ad If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It INQUEST SCHEDULED OCT. 20 Two:Person 8 Drumheller Arena Burns whose canoe capsized. A boat carrying a man woman and two children from Fire of undetermined origin de- - |stroyed the Drumheller Memor- successful attempt to save |ial Arena Sunday night. Dam- Armand Laroque, 18, 2lso of the | 88e was at about Firemen saved a curling rink about 12 feet from the burning building. Nothing was saved in the building, which included a newly - installed freezing plant. The arena, built in the 1930s, had a seating capacity of 1,700. Larfoque, 36 and her daughters Mery Eliza, 3, and Mary Rose, Waterhen ake is 2) miles ST LOUIS, Mo (AP) —Pro}-| ect Apollo is not just a one- shot, 20,000,000,000 program to |‘ land two Americans on the) ‘moon in this, decade, an official of the National Aeronautics end Space Administration said 1980. William B. Taylor, director of NASA's Apollo extension sys- office. i Taylor said the basic man Apollo rocket and craft will be used for sions: . —Earth orbit fli ‘as i s Lose Lives To City Group or Cyril K. Brennan, solicitor Franklin R. McKay, city treasurer Edward J. Healey and four other members of the council. Anvestigators . believe. the threats were mailed by some- aes ‘ WEATHER * noon eatery. Lowi 16 and | west ne Edivard Islapd Like The Dew” ewes 1e WN, CANADA, TU Y, OCTOBER 12, 1965. wor moe’ SEVEN CENTS * 16 PAGES es — og emeepie — ef cael is ousla & ® ‘ * 3 : .wedine | Rhodesian Capital Tense | Shastri said the long-term ob- jective ts to produce - enough within India to feed and build jup a healthy country. Dependence on food imports pared with 6,670,000 day when prices cords set last ‘spring, Two-Car Crash © Kills 8 Persons KEMAP, Tex. (AP)—A fiam- As Ne) 'NLY, Stock | aaa Prices Soar’ To Records’ ‘The volume of trading: on the | New York Stock Exchange was | & heavy 9,600,000 shares: moved. easy striking distance “of com- FPri- into Te- S. More R Land In WEST, boatload of age ue REE al i ipiity ya i i ~ s i [F | F Stude Congratulated OTTAWA (CP)—Fasting etn-| ger Committee dents on Parliament Hill were congratulated for their actions | and Trade I attention to this vital @ ledger, hend to’ we angry over the new city: tax. (teft) congratulates fasting students in Ottawa Monday, / weekend, lope te point up the record suggestions, — leon “As the: firet chairman of the! ‘ Freedom from Hun- ‘or anything like that.” : a. aa age eS ae coner: you. on your gesture to glass few eat fast ugees Florida Ry s + lise ge ' ‘The fast was by year-old Oliver Kent of OF. ; aoe only 4 N PRESS doctors ted us| By THE CANADIA for, days,” said) TUESDAY Karo! Rae Hommon, above, 2i-year-old Miss Alaska of 1964, was killed Monday in a 200-foot plunge from Mt. Sugar- loaf at South Deerfield, Mass. worship services across the land, they observed the solemnity of Thanksgiving. 28 al of visitors had come to Parliament Hill to taik) fasters and express sp | . ‘ | ‘None thought we were oi Leaders On Hustings Pearsen—In Quebec City. Diefenbakér — Moose Jaw, Sask-, and whistle-stopping to Medicine Hat, Alta. Dou Thompson—Toronto and St. Catharines. ‘ Caouette — In Thetford Mines, Que. BEAUTY DIES IN FALL SALISBURY, Rhodesia (Reut-| Move Awaited Hopes Flicker | -For Compromise His protracted stay in London -\ers)—This capital’ waited, tense)has revived speculation that de- > |but calm, Monday for the self-|epite the breakdown in negota- * | governing colony's prime minl-/tions, the ords against an im- ¢ |\ster lan Smith, to return from mediate declaration of indepen abortive independence talks in| London But the question in everyone's) Ms- tened eagerly to radio news bul-| A sophomore. at Smith College . she was taking part in ‘“‘Moun- tain Climbing Day” when the accident t | of the Broadway mu- notable event for Nova some suburban super markets remained open- “events on ‘the Prairies and British Columbia were well- patronized. Temperatures in B.C. hovered in the low 60s’ un- der sunny skies. In the Maritimes, ‘showers put | a damper on outdoor activities in the morning \broke through by noon. There ‘were softball playoffs, and an levening harness racing meet at Moncton. Hardy amateur sailors raced im an dingy com- petition in Toronto harbor Sun- day. At Guelph, the 7ist running of that city’s Thanksgiving road races over city streets ‘drew 80, a Canadian Press sur- vey shows. Classified . Births .... Hee eeeeeeeeenee | i iH a by f if: i z 5 jt Z z i dence ate growing longer. PLAN MEETING Leatiers of the Association of and the National Farmers’ Un- ion plan to seek a meeting with Smith as soon as he returns, Gap Too Wide To Bridge LONDON (Reuters) — Rhode- it before until now. Now we have it and-we can finally make our. By BORIS MISKEW UNITED \ NATIONS (CP)-— United Nations pasded a draft resolution Monday night- calling on Britain to use force necessary to prevent a uni- lateral declaration of -independ- ence by Rhodesia. The 117 - nation trusteeship committee voted on the resolu- tion, introduced by G uinea, ‘after talks in London between the British government and Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia had broken down. Delegates regarded Rhode- sia’s threat to declare inde a The resolution might came up in the assembly today. debating the resolution aid Delegates spent the entire day urged in their speeches that Britain use force if necessary te prevent whiteruled Rhodesia from carrying out its threat. The British government hae said it would regard a unilat eral declaration of independ- ence as an act of rebellion. Francis Brown, British dele- gate to the UN, said earlier Monday that Britain has taken as an “urgent” mat- ter and sought to take. the reso- lution as soon as possible before the General Assembly for! ratif- jfeation. The committee voted % to twe in favor of the resolution, which requested Britain to ‘‘use al possible measures” to Rhodesia‘s-- proposed unilateral jaction. Canada was among supporting the resolution. FRANCE ARBSTAINED France was the only absen- tion, with Britain announcing it wat not going to participate in ‘the vote. South Africa and Por- DAR ES SALAAM (AP) — A unilateral declaration of inde- pendence would be the signal for a bloody campaign of terror against Rhodesia’s white set- tlers, the leader of the Zim- babwe African People’s Union, James Chikerema, said Monday night in this Tanzanian capital. Rhodesia’s Negroes have been told to rise to a man when the white government declares its independence of. Britain, Chik- jerama said. ‘We expect a lot jof deaths. but we are sure we | will inflict some ourselves, full account of al views ex- pressed by Commonwealth gov- ernments. He told the committee that |the British government had pa- ° itiently and genuinely sought to remove the differences between the’ British government and that of the Rhodesian chosen by the. colony's white jminority. : Britain said it would withhold Rhodesian independence antil some arrangement could be ar- rived at to assure Rhodesia’s 14,000,000. black citizens of “a | voice in the government, now jcontrolied by fewer than 250, 000 white settlers. Bloody Terror Campaign Forecast By Negro Leader “There are many Ways of kill- | ing a cat. An axe, spear, and an arrow can kill, and we will use anything that can kill.” | Chikerema said it would be a }campaign of terror and Eure- pens who did not come out lopenly with his group in Rhod- esia would not be safe.” |PLANS READY | Plans were ready to establish la government in exile immedi+ lately after a declaration 9° in dependence by the white regime and envoys would go out to 6@ 1 (Continued om page3, col. 9? tugai voted agsinst the rescle- tion. a OA CUR ens i eit cnt = acme! RY mat. inane Mai SR