v ' ' If It's Good For The lsland .The Guardian Is For it VOL. LXXVII. N0. 247 litre @mmdion “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Authorised as Second Class sun by the Post om" Department. ottn'a. and for payment of postage in out: CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17. 1964. WEATHER y and Vet-y warm; light winds. Low. unn igh 42 and 68. Sunday: cloudy and NUl' KORE M SEVEN CENTS 14 PAGES ‘ Cape Wolfe ls Selected Centennial Community In Island-Wide Contest Cape Wolfe. about west of O’Leary. has awarded first prize of $500 been the 12 miles been in I Mrs. the 1964 Rural Beautificationllmvid Centennial Competition and has: . in announcing the awards the Judges. Edwin .Iohnstone. Gordon MacMillan and all 39 entries did something to Centennial l improve the appearance of their Community of Prince Edwardlccmmunities but none match< Island. Announcément of theged Cape Wolfe for" the extra- award was made by the judges ' ordinary and almost unbelieve- nt a meeting of the Society this I able transformation of its 0 . David Stewart. min- ister of tourist development. an- nounced , earlier in the sensational" tire area." “Nothing short of was their verdict. Lot. 16. Kelvin Grove. South year,;Freetown. Long River. Freder- when the terms of the contest icton. North Milton. South Mil- were released, that the com-lion. Brackley Point, munity winning first place ianlainS. h . te Ccn nnlal would become the. Alberry Stanhope. Pleasant CompetitioanrOve and East Baltic were Centennial} singled out by the judges for Community of 1964 and an aer~ ' honourable mention. in] photograph in natural color; In awarding first place hon- would be taken of the commun- ors to Cape Wolfe the judges ity and featured in the Island's Ioutlined some of the remark- tourist literature the following able achievements which were year A total of 39 communities on- Other Harrington.llnllnlty hall and two cemeter- second place ($400).- Sprin g . it‘s-Were repaired. and tered the competition. winners . included: elfccted by that community. All public buildings and properties-- the church, the. school, com- rede- vpneyv third place ($300,; St. corated, and the grounds lands- Teresa, fourth place 19.00.00): and Cape Egmont. fifth place $000). In addition a special bonus of $500 has been award- ed to the community of York for_ the greatest improvements, to its roadside entrances in thel by pointing out Icemetery every community. caped with concerete walks. flowers and attractive fences. Every public building was identified by a sign Some. idea of the magnitude of their efforts can be gained Premier Show Declares ’Ptositively Thrilled’ Premier W.R. Shaw on learn- fng that Cape Wolfe had been nam the Centennial Com- munity of 1964 offered the fol- lowing statement last night: "1 arm positively thrilled by the announcement and I would like to offer my sincere congrat- ulations to the good people of Cape Wolfe who have worked so hard to bring this about. Theirs was a remarkable achievement particularly when they faced such stiff competition all over the Island. and their spirit of leadership, hard work and co- operation set an example for all other communities to follow_ “I am proud of Cape Wolfe and I shall not be satisfied until I have visited the community and personally congratulated all those who. by their hard work and perseverance. brought glory to themselves and to their com- munity." Photograph ls Scheduled ~ To Be Taken Next Summer ' Commenting on the announce- ment that Cape Wolfe had been named the Centennial Commun. ity of 1964. the Hon. J. David Stewart, minister of tourist de-1 velopment. said last night: “It could not have happened to a finer community, Tile re- sident-.5 of Cape. Wolfe belong lack of good natural color, the aerial photograph of Cape Wolfe will not now be taken until early next summer and consequently will be too late for inclusion in our 1965 tour- ist literature. However. Cape C. Schurman. stated that ed that in one headstone andl marker was removed to an ad- joining pasture field and the grounds of the cemetery levell- . e and lanscnped. Then all the headstones were carried back. re-set in their proper positions and a beauti- ful new was ed about the whole. To complete the job a flag pole was erect- ed and a large sign identifying the cemetery was installed. HOME-OWNERS AIDED Besides the work done by the community as a whole, a large percentage of the homeowners in the-district set a im- proving their own premises by painting or whitewashing their homes. removing unsightly buildings. planting ‘lowers and other general improve- ments. Homes and other build- ings which had not seen paint in decades suddenly became objects of beauty by a new coat of paint or whitewash. Many homes, in-keeping with the (Continued on page 3. col. 7) Pensions Committee Planned TORONTO (CPl—Pension ex- perts from the provincial and federal governments decided Friday night to form an inter- provincial committee to pro- mote uniformity and portability on private pension plans across 0 in :1 Delegates to a conference on uniform p e n s i o n legislation. called by the Ontario govern- ment. voted to have the com- mittee's secretariat operate ou of Toronto so it can use the staff of the Ontario pension commission. which as done pioneering work in the field. The conference was sched- uled for two days. but ended Friday‘ night after covering its agenda in what Laurence Cow. . ‘ x the ' confer5 ence and of the Ontario oen- sion commission. said was a promising sign for future agree- ment among the provinces. oward said the inter- provincial committee —— whose members have not been named yet—will be asked to present a model draft bill to all provinces for consideration by 1966. The Quebec pension bill is scheduled to take effect that a, . 5-: Wolfe will not be forgotten The d v photograph will be taken and to a proud hard working race I will be reproduced in our tour- of people and their community l N lllel‘alure for 1966 " efforts this year in the Cen- would like person ly to on gratulate every citizen whose efforts contributed towards making '5 award a reality. “Unfortunately, due to the lateness of the season and the De Gaulle Notes RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)— ‘lSic transit gloria mundt"— thus passes glory in the world. at w s he comment of 73- year-old President de Gnulle of France on the departure from power in the Soviet Union of 10-yehr-old Nikita Khrushchev. De Gnulie made the remark to Msgr. Joseph Mes. the Vati- can charge d'affaires in Brazil, tennial Competition is in keep- ing with a proud tradition. a1 (: - ' lLBJ Says CINCINNATI (AW—President Johnson said here Friday the 1world was confronted with one Thus Passes Glory; of its saddest hours in history when the Communist Chinese exploded in "crude nuclear weapon." He told an election-campaign crowd in Washington earlier in a meeting with State Secretary Dean Rusk. Defence Secretary Robert S. McNamara and other high officials. confirmation the Chinese detonated a nuclear weapon had been received. In time. the president said. the Chinese Communists obvi- ously will develop nuclear ca- pacity and the means to deliver at a reception on the last night bomb of the French president's Latin 1 American tour. De Gnulle added: Khmshchev is gone , . “Well. . violai' s. ' “This is a sad day for the Chinese people." he said. It was "one of the saddest hours in the history of the world." communique issued after Friday's meeting said all dele- gates—most 0 them technical experts the provincial governments—agreed there is a need for legislation governing private pension plans which provide benefits In addition to any national plan. There was no conflict between the confer- ence's work and the proposed Canada Pension Plan. Pravda Throws Book At MOSCOW (AP) - Pravda. Nikita S. Khrushchev's former N 'k't The editorial. first expression of party opinion since Khrush- mouthpiece. threw the book at. chev's downfall. said it was him tod Y “irreconcilably and consistently The organ of the Communist opposing and continues to op. party accused its ousted chief pose the Ideology andupractice of “hair - bralned scheming. of the personality cult. m m a t u re conclusions and This was equivalent to accus- hnty decisions and actions. in- g ing Khrushchev of dictatorship. dividualiatic b r a g g ing and l Informed sources said Friday PM.” ' mongering‘ command' l Khrushchev was ousted for non: mm and unwillingness to take Into account the achievements Of science and practical expon- once." The Rant - page editorial no- where mentioned Khrushchev the" was no ‘ "tolerate a r m c. h a l r meth- hy name but doubt about who was meant. It Mid the Communist party 09900011 all these things and de- nuded "collective leadership" -Oxlctly what Khrushchev in~ slated upon when he ruled Rots}; x! " artnership WI 9y. _ 590m M. Malenkov and later ; showed discontent It- first in with Nikolai N. Bulganin. the" men fell victim to Khrushchev. relentless drive '0! m. I .otism Igiving jobs to relatives) n d bad tactics in the bittei dispute with Red China. ravda. again without men- lioning Khrushchev by hump. said the Soviet Union could not 5. personal decision and dis- fregard for the practical experi- ence of the masses. The reference to the masses was a clear indication the par- grass roots soundings with suclh 1 ‘ s as the agricultural fai- ‘hhrlengthat forced Khrushchev to buy wheat from Canada and the United States. De Goulle Arrives Home PARIS (AP) — President de Gaulle returned Friday night from a three-week. m,mmile south American good will tour. Parliament At A Gonce By THE CANADIAN PRESS FRIDAY. Oct. 16. 1964 Th mmons passed the estimates of Central Mort- gage and Housing Corpor~ ation. The Commons and Senate passed unanimously sage of loyalty and devotion to the Queen after her Cana- dian visit. Lucien Plourde (Creditiste -- Quebec West) remained seated as all other Commons members present rose and sang God Save The Queen. External Affairs Minister Martin said Russia has n- sured Canada its. foreign pol- icy won't change as a result of Premier Khrushchev: re- tirement. ' Mr. Martin also said he hopes no‘nation will use the Red Chinese nuclear explo- sion as an excuse to break the nuclear test ban. Justice Minister Farrell said he is considering a par- liamentary committee to look into Canada's penitentiarles. Supplementary spending el- timates of “1.320.145 for the 1964-65 fiscal year were tabled in the Commons. bringing planned spending to $6.830.- .787. The Commons "talked out" p.m. legislation. T'ie Senate stands adjourned until Nov. 8. Commons l Expresses Loyalty By STEWART MacLEOD . OTTAWA (CP) — The Com-i mons. Friday expressed itsl “deepest loyalty. affection and} respect" for the Queen and then the members rose l their seats and loudly "God Save the Queen." One Creditiste member stay- in his seat. The message of loyalty to the i Queen. moved by Prime Min-' ister Pearson and seconded by Opposition Leader Diefenbaker. ress “tour heartfelt ap- preciation" for her recent visit to Charlottetown, Quebec and Ottawa. It was a visit, said the message. that warmed the earls of all “true Canadians." When all the members rose . to sing "God Save the Queen," Lucien Plourde (Credististe— Quebec West) remained in his seat, and he later told a French speaking reporter that while he was not against the Queen, 11; would rise only for 0 Can- a a. "I am a citizen of the pro- vince of Quebec and a Canadian subject, not a British subject. I would have risen for 0 Can ada. ‘ “This does not. mean that I am against the Queen. On the contrary I am in favor of hos- pitality and I oppose. for ex- ample. the actions of the ter- rorists who try to mislead our youth from reasonable objec- tives. It is the newspapers and the CBC who are helping them (the terrorists). Cblo Porter Goes Home In Death Cole Porter went home Friday —-to Indiana. The internationally famed composer of Night and Day and Begin the Beguine died Thurs- day night at 71 — ulti-mil- lionaire. confidant of celebrities in the cafe society of two can tinents. but a man without any immediate Friends did what he i-lad asked. They-shipped his body to his birthplace. Peru. Ind., to mother. His closest relatives. J. Omar oe. of Peru. 1: first cousin. was arranging private services there. Porter's Hoosier origins were often overlooked. His ca- 0 reer, which spanned 50 years. was characteristically sophisti- c He wrote the music and lyr- ics for such Broadway shows as The Gay Divorcee. Anything Goes. Red, Hot and Blue. Sorrl- thing For The Boys. Kiss Me Kate. Can Can. and his last, in 1955. Silk Stockings. He had been retired since 1958. still reaping the riches from royalties for such songs as rue Love. What This Thing Called Love?. My Heart Belongs to Daddy. You'd be so Nice to Come Home To. Don’t Fence Me In. I've Got You Ender My Skin. and Wunder. ar. HAROLD WILSON, came Britain's new prime who he- minister yesterday. waves as he and Mrs. Wilson arrive at a London railway station from his constituency in Liverpool. Wilson‘s Labor Party won a ANOTHER ELECTION FORECAST {1811 to 13 years of Tory rule be buried between his wife and Job e Harold Wilson Becomes Britain's Prime Minister By‘ JOSEPH MacSWEEN son. the 48-year-old Yorkshire- man with the com uter . like rain. became Britain's 44th prime minister Friday leading his Labor knife-edge election victory. Power shifted from Conserva- live to socialist hands after one _ o the most dramatic general: SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP) election finishes that Britain has seen. putting an uneasy fin- The Queen called Wilson. the youngest British premier this century. to Buckingham Palace and asked him to form a gov- ernment after she accepted the resignation of Sir Alec Douglas- Home. 61. who had been prime minister for one year less a ‘ ay. h ceremony of hands" with the Queen com- pleted. Wilson tore into his new ' with characteristic energy. preparing for his first television appearance as premier. Only one remote constituency ~Angyll. heldby the Conserva- tives in the last House — re- maine to be reported follow- ing Thursday's general election fr the 630-seat House. Labor had 317 seats compared with .103 for the Tories and nine for. the Liberals. ELECTION LIKELY The outlook was for Labor to have an over-all margin in t e next House of Commons of only four seats and some politicians predicted another election in a year or so. Few expected the new government would go a full , five-year term without another Wilson quickly began filling laces in his cabinet. For the key post of foreign minister. he named Patrick Gordon Walker. a party stalwart who failed to win election to the Commons. l{safe Labor district from {an obliging ' afterleiected. would be asked to re- arty to a Sign. As expected, Wilson named George 32:” “kissing ‘ ] Walker. 57. a former history lu- 1 Office al. ‘ ‘ LONDON (CE—Harold .Wil: tor at Oxford. is expected tol Wilson tried (0111sz any fears-l cheY— l‘run again in a byelection in a his Labor government Might belalso M which tumbled from power because of incumbent, newly.lits thin margin. Deputy Party Leader .Brown, 50, once Wilson's rival r power. as first secretary of: 0 state and minister for economic affairs. It is the second-rankina cabinet post and he will be act-l ing prime minister w‘ien Wil- son is out of the country. James Callaghan. 50. another rival to succeed the late ‘Labor . party leader. Hugh Gaitskell. last year. became chancellor of the 47 excheq-uer. Denis Henley. . an advocate of an East- West disengagement in Europe. became defence minister. Lord Gardiner in was pill charge of the judiciary as lord 1 treasury picked UP a tidy £2 .- Chancellnr. Herbert Bowdcn hc-l 300 ‘ came lord president of thelcandidates in the general ‘Elec- him .‘ tion. council. w h i ch makes leader of the House of Com: . mons. and Edward Short be-lonP-elghth 0f came party whip. w‘lich places“ their districts and had to forfeit 0 him the responsibility of‘ the £150 deposit each candidate!“ re . . . t quired before the Chinese keeping Labor's narrow major- has to post. I . . ‘ ity in . There will be an additional[obtain a stockpile. of nuclear: are expected to within a few In a talk to the C Standings LONDON (CPi—R e l u r n s from 628 of 630 constituencle. In the British election showed theI following party standing at 5:45 pm. EDT La bor .117 Cons 303 Liberals s ’Unreported 2 Total 630 lincrease in their popular vol ‘0 itives 350: ‘7; others. including speaker. 3: . vacant 14. £142 Candidates 1 loss Deposits p- ‘ cl three—minute television. nation from his new 5 32 Communists who surrenderedl From Reuters-AP PEKING (CP)~——China its way into the world’s nuclear. weapons. . The official nese who ran joyously through the streets of Peking. Th announcement. hours after the blast — came a 3 . . gave no details of the bomb, against other nations. It called for an all - nation summit conference to discuss "complete prohibition and thor- ough destruction of n uclear weapons." With the blast, China became the fifth member of the nuclear club behind the United States, iRussia. Britain and France. :Both France and China refused victory by a narrow margin over the Conservative Party in Thursday's national elect- , tMoscow in August. 1963 w ich ion. (AP Wirephotol iwas later approved by some 100 ‘ FOLLOWED NEWS The announcement of the lKhrushchev's replacement U club Friday. and immediatelygthe called for a summit conference 5 about the farce of the first Uhs_ on the abolition of nuclear'ammic explosion. at China' eight ground blast whichibe the first to throw radio— ADTl—jactive matter into the atmos- but.p‘iere since the 1962 test series pledged China would never be‘in the Pacific by the United the first to use nuclear weapons f States. The nuclear test - ban "treaty was signed July 25. 1963. UN Entry Should Be Mode Soon explosion came within 24 hours lers' questions that o the Moscow announcement ‘ tion of a nuclear deVIce by Red t of R u as i a n Premier Nikita ‘ China _ as t tance of Chinese participation Chino Crashes N-Club, Calls For Summit Meet Reminder Seen To Soviet Union unconfirmed report said I used. i An blasted steel test tower was .5. nuclear scientists said. blast likely was primitive. Alama- gordo. N.M., in July. 1945. That announcement explosion was rated at 19 kilo- was distributed to jubilant Chi-pious. or 3 ‘tons of force equal to 19.000 5 presumed above apparently would OTTAWA 1 CP )——External Af- lm Sign the lea-ban trealyd" fairs Minister Martin said Frt- h day the question of Communist China's possible entry into the mons‘ lUnited Nations cannot long be lpostponed. He added in reply to report- the detona- emphasizes the impor- head of the Soviet Communistlin disarmament discussxons. party and government. was a timely reminder to ‘. Khrushchev's was determined to develop its"-L m Downmg Streemown strength in all fields a . ped to use the success- ‘ful explosion to increa “I want to make it. quite clear; Africa. that this will not effect our abil-i 9 government announce. . i ity to govern." he said. “There I ment e a l l e d i “major ‘ serious problems to be ' a c h ie v e m e n t" in China's and n with. eal with them. capability and opp ose U.S e Liberals recorded a The statement apparently at the expense of the‘I said: onservatives. l C aid 1 Chinese leaderslmg "‘ jwater. se their: political influence in Asia andgrriday—the fall from power of Nikita Khrushchev ~ Mr. - .‘tin told the Commons that Rus- blgl "imperialist policy of nuclear . AMbassadol‘ 1V3" E.l blackmail and nuclear threats." ‘_ assured him Friday that "them “The Z would be no reversal of the pol- ‘h III as e government hereby z icy of de-StalinizathH-" In the Commons. Mr. Martin Observers said Friday’s blastlsaid the government hopes “0 nation which signed the nuclear successors China itest ban treaty will use tile nu- clear explosion in China as an lexcuse to resume nuclear test.- the atmosphere or under- On another prime topic here Mar 1‘ has assured Canada that a there will be no change in So- we intend to struggle to increase its defence: V‘et lore‘g“ pone" The minister said Russian 0 Party standings at dissolutionl f Parliament were: Conserva- r 256: Liberals solemnly declares that. China! will never at any time and ‘under any conditions be the. [first to use nuclear weapons .. . . the Chinese people can be. ltrusted." It said China had been forced I conduct nuclear tests idevelop nuclear weapons. Brilli‘hicoNFmMEn BY US- LONDON (AP l—The Friday from 142 frustrated Red China had explod yield" nuclear test. {Johnson cautioned "its military '0 get at ‘93:“ ‘- significance should not be over- estimated." 331 a n y years and much difficulty will ed‘ a ‘low- The 142 failed the total vote in leted in remaining constituen-i m es ‘ Am ng the contributors werelno a total of £4300 Another 20 cabinet meniberleindfall as counting ls com-lWePsom and 1' deliver-V “393" be appointed ' s. Yanks Watch For Fallout WASHINGTON tAP) m The and US. government's country-wide .system l-radioactive fallout is on special walert The united Stale-5 cm‘lil'l'nt’dimeaningful" increase in atmos- pheric radioactivity as a result. PreSldentlof China's nuclear blast. for keeping tabs on to detect any "possible This was reported late Friday in a statement by the division .of radiological :U.S. public ,health service. health of However, a esman for tie agency said: "It. is not expected that this explosion will produce ‘sn Peking's announcement gave ' amounts of radioactivity in this indication whether the test‘country even remotely ap- blast was underground. at thelproaching surface or in the atmosphere. .during the 1961 -- levels experienced 10le testing." RUMORS FLARE IN MOSCOW These men. two of them chief editors of two top Sov- _ let newspapers and the third. at of the state radio- 'I'\ stem. have all been ft and replaced. usually THREE FIRED WIT H KHRUSHCHEV reliable sources said to Mon- cow Frida . From left are Mikhail A. Karianov. dis- ml as c of the state com of broad- casting and television; Alevel Adnhubei. fired as editor of the Khrushchev. government newspaper Ines- tie and Pavel A. Satyukov. dismissed as editor of the Communist Party newspaper Pravada, Adzhubei to son- of f Premier in-Inw m (A? Wheel-om KhruShchev's Friends Go By JOHN BEST l Meanwhile. Soviet officials MOSCOW (CPI — An atmos- confirmed several of the former phere of uncertainty grippedilender's top advisers m includ- Moscow Friday following the ing his son-in-law Alexei Adth- announeement the Soviet com-bet. editor of the government munist party leadership had re- newspaper Izvesl.ia——have been moved Premier Khrusfichevldismissed from their posts. from his topajobs in the Krem-3 K0”, gin appeared Friday lln. ‘n t at a Kremlin reception—u .h'u: first semi . public appear- But outwardly. the city. ap- ed 1 pear cam. I ‘ lance since he was named to thUs713ally mangleI sogr‘cjes saidlbis new post. e year-o rus c ev was‘ . removed following charges thatl But Brflhn‘fv W“ "m “'03?” included nepotism and bad lac-"t "‘9 mer“ l‘"""”"“ W“ tics in the Soviet dispute with g: .C“""“ P”“'“""‘ 0““1“ China. The sources said also he "mo" had been accused of creating a i No EXPLANATION Dawn‘l'ly w"- ' There was no immediate ex- K h r u s h c 'i e v. fought the! planation for ‘lis absence. charges. made in a secret meek; ov i et officials confirmed ing of the Communist partylAdzhubei. well - known in the. central committee. but' could West through his travels there. nott Wltlllw thef committee's sup-V was no longer chief editor. ”;~umo::":::“ fluimon‘ They added Mikhail Kharla- “new freely "Bram! the “I. mov. chairman of the stale nlificance of the unexpected disc cosure early Friday Khrush- chev‘sbypowers had been. take over Leonid Bro Alexei Kmm‘ "m" “d mm. a. deaths .... .. 1;. roox KEY roe-r Fiance. markén'"."...f 10 "Eggnevz‘ofté Ikeyomier steel Comics 11 . post 0 i first secretary of the Commu~ ma" 7 pggwhmfosyfitn. m. I lcmmu 4 comes 2.? I ' M M - .... : .3” be” M . “mm noel Prince 0.. - I y i. ' might ‘patch up .radio and television committee. also had been dismissed. In addition. authoritative sources said Pavel A. Satyukov. chief editor of the party news- paper Pravda. would be dis- missed when he returned to Moscow during the weekend following a visit to Paris. Official sources said there probably woul be more dis- missals of men closely linked to Khrushchev. HAS BEEN REPLACED They said Adzhubel had been replaced as lzvcstia's chief ed- iior by Vladimir Stepakov. head of the party's agitprop section for the Russian republic. Kharlamov’s place as head of the Soviet radio and television network. was taken by Nikolai Mcsyatsm'. deputy head of a arty department dealing with Communist bloc affairs. Both men have played impor. tant roles in he party's ideolog- ical direction, A prevalent line of specula- tion was the ch signal an the Soviet govern— ment‘s quarrel with China. World Communist unity. and Russia’s leadership of the inter- national Communist movement. .have crumbled from the divis‘ ive effects of the wrangle which grew largely Khrush. rhev’s policy of peaceful eo- uustence with the Welt. .;