4 on ona rtmosd, Gre , aa apa erat “Covers Prince Edward Island Like ‘The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1965. ~ «NOP MORE SEVEN CENTS j nounced by committee of the Norwegian Stortin Rom an’ Catholic OSLO (AP)—The Nobel. Peace AB na 93 was awarded. Monday- to peer ~the United Nations In- ional Children’s - E mer. cy Fund—dedicated to feed- img and helping children in more than 100 countries. The $55,000 award was -an- the five-member (Parliament). As. usual, the committee did not explain its choice. Under the 1895 will of Dr. the Swedish inventor of dyna- mite, the Peace Prize was to go annually who shall have most or best pro- moted the fraternity of nations and the abolishment or reduc- tion of standing armies and the formation of peace congresses.” Alfred Nobel, “to the person and. extension The executive director of the fund is' Henry R. Labouisse, a former U.S. ambassador to Greece and a director of the in- | ternational co-operation admin- | istration. (Nobel Peace Pie Is Awarded UN Children’s Emergency Fund There were $1 nominations for the prize this year, including UN Secretary-General U Thant. The prize went last year to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the American Negro civil rights GIVES AID leader, | It gives food and medical aid The prize, along with a gold to more than 56,000,000 children. medal, will be presented here !t helps set up dairies and milk- Dee. 10. It is the eighth time drying and - pasteurization the prize has gone to an organt- Plants. It helps develqp cheap, zation. The International Red (protein foods such as fish flour, Cross won At in 1963. jcotton seed and soybean -prod- offices try to handle the re- quests for help that pour im from the poor.countries of the {vere MISSING | Depending on voluntary con- jucts. tributions from _ govrnments| and individuals, UNICEF was founded: by the UN General. As sembly Dec. 11, 1946, to help child victims of the Second | World War in Europe and Asia. ‘lin to compat yaws. The task of the fund was| Contributions from midwives in primitive villages, insecticides to spreadng mosquitoes, govern- 1950 to aid children in all un-|of its budget. derdeveloped countries. years later it became a perma- peace prize be awarded by the nent_UN_ organization. |Norwegian Storting. The four | $32,900,000 a year, Its. 30 area jin Stockholm, Council Renews Efforts On Religious Declaration By GERALD MILLER VATICAN CITY (AP) — The put into have. sed on 202 sug- a in writing ur ind its as- 9 has the|~ perfect worship according to his San, eight a old a Bishop Emil Schirra thought she A Montre#i said Monday two skel- |\de Smedt, mémber of the Vati- her father. felt. low . ’ were cans’ Christian unity secretar-|— “Mad,” she said, | had-come. The — farm ; SCHIRRA DISAPPOINTED cedented twin lown | Re era over the weekend. | “lf the declaration shall be “We are disappointed,” flawiessly—and. the er Police said: they. could not yet |prociaimed by the council, it Schitra told astronaut booster had burned itsway into | give any’ details. will open new ways for the tree B. Shepard, the first U8. Space as if ‘by habit. The wife of a varmer in the exercise of religion in the ut into space. But when time came’ for the |area: told a a that” the The recognition of religious he Gemini 6 astronauts = modified Agena rocket to take | skele' found by her liberty establishes the founda- fly back to Houston today and jover, the picture was suddenly | husband. | “ition. needed for the complete they may get a couple of weeks grim and a-spokesman said: ‘‘A She said the QPP took . the elimination tn theoretical or vacation. dramatic loss of.telemetry. The)|skeletons away in two wooden j|practical discrimination among no PA they a le shortly after as- . it may leaoree combination was launched indi-|many times ‘before. It hed sent |eated in an old eae. a pee sits ioe. 104 Candidates Are Contesting 33 Seats In Atlantic Provinces By HARRY CALNEK. HALIFAX (CP) — The 33 |Scotia House of Cobmmons seats in the four. Atlantic provinces will be wees by 104 candidates in federal election. Seniameiaax closed The number is two more than contested the seats in the 1963 election. Liberals and Progressive Con- servatives were nominated for all 33 seats. The New Demo- cratic Party is offering in 2 seats, Social Credit in) six, inde pendents in two and an indepen- dent Liberal in one. There are four - way contests ip seven ridings: ‘St. John’s East, St. John’s West and Trim ity-Conception in Newfoundland; Colchester-Hants and Halifax in Nova Scotia; and Restigouche- Madawaska and Victoria-Carle- ton in New Brunswick. For Newfoundland’s seven | seats Social Credit nominated four candidates, In 1963 they had none. The NDP nominated three, the same as the last elec- tion, and there was again one independent Libral. NDP ACTIVE The NDP is all four seats in Prince Edward Island, all 12 in Nova Scotia and all 10 in New Brunswick. No Social Crediters are running in P.E.1. or Nova Scotia but there are jTrunning |, dependents are running in Nove ge SES minute Credit candi- dates defeated in 1963 in New Brunswick. In Halifax Ignatius J. Ken- nedy filed Monday as an inde- pendent. offered for a t on the Haiftax county. council .in 1960 but was defeated. He said he has “worked for the Conserva- tivs for the last number: of THREE WOMEN ENTERED Three women are entered, all of them in New Brunswick. Mrs. Margaret Rideout, 42, is for the Liberals in INSIDE TODAY Classified ....-:...... 14, 15 Wirth ax cccese saeco Deaths .......50055" ins Comics* ...... + es Sport ........ eevee 2 elear that the declaration con- | cerns the juridical area of | civil and social rights, in up-| degree that ‘they find it, to follow it. —More references. to past «fone ae and = — c tl Cress: ot. rine yo asic prin- wiples;- +: Signe RE “fhe —A clearer statement phd oo nizing that some have .°n cetablished Sion” Some prelates had wanted any such references to be Jeft out, | but the drafters ae the sit: | uation could not be ignored. holding et freedom.) { apart from question of ane Se SDU Students Will Meet Govt § A delegation of - student union | Premier ioe ond te “lial Officials from St. Dunstan's | si0:3) am this morning 1 University are to meet: a govern- Leaders On fhe triet ie dealing with the problems of financing higher ed- ucation in Canada in general and P.EA. in particular. AM ten The fund provides kits for | kill malara-' vaccine | to fight tuberculosis and penicil- | Peter Macfarlane of Toronto | television station CFTO-TV is among four men missing since Saturday when they failed to | return to Tobermory, Ont., from an underwater filming expedition. Others missing in- clude draftsman Thomas C. a poe gat cst gy WEATHER ‘A few showers during afternoon; winds increasing to souhtwest 25. Low-high 35 and 48, Wednesday: cloudy, cool. 16 PAGES . usands Of Negroes ilson’s Arrival 6,000 Wait Hours To Greet British PM By TOM OCHILTREE |some Negroes ‘on a balcony SALISBURY (AP) — Britain's |tried tu rush downstairs to join Prime Minister Wilson arrived |thousands below. Police blocked \here Monday night for a show-|them off. \dowh with Rhodesia’s |\Minister Ian Smith, saying he | Prime! Wilson told the press confer- ence his visit Is a working one had come ‘‘to avert a tragedy.” While 6,000 Negroes cheered’ or public statements. He added. him, the British leader made it |that he has a job of work to do jclear that he wants at all costs and ‘‘when‘that job of work is ito head off a grab for independ- done I hope I shall have some ence by Smith's white Rhode- thing to say to you.” sian government. He said he wants to acquaint He told an airport press con- himself with the feelings and ference: ‘I want to do every- views in the colony and, sec- ithing possible to’avert a tragedy only, to avert what in his opin- iif a certain ‘action were to be ion would be a tragedy if cer- itaken. That is why I am here.” tain courses are pursued Wilson refused to say what Wilson said his first aim is to leounter - measures the British break the deadlock ift which re- |government would take if the cent London negotiations ended. Rhodesian government took the \plunge for independence’ from \Britain. *’ broaderied ‘by the assembly in |ments account for 80 per cent | Three | Nobel's will provides that the | UNICEF aid now amounts to other Nobel prizes are awarded | Nicholson, 26; arcist-designer |" To reveal that.part of his hand Deane @1. of the University of now ‘would not be helpful to Toronto geology department. ithe negotiations,” Wilson said. Search officials hope the quar- srEKS NO PUBLICITY As the flash bulbs of photog- tet sought shelter from stormy weather in one of the numef- raphers flashed around him Wil- i | | ous iskands in the area. son said: ‘‘E have come here to. (CP Wirephoto) do a job of work. I do not seek |publicity.’* | Wilson's. government This Rivard lwarned it would consider a unilateral declaration of iIs Candidate ipendence tantamount to foun . jand rebellion by Smith's govern- | MONTREAL (CP) — Lucien |ment, whieh rules 4,000,000 Ne- Rivard, Montreal newspaper re- |groes and 250,000 whites. \porter who has derived and! Britain has promised Rhode- leaused amusement because his |sia independence but not under ‘mame is the sam. as that of |the present system of Rhodesian ithe. notorious convicted nat | government, in which the Negro jeateerseneaaeiee.< fs filed nomina-|majority has no say. tions as a Smith. was_not..at the air jdidate in’ federal ae teatine Noe. }to receive Wilson, but” Rhode. | 18, json officials said protocol did ‘not demand Smith's presence Deputy prime minister Clifford | Walter MPupont was the chief | Rhodesian official in the airport | receiving line. Mr. Rivard listing himself as a representative of the Rhinoc- any erbs party entered the election | ‘in. Montreal Papineau constitu- | tency; -represented-- inthe last | ‘Parliament by Guy Favreau, | | at president of the Privy Council | who is Quebee Liberal leader. The Rhinoceros party is an intellectual group that takes a sardonic view of all politics as a reception at government | | house. a hot sun to see Wilson. Some | shaded themselves with three branches. Women were present oe eacune, lwith babies across their backs. 3 ° ° : | AFRICANS CHANT ‘Nominations. |’ mr geo te 8s igroes. chanted as Wilson stepped with dogs on leashes. Only once from the plane. | Rhodesian police stood by |with dogs on leashes. Only once By Provinces Hustings provincial governments sorons AY Ts Mendimeted aihie-Be | In the ation ve London and Wal- | Morton, president of the Stu- ee. Ont. - | dent’s Union at SDU; Tom Mc- Diefenbaker — In Montreal, of the Canad- whistle-stops. through 1’Assomp- mg Boog of Students at SDU | tion, Joliette, St. Norbert, Sha- | and aiso Charles McMillan, ex- ceueae. St. Tite, Hervey J | ternal affairs. . Portneuf Station to Qu The visit with the govern- cy, | ment and the submission of the Deuglas—iIn Saskatoon. brief are part of SDU's particl- Thompsea—tiIn Red Deer, Alta. Caouett.—In Hull, . Que. tae i Day to be held Oct. 27. pation in the National Student's | ‘Smith and Wilson met "Tater } Negroes had waited hours in | Wheat Sale Made To China TORONTO (OP)—Trade Min ister Sharp announced Monday night Canada has signed with Communist China one of the big- gest wheat-sale contracts in his- ae worth more than $400,000,- mraiag for .a | politi¢al meet- ing in his riding of Toronto- | Eglinton, the Liberal minister | said estimates of the size of. the ‘deal by sources in the grain . | trade—223,800,000 bushels worth about $403,000,000 were the minimum value-of -the contract. Canada signed a contract in {1963 with the Soviet Union for | 230,000,000 bushels. Mr. Sharp said deliveries te China will be made~-during the next three years, arrangement similar to one agreed to in Pe- king. in. 1963 for 187,000,000. bush- leels. The last order under that ‘contract. — 59,000,000. bushels — was received Jast August. Mr. Sharp declined to give further details on the new con- itract pending a_ scheduled \formal announcement Thursday giving credit _arrangements. Denial Of Quebec Aims Seen Threat To Unity MONTREAL (CP) — Premier |full significance of their opin- “Tf, as these people claim, —_— |danger to the unity and integ- | Quebec's assertion of itself and the aspirations of its population |constitute a threat to Canada’s settee ts caste peg [meets i summary of nominations by provinces and parti for the Nov. 8 federal e : Total PC NDP CSC 0 Nfld. m2 3— 41 P.E.I. 12 4 4 Gh ine aed ns INS. , 3% 12 12 12— — 2 |N.B. 32.10 10 0— 3— | Que. 328 7% 75 7175 —32! Ont. 291 % 8 && 1 1917) Man. 54 14-14 4— 114 | Sask. 6 17 17 17— 12 1 | Alta. 71 17 9 AP 12% run Bo: 96 22 22 22— 22 giJean Lesage said Monday that | ion. iNLW.T. ots 1 — — Canadians who are really a Yuk- 2311 —— Tel, 1,013 265 265 25576 87 65 | rity of the country are those | |who refuse to accept the effort Westmorland, which she won in| November last year to fill a vacancy left by her husband's death. She was the first New Brunswick woman to win a Commons seat... Mrs. Dorothy Dearborn, 38, is running for the Liberals in Royal, where she was defeated in 1963 by Progressive Conserv- ative R. G. L. Fairweather. Mrs: Emelia Nugent, running on the. NDP ticket in Resti- gouche-Madawaska, is making her first bid in politics. There were no old - fashioned homination day debates be- tween candidates as in past elections, although one is sched- uled for Pictou Nov. 2. HAS WIDE CHOICE As in the last election, the greatest choice is in the two- member Halifax seat .where seven candidates are running, two each from the Conserva- tives, Liberals and NDP and one independent. Four cabinet ministers arte defending their seats: Trans- port Minister Pickersgill in Bonavista - Twillingate; mines Minster MacNaught in Prince; Labor Minister MacEachen in Inverness-Richmond; and Fish- eries- Minister Robichaud in Gloucester. Nominations closed at 3 p.m. local daylight time. Nomina- fwo in New Brunswick. Two in- 8 tions in the seven Newfoundland seats closed Oct. 12 = FORMER SPEAKER NAMED TO PRIVY Y COUNCIL Alah Macnaughton (left) Speaker. of the House of Com- mons for the tast Pariament, naughton was made a member Fescecalesndeay” Guierna_ sougnten, Caneaat sheeker earson y following r \eeremony in which Mr. Mac- Parliament for Mount Royal, chats with of modern Quebec to assert. it- lself as the mainstay of French Canada. | The premier, who was speak- |ing at a meeting of the Cana- dian Club here, said those who regard Quebec's efforts to as sert itself and its claim to be the mainstay of French Canada | |nd integrity never follow up | their train of thought to find out ' where it leads. | This was either because “they hesitate to do so before French- speaking Canadians, because they do not realize the OTTAWA (CP)—An epileptic sentenced to 10 years’ imprison- ment for attempted murder. Marion ‘lizabeth O’Brien of Saint John, N.B.. will get a new trial under a decision made by the Supreme Court of Can- ada Monday. } The highest court turned down a motion by the New Brunswick. attorney -- general's rtment to appeal a decision handed down Sept. 22 hy the province's appeal court. The NB. Appeal Court quashed Miss O’Brien’s convie- i of Jan. 13, 1964, and or- ered a new trial-on a charge > of attempted murder. in the last Parliament, js not The-Appeal Court, ruled that for election in the the trial judge erred when he jruled out insanity as a defence running current federal i (Ge Wirnketey jin bis charge to the jury. | unity, jas a threat to Canada’s unity | or | this means that they can- no conceive of our country be- ing able to satisfy any such as- pirations. “In other words, they see |Canada as an essentially Eng- lish - speaking country which tolerates the existence in the ‘Quebec reservation’ of a slowly vanishing .group: The French- speaking Canadians. As_ they see it, Canada’s unity would be | strengthened as the country be- jc ame increasingly unilipgual jand unicultural. “Naturally they don't come | (Continued: on page 5 col. 7) Epileptic Woman Granted New Trial At Saint John Miss O’Brien was accused oi attacking Mrs. Constance Finni- fan. a grocery store operator, with a knife and soft-drink bot- tles Oct. 4, 1963. Dr. Robert Gregory. upertn- tendent of the -Lancaster men- ta: hospita\. testified that Miss O’Brien probably was under an attack of psychomotor ‘aute- matic) epilepsg» during the as- sauli and that she probably was not conscious of her acts. He said such attack: of epl- lepsy were likely to recur, but expressed the opinion that Misa O'Brien was legally sane at the time of the assault The N.B. Appeal Court found that psychomotor epilepsy is a “disease of the mind” as de .fined in section 16 of the Crimi-_ ‘nal Code * a ie aeons