If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It , VOL. LXXVITL.- NO. 238 ~_ a ee CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY, Japan. arrived in Montreal was accompanied by his wife Tuesday to start six-day un-_. Princéss: Yuriko and daughter JAPANESE ROYALTY ARRIVES Prince Takahito Mikasa of official tour of Canada. He ~ Che Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew”’ SEPTEMBER 29, 1965. Smoke, Ash, Shroud Fate Of 2,000 WEATHER Overcast with showers or rain; winds Low-high 37 and 55, Thursday: cloudy. NOT MORE SEVEN CENTS Hot Lava 16 PAGES | j | MONTAGUE BUREAU | Merri!l Ross of Lower Montague. OF THE SUREDIN ane nae nor Sandy John- 7 | ston gue, a passenger in hey e Chagas of mee the Ross car were injured. Harbor died last night after 8) ‘Honna White, also-of Murray two-car collision on the out- Harbor, and a passenger in the skirts of Montague. He was be- Chapman car was suffering from lieved to be 38 years old. shock but was believed not seri- Chapman's car was in collision lously injured. | about 7:30 with one driven by’ Damage to the Chapman car British Premier's Control. Is Firm Over Conference By CARL MOLLINS |position between Labor and the BLACKPOOL, England (CP) opposition Conservatives. Britain's governing Labor party | The line-up of parties in the received its- marching orders |630-seat House is Labor 315, Tuesday from a chief treading |Conservatives 303, Liberals 10, a middle way while some of the |with two seats vacant. . foe veered right f°" * MEAD FOR WIDER SCOPE | , : | Wilson's 70-minute .report on Princess Yasuko, 21. Prince is Emperor Hirohito's youngest brother. << . (OP Wirephoto) INDIAN REPLY AWAITED Pakistan Suggests UN ~ Place Force In Kashmir 7 By BORIS MISKEW jsembly, Bbutto criticized India ° UNITED NATIONS (CP) — for refusing to permit a UN Pakistan called Tuesday for the peace force in Kashmir and for replacement of Indian and Pak- refusing to withdraw her forces istani troops in Kashmir with a'from Pakistani territory. India United Nations force pending’ has stated she objects to a peace attempts to reach a settlement: force although she-tas” 1 Ob- in the troubled Himalayan state. jection to UN observers. Foreign’ Minister Z. A. bhutto) Bhutto repeated Pakistan's of Pakistan told the General As- threat to withdraw from the eembly such a force should-con- world organization unless a s0- sist of contingents from Afriean; lution is soon found to the Kash- Asian and Latin-American coun- mir dispute which has dragged tries and should remain in Kash-'on for the last 18 years. mir pending the outcome of a plebiscite to determine Kash--AWAIT RESULTS . Mir's future. The Pakistani foreign minis- Prime Mifister Wilson pre- |his government's first year in ae very for eee office and future plans nudged struggles in Parliament a al possible election with a rousing |" a a a aan reminder at the annual party oo WOR: WOTRINE-Ciass conference ‘that Labor's battle toward ‘‘the whole British peo- for a ‘‘new Britain’’ is just get- ple.’ : scotommete= Qak Island Lures US, mal alliance with the 10 Liberal members of Parliament in order By DON ANGUS OAK ISLAND, N.S. (CP)—A to tighten his government's ten- uous grip on parliamentary California petroleum geologist. who read about this tiny island ative to the UN, and other mem- POWEr- ; bers of the Canadian delegation If Labor’s two-vote majority | and its mystery-shrouded treas- jure troves as a boy in Colorado, watched developments in the In-|should- evaporate, he said, “‘it com- | has renewed the hunt for buried dian - Pakistani dispute closely | not be an issue to he settled ,and held consultations with UN | in :jWé back corridors of the Pal- official peersey ey of . Westminstér’”” but in a | Canada now has 19 military general election. : | @bservers with the 45-membef, it Wilson said he would wel- | H-nation old observer group eome support f ; Pei | port for his foreign and that has been supervising Con- domestic measures. from the /ditions in Kashmir since the|s jneral i (1949 ceasefire’ between India ithe House oe Neapanone a and Pakistan, —. manda near balatice of Murray Harbor Resident Loses Life In Collision | was extensive. The other vehicle was not so badly damaged. The accident occurred on the — ay near the Kings Lumber vil was pronounced dead after arrival. yr G&A tague ordered an inquest. After shortly jurors viewed the body. and the’ # scene_of.the accident the hear- “ing was ‘adjourned te Oct. 7. It) will be held at the court house in Georgetown, beginning at 7:30. p.m. Chapman is a son of Mrs, Mil- ton Chapman, Murray His father, Capt..Chapman, died several years ago. Also surviving are five sisters and four broth- ers. Sisters are: Reta, Mrs. Keith Bueil and Alice, Mrs. Windsor Glover, both in British Columbia; Carrie, Mrs. Louis Herring, Mur- ray Harbor: Bertha, Mrs. Silas Mackey, Beach Point; and Doro- thy, Mrs. Perley Harris, Guern- sey [Cove. The brothers are’ Cyrene, British Columbia, and George, Robie and Cecil, all of Murray Harbor. Treasure Geologist | He said his share probably would amount to 37 per cent and total investment by the four chief participants would run to about $35,000. Mr. Dunfield was optimistic about reaching what- ever is hidden beneath this 2%- acre -island’s hard clay sutface Both cars were said to be’ proceeding in the same direction. | The injured man was taken ‘to, the Kings County Hospital but! Inman of Mon-; Harbor. | | MONTREAL Secretary - General U Thant! \proposed the setting up of the ‘pew observer group to oversee) Movie Actor the withdrawal of Indian and! power ‘wealth that six weeks ago lured : _ * ter spoke as the Security Coum : : _ Addressing the l17-nation a& ci) awaited the outeome of its Pakistan forces into their own demands, renewed Monday territories along the 1,000-mile Seriously Ill within a month. CERTAIN OF SUCCESS “The way Wwe are going about it we certainly should know within a month. I'm eonvinced [eo men to their deaths. Robert R. Dunstfield, 39, .of |Canoga Park, Calif., said-in a j interview Tuesday he has pur- chased the controling interest By MARIO ROXAS 'to turn- back when volcanic mud TAGAYTAY, Philippines (AP) coated their windows. The Red Cross said today 184 _|bodies have been recovered SAW NO LIFE tear still-smoldering Taal vol- Hoirs later ‘Mayor Antonie } i Villegas of Manila cruised: over which ted just bef —. suai. ” wes the island in a light plane and- There were no reports“of new Said he saw ‘‘no sign of human \eruptions -as rescue workers life. toiled through the ashes on the ‘‘The whole western side of tiny island in Lake Taal where|the istand is black with ashes,” the volcano lies. They feared Villegas said. ‘The eastern side ‘they would find evidence that jis still greeh and. the people ccc HEAD ~___.most_of_the_island’s_.2,000 inhabi-' there probably got—oft—safely. l¢ants had died. ‘But even on the eastern side | Some of the islanders—awak- there was nothing moving.” sened by the yammering of fear-|. The mayor said the casualty ful dogs, cats and cattle—fled jtoll may have. been increased by boat before the initial explo because there was a village Maj..Gen. R.H. Keefler of Montreal has been elected pre sident of The Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce during the Dief Tours Rural Area Of Quebec LACHUTE, Que. gressive Conservative organization’s annual meeting. |810n at 2:30 a.m, fiesta on the { ‘and Monday a LgaaN Tuesday. The aa | How many got away remained night that attracted a number tive of Weston, Ont., is presi- | to be determined by a check at. o% outsiders. dent and board chairman of refugee a ote. organized : Northern Electric Co. Ltd. by Luzon‘ officials and a survey ° (CP Wirephoto) of the stricken island by rescue - British Tories See een er a Peller Lene, o— Ma j H Id | The disaster developed on the will Support nis e ‘ '55th birthday of Philippines Immi rant Ban i Sla in |President Diosdado Macapagal. g n ying oe anaemia Manila for &| Ry HAROLD MORRISON (CP) — Police : : LONDON (CP)—Britain’s Con- said Tuesday they -are holding BURNS FARMLAND : eervatives, cast out by the vot @ man as a material witness in Hot lava, ash and steaming-ers a year ago, have decided te connection’ with the death ‘of-mud spewing from the 984foot |give full support to the Labor Richard White, 24,- a Moncton, |peak in the early-morning dark- government's non-white immt-_ N.B., laborer, who was found ness buried more than half the-gration. curbs. strangled: and etabbed in a/island’s 12% square miles. Vol- put sentiment expressed ° in Montreal hotel. canic.ash,.,.soaring above the | constituency resolutions #u g- Police said the man voluntar- ,!ake, Burned “Luzon farmland 10} gests many favor entry inte the ily came to police headquarters Mil-; away. | European Common. Market and Monday night, | Smoke~and fiames soared up a less critical attitude on Ian 15,000 feet in a spectacular dis- | Smith's policies in Rhodesta. | play that generated thunder-| The various constituency pro | Storms over the area and added |posals, to be offered: for general jlightning to the fireworks. The acceptance by the party’s an- volcano roared at full power for gyal conference at . Brighton jabout two hours, then edged off nex; month, are studded with |to measured bursts of smoke condemnation of the socialists’ and ‘steam. first 11 months. in office. But These gusted upward at five- the grassroots offerings, made } ‘minute intervals. public Tuesday night, gave little (CP)—Pro-| Sulphuric heat -barred relief indication of any great al- Leader hoats from making an immedi- ternative vision. that might zrip southerly 15, becoming light by evening. ~~ - ceasefire agreement of Sept. 22 By Hurricane _ |positions held before Aug. 5 MAZATLAN, Mexico (AP)? i At least six persons were dead = ee oe and thousands homeless Tues “jhaian and Pakistani troops day from. a weekend tropical ; ; storm that ‘smashed into this “Te spas Paseo. Renting Pacific Coast port and the’ : ; spite ‘the UN call to honor the oe Mexican states of Sl- ceasefire. And sporadic fighting oa _and Nayarit. ; was reported Officials estimate the damage along the Indian-Pakistani lines. at $10,000,000 from the six-hour India is expected to reply to- _battering by hurricahe- Hazel. | gay to—Bhutto's—-proposal- for The shrimp fleet. Mazatlan's withdrawal from Kashmir when economic base, suffered major Sardar S. Singh, India’s external damage, officials said. affairs minister, arrives in New Authorities feared the death York to attend the assembly. toll would rise. | Maj.-Gen. Bruce Macdonald of About 10,000 -persons- fled Ma-'Edmonton, commander~ of the zatlan’s low - lying slums, the mew UN. obsefver group being hardest hit area of the city. set up to supervise the proposed Thousands of flimsy shacks of withdrawal of Indian and Pak- wood, tin and cardboard were istani forces, arrived in India washed away or covered by Tuesday. _ muddy waters as deep as six Ambassador Paul Tremblay, feet. Canada’s permanent -represent- Florida Area Facing Tropicat Storm Threat NEW ORLEANS (AP)—Tropi- cal storm Debbie plunged through towering Gulf of Mexico seas Tuesday toward northwest Florid- and its miles of resort beaches and military bases. After giving hurricane - con- A hurricane watch was put into effect eastward from the mouth of the Mississippi River to Cedar Key, Fla. WARN OF FLOODS Forecasters warned of flood- ing in northwest—F lorida, south- scious South Louisiana -a mv- mentary scare, unpredictable 45st _Alabama and southern Debbie turned rapidly to the Georgia from Debbie, which northeast. may dump up to 10 inches of ae “Mexico Hit > =) 2isht= for the—two~ comman-.Indian-Pakistani. border. —~--____--AUSTIN Ses ae Seah countries “te hooae "tant “The secretary - general re-| Scott, 51, rote r ot RNR and withdraw... their -.-forces-to. in India’s Rajasthan state de-| in other” sectors” z stage and movie actor, | Widow Guested 100° observers for the/is~“‘critically ill” with~ a” brain Year-old —Hamilton——steelworker new. group..and Canada. has tumor. and. has. received-.radia-|@0d motorcycle _ acrobat .. whose supplied 12 officers in addition | tion treatment, a family spokes-|.8ix-year search.ended in tragedy to Macdonald, who will work|man said Tuesday, | Aug. 17. with Lt.-Gen. ‘Robert Nimmo of | Mrs. > Restall ; ‘ | The spokesman, who asked; Mrs. all, her son - and Australia, chief of the old ob- tna: his name not be used, said @aughter are to retain a small server group. jdoctors described the tumor as|Percéptage, Mr. Duntfield /‘said, malignant. He said Scott, who! but major shares in the fenture . enship of Miami, Fla., G, R. UNDECIDED | “There has been no opera- Laperie of Bakersfield, Calif, \4ion,”” said the spokesman. and himself.: TORONTO (CP) =~ William ~~~ : oe Lyon Mackenzie King IV hasn't made up-his mind yet | whether to become a doctor or a politician. | Two W. L. M. Kings—Wil- liam the fourth’s father and grandfather were doctors. The first W. L. M. King—Wil- liam's great great uncle— was Canada’s prime minister for 21 years -in the period between 1921 and 1948. As he is only four days old, the latest W. L. M. K. has many year in which to | choose his profession. “This seems like a medical family, so he probably will continue and be the same,”’ his mother said in hospital here Tuesday “T'll leave that up te him, however.” . His father is Dr. W. L. M. King, great-nephew . of the prime minister. His grand- father on the paternal side | was Surgeon-Lieut. W. L. M. King, the prime minister’s nephew wh went down with the Canadian destroyer St. Croix in 1943. His paternal grandmother is also a doctor, Dr. Marjorie King, of Tor- onto. : : | rain on these areas. Debbie's winds were pushing tidés up, flooding low coastal roads: Tides of three to six feet : were predicted. ; Hundreds fled Louisian's St. At 2 p.m. EDT, (3 p.m. ADT) the storm's centre was about 230 miles southwest of Pensa- cola, Fla. It was moving north- east at 10 miles an hour. Debbie's top winds were éstl- mated at 35 to 50 miles an‘hour Bernard parish (county) below —enough to kick up high tides-New Orleans. They had re- and foaming waves,but not In|turned only a day or so ago to! the class with Hurricane Betsy’s|start rebuilding homes de 150 - mije « an - hourwindsthat|stroyed by Hurricane Betsy speech to Ontario Association of ‘Housing Authorities. 150 - mile - an - hour winds that! Sept. 9-10. smashed Louisiana 2 days be- Debbie was spawned Sept. 24/ fore. in the extreme western Carib-| The New Orleans weather bu--bean Sea near the spot where at Timmins and Kirkland Lake. reav said Debbie probably Hurricane Carla was born four would-reach the Florida panhan-'years ago this month. Carla | Alta. dle late Tuesday nicht or early. wreaked death and. destruction Wednesday. ton, Galveston, Tex._ ae ‘pt \area. Leaders On, Hustings By THE CANADIAN PRESS | WEDNESDAY - Pearson — In Toronto for ASTRONAUT REUNITE * Astro-Aquanaut M. Scott Carpenter and nine Sealab 2 Carpenter and, wife, Rene are teammates emerged from de re-united at Jolla, Calif., after © compression chamber Car- . Diefenbaker—tIn Ottawa. Dougilas—In. Northern Ontario Thompson In “Red Deer, Caonette_ — In Rouyn, Que, » s sure nts." from -- the -there- of Robert Restall, a 5% it is. i * i held by. Jack Netherc f LATEST KING hows ‘of is condition """"* Beverly Hills, Calif, Dan Biank- D WITH WIFE and .who put it there ecouldn't--venture -any--opinions.’ ~-~Mr---Restall;-a-few--months: be- fore he died in a gas-filled shaft, estimated the fortune. to be at least $30,000,000. But Mr. Dun- field would not “hazard guess."’ He also holds no. the- ories of his own regarding the elegendary treasure | \ ; — toni’ aa wha buried it) ‘the day. when a great national The local estimate is 1,335. through the rural areas—of—the— colorful Latirentians “Mountains, unite Canada’s ~ two “founding ‘races in “a single Canadian- boats ready.” ism.” “That has beeen my purpose who turned out to meet him in St. Adolphe. : 4 He said he looked forward to |Diefenbaker Tuesday toured ‘ate janding. A constabulary offi- the imagination rt VONOTR ree of complacegt : ; t "It's still’ too hot ‘to land , Saying that—his—ambition—is to. there.I—don't -know—when.. we. = Liberal MP =~ can get in. We have four motor The eruption was Taal’s 19th ill N ie in recorded history. The 18th Wi ot Kun World Almanac has estimated MONTREAL (CP Tamond 3,000 persons. died then, but the fudes, 53, Liberal MP for Mont- exact toll never: was determined. real Hochelaga. Tuesday ~ n- imounced he wil! not run for re- a in life,” he told about 75 people seared the island in 1911. The, under its confounding layers of |Confederation—conference 2 will;~—Lightning-formed—an-awesome—election—Nov-—8. oak platforms and intricate net- work of drain tunnels. Pa | } | | F ; 4 4 penter spent more thar 29 davs on ocean bottom. Decompres- sion ended Mondav- © {AP Wirephote) be called . . . to bring about | the changes necessary so Can- - ada---will—-have—_a-—-constitution miles—from-the— peak: “ made in Canada by ) Canadians for Canadians. sideshow in the new disturbance. ! pyblished reports in Montrec! One bolt killed a farmer three had predicted Mr. Eudes would -step down and he: replacéd~ as Planes that tried to approach Liberal candidate in the consti {the volcano early in the day had ‘tuency by Gerard Pelletier. TORONTO ‘CP)—John Diefen baker misunderstood Quebec's aspirations although he wanted to be its friend, was suspicious of big business and tended to listen too much7to advisers who agreed with him, a former cab- inet colleague said Tuesday aight. Pierre Sevigny, who quit. the cabinet in 1963 over the nuclear weapons issue, outlined his opin- ions about Mr. Diefenbaker as prime minister on the Pierre Berton television show. Mr~ Berton was interviewing the former associate defence minister about his forthcoming book, This Game of Politics. Although he is critical of the party leader in the book. Mr. Sevigny has announced he wil! campaign for the party. in the _~LNov. 8 election. justice or external affairs ,* Dief Misunderstood Quebec, if former Colleague Declares better if persons who sincerely wanted to advise him had been able to reach him Mr_ Diefenbaker sought optn- ions but ,“‘he frequently did not like too ‘much people who dis portfolios gone te a French- Canadian —Mr. Diefenbaker and his colleagues did more for Que- bec thar had ever been done before, but he never under- stood that Quebec wanted 3 agreed with him or told him master plan and not a piece- things that he didn’t like. to meal approach to its prob- pear. lems to bring the English and French nations ‘together for a united Canada. ~The cabinet -erisis of 1963, when Mr. Sevigny, trade+min- ister Hees and defence minis- ter Harkness resigned. could have been avoided if Mr. Dief- enbaker and his key lieuten- ants and the cabinet had had better communications: CLAIMS DIEF LONELY Mr. Sevigny said Mr. Diefen- baker was possibly too'longly a “There were some people who actually surrounded him ‘ with flattery and if he had lis tened possibly less to these peo. ple and little more to those who were more objective and to the realists the: end results would have been different.” One> of his ‘most serious faults,” Mr. Sévigny said. was his holding ‘‘almost a- resent- ment’ against bic business and the financial world because — it stands to reason that if you get the pewerful of the world behind ISAYS PC’s BLUNDERED man. and i would—have Seen you, the powerful of this world Sara oe sanaivertions Me oes will influence those under them igny said: | INSIDE TODAY no th nibs eevee ; He said at first tradtionally- French-Canadian second Mr. Classified .......... 14, 15 poe orien big .husiness Diefenbaker’s nomination at Births .....:.. .. eet TS one oe deal of Me. the 1956 leadership conven- WOMENS és tiecions eeete 3 a enbaker and ‘most of the tion was a ‘ghastly blunder” CONES a ceckcciivcss? 13 time they got exactly what -they Gat could Bane tort Whe faelg| MEME oe ccscceocsivesces 8 _wanted so they réally had. te ifs 1957 victory had the Lib- Finance, markets ._....... 7 reason to éomplain. erals been smart enough to Ween Sk ii needs 6 LOST SUPPORT - : ‘ MONOHMES 6556 is civscesas : ; bp mal ay nan ia as Seances fT ; But later an impression that 4 1 aie | Kings, Queens, Cie... 5 Mr. Diefenbakér was azainst Diefenbaker had erther “the Prince County vee Ble ny rpiolted. ba pe cape sition and ‘‘steamrolled’’ so that : (Continued on page 3 Col. &) tt