if It’s Good ¢ VOL. LXXIX NO. 231 . (er Seis Sac aeaae a Mao Tse-tung, the Red lead- er, and books of his writings By ‘CARMAN CUMMING OTTAWA. (CP) — Arnold Smith, “Canadian head of the fledgling Commonwealth-. tariat, was warned by delegates to the Commonwealth Pariia- For The Island The Guardian Is For It CHINESE CELEBRATE 17 YEARS RED RULE " Chinese hold portraits of during giant demonstration in Peking Sunday marking the 17th year of Communist rule on’ the Chinese mainland. This picture was monitored in To- kyo from a Peking broadcast. (AP Wirephote by radie from. Tokyo) Commonwealth Secretariat Head ‘Warned By Conference Delegates mentary Conference Saturday |monwealth among a significant Ey ret his authority. vaenane ae: Smith had told the conference = was disepchantment with . Com- Loss Of Barge Blamed On Liner. QUEBEC (CP) — Eight mes were still missing and pre- sumed drowned as a_ search continued Sunday night near the spot where the dredge Manseau 101 overturned and sank in the St: “Lawrence. River. with :23 aboard. Thirteen of the crew escaped without serious injury, and the bodies of two crew members. have’ been. recovered in. drag- ging operations since the Friday night mishap. <A provincial police spokes- man. said Sunday there was lit- tle hope the men would be re- tovered alive. . The barge, property of Marine Industries of Sorel, Que. went down within minutes Friday after it was swamped by large waves near the Quebec City bridge, about 10 miles-west of |in: here. Andre Peloquin, 54, of Ne du Pas, Que., one of 13 survivors whe’ were picked up by ships »..gent.tosthe..scene,.. tier. told_re-- porters that: a few minutes be- fore the accident a large ship |rosee had passed. the-dredge. SHAKEN BY WAVES The Manseau, \which meas- ured 52.by 125 feet and was val- pillars to anchor it- self when it».was shaken vio- lently by large waves as. much as. 10 feet high, he said. He and 10 other of the 13 sur- vivors were picked out of the water by the tug Rene Simard which had been pulling the dredge and. was tossed about but did not~sink. . Newspaper reports in Quebec City. later quoted ‘Rodrigue La- barre;.captain of the Manseau 101, as <saying the ship that passed was. the 22,000-ton Cu- eS ra at $1,500,000, was just low- ig large ‘nard liner Franconia Cunard officials said in Mont- real Saturday. the Franconia left Montreal at 11:30:a.m. EDT Friday. heading downriver and was in the general area of the aa at the time of the sink- The eight of the crew still missing are: Alfred Peloquin, Boucherville, ‘ Que.; Luc Len- Aime Gauvremont, St. Ignace- de-Loyola, Que.; Victorin Gam- elin, Sorel, Que.;~ Patrick “L- rosee, St, Joseph de Sorel, Que.; Real Parenteau, Pierreville, Que.; Real Bergeron, Tracy; Que.; Denis Phourniotis, Mont- real, and Armand Tessier, Le- clercville, Que. INEZ TOLL INCREASING ~Alorida And Bahamas -Warned-To Be Alert (AP)—Tropical., MIAM}, Fla. storm Inez brushed the’ Florida Keys and the Bahamas with ‘Bales Sunday as she crawled forth from Cuba, Jeaving hun- dreds dead and thousands in- jured--and homeless. “ Although Inez packed winds ot only 60 miles an hour, she war expected to regain hurricane force, weathermen ‘said in ad- vising jittery residents of south Florida and the nearby Ba- hamas to stay alert. Inez was estimated 175 miles Routh of Miami. Gales extended: 125 miles in the northeast semi- circle. Photographs taken by a weather satellite indicated that Inez will eventually increase to hurricane force, weather bureau said. fens wan etc by beak eastern Cuba’s ‘tewering Sierra Maéstra Mountains. In le S than. a week Inez travelled*some 1,700 miles. After spawning in‘the warm.waters of the tropical Atlantic, Inez crashed ‘into the \French island possession, “Guadeloupe. Then she plunged across the. Domini- can Republic's Barahona\Penin- sula and struck a terrible blow at Haiti. Finally, Inez swept into pouth- eastern Cuba, near « the “U.S. navy base at. Guantanamo Bay. loupe, local authorities said- Inez killed 26 and injured_ hundreds, about 200 severely. 'Property damage was put at $4;000,000.In-the-Dominican- Re- lic civil: defence officials listed at least 67 known dead and reported massive destruc- |minority of piblic opinion in in, as well the effect that © ing data and stay away from judgments of policy-making. ‘The most direct reaction came from Bernard Braine, a Con- servative member of the British Parliament and a former’ under- secretary of state for Common- wealth relations. He said it was “most unfor- tunate that yesterday in the course of an excellent addres: to us Mr. Smith should have .re- ferred to a significant body of opinion in the United Kingdom which is. critical of the Com- monwealth. . Mr. Smith, ‘attending the can- ference as a guest, listened to the criticism from the gallery of the House of Commons chamber. SAYS MISUNDERSTOOD He said afterwards in an in- terview that he would be very sorry if his warnings. te other Commonwealth countries about the danger of taking Britain too much for granted were misun- derstood in Britain. “In Britain, as in other coun-. tries, adjustments and compro- mises to meet the views and in- terests of other countries can be difficult and costly, just as they America.” At Pointe - a_- Pitre, Guade- About 30,000 lacked sheiter., Leads In Rainfall HALIFAX (OP) — Greenwood in Nova Scotia’s»Annapolis Val- ley receiv.d 1.29 inches of rain in the 24-hour ‘ending at 9 am. ADT . but. most Maritime communities received less than an inch in brief but the night. Brunswick was Saint John’s fmches. Moncton received 1.08 less ‘\| than nine-tenths of an inch and icton less than’ half-inch. Prince Edward Island where. shower activity continued into. the late morning; both Charlotte’ and. Summerside reported\just\under one inch. Yarmouth’s rainfall measured .86 inches, twice ‘that received in~ the OF actea nants re- tied .78 Copper Peake it\eastern —— ee Scotia. .66 inches. INSIDE TODAY tien on the Barahona Peninsula. . — rN general should stiee to collect. |just Greentvoud 9 heavy showers that fell during . Heaviest fall recorded in New OTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1966. ince Edward Island Like The hoo a WEATHER - A few clouds, continuing cool; winds © westerly 25, becoming lignt by evening. — Low-high 40 and 55... “ ee ae 4 PAGES KENTVILLE, N: 8. (CP) Six Annapolis Valley fire depart- scribed_as the worst fire in. the history of this. Annapolis Vailey town early Sunday. The blaze destroyed ‘the fruit division section of the four-acre Canada Foods Ltd. plant in the _ |west end of town. One fireman was slightly injured. Company officials would place PORTLAND, Ore: (AP) — A DC-9. twin jet plane with 18 per- sons.aboard crashed and burned fm a mountain ravine Saturday night. “There were no hep. The wreckage was found Sun- ee afternoon. It was described pretty much in a ball” and timber around the — wreckage was burned. A helicopter landed nearby and confirmed all were dead. a $1,000,000. kup. said the fire crippled the pees fruit processing — opera- tions for -this year. About 100 men and women were employed in the section destroyed by flames. and anoth- ler 30 were to be hired in two weeks. to meet. the peak harvest season, C rash : The crash area, at the west- ern edge of the Cascade Moun- tains, has no roads and is both rugged and heavily timbered. Aboard the dl 13 pas- ed as an evaporator section in ments battled what. firemen de-| General: manager Frank Sou- |the central portion of the plant. The plant comprises a number of interconnected buildings and wings of brick and frame con- struction, one and two storeys high. Kentville fire department units answered the first alarm at 2.30 a.m. adt and were joined by de- ents from the nearby com- 18 Daitons Die In DC-9 Port- Williams, Greenwich and Waterville. A total of 22 units of (fire fighting apparatus were put jinto play before the two-way ad- vance of flames was halted. The fire was stopped before it reached the company’s pickling division on one side and the fruit division's main storage area on another. One fireman was slightly in- jured by flying debris but was released from hospital after DID NOT pe treatment. - There was’ no. ation of Gites dig ot tha fie enon: what went wrong. The pilot had |plosion sent cases, cans and oth- {made the routine report that he jer debris flying over a large ‘was 10 maiples frome Portland |area. pean: a he. did a ue he Later, Wt ash beneath piles of edge clearance given begin his (debris emMloded vacuum packed tins of fruit and fruit coffcen- trates as firemen mopped up at the. scene. ._ Mr. Soukup: said many of the 125 /persons employed in the di- li scend “to 9,000 feet. It was 10 minutes from Portland Airport. Search: pilots flying over the ek seene spotted the wreckage. It was between 3% and five miles northeast of Squaw Mountain im a ravine. at the headwaters of Cheeney Creek. The. wreckage |bers, sengers and five’ ¢ One was a. month-old [payee were sisters. flying te eae d West Coast had a Pata It was also the first crash of a DC-9, a $3,- 000,000 Douglas. jet designed swift short-hop flights. It has a capacity of 75s West Coast had’ put this DC-9 (CBC Strike Is Averted - OTTAWA (CP) — With the |threat of a nationwide CBC tele- vision strike averted early Sat- urday, a CBC technicians’ union mow is polling its 1,850 members ion terms of a’ proposed $5,000,- j000 waue and fringe benefit of- fer. é Representatives of the corpo- ration and of the National As- ees .and: Technicians reached agreement on the proposed. new 30-month contract after three days of jate-night bargaining. are in ‘Africa, Asia and North | ss Mrs. Hubert “H. ‘Humphrey, wife’of the United States. vice- president, i¢ seen tollow \| her arrival-in Moncton Satur- ‘day where she~addressed the. closing dinner of the four-day Sy. \ 4 S sociation of Broadcast Employ- |: ‘SPEAKS AT CONFERENCE into service Monday. bodies would be brought out by would hack a path to. the coroner's office, At least 12 persons died in ac- cidents in the Atlantic Provinces during the weekend, eight in traffic, two by drowning and one in a hunting mishap. ; + » q national conference. on mental retardation. With her is Prem- ier Louis J. Robichaud of New Brunswick. In. the eo Mayor Leonard C. ‘Isiding near the building - in its 2 year's |Dloyees as coins on. other phases of the company opera- tions. The other major sector of the company’s operation is vege- for |table. pickling. Ten railway cars parked on a were hauled away by a locomotive be- fore flames reached them. A decision on whether the} Company presideit John Shaf- }here Sunday. fmer said expensive machinery: helicopter or whether ground |was lost in the fire. He said ‘‘we |Legion’s ‘provincial membership intend to stay in business and we sete mace was Cee tree eee 00 Or beck ie Corotin Fes session was. .to quickly as we can.” i Accillenit Toll Placed At 12 with eight deaths, six in traffic ed one traffic ‘| foundland one fatal hunting ac- cident The deaths: Chesley Raymond Gillett, 16 of Corner Brook killed in a hunt- ‘ing_accident near his home Sat- urday. Able’ Seaman Brian George tioned. Cliff. .d Doucette, of Miscouche, ae ole Wee eee a two-car crash on the outskirts of Summerside Friday night. They were the drivers of the two vehicles involved. : Romeo Martin, 37, of Aroo- stook Jiinction, N.B. died when his car collided with another about 18 miles south of Edmund- ston Friday night. Alexander Boak, 28, of Dieppe, was killed when the car in which he was a passenger struck a tree in Moncton ‘Saturday. “Leo Doiron, 28, of _ Moncton was killed when the car ‘he was d@rivirz struck a culvert Satur- | day morning. i Harold C. Kaye, 58, of Moncton was killed when the car he was driving left the road at Pollet River: near Petitcodiac, Satur- day. night. Eugene Perkins, (4. of Zea- Jaad, about 22 miles from Frederictondied when he was struck by a car as he rode his Siepcle Saturday: France Stephen Purdy, 45, and Lenorad Shipanock, 20, both of Lancaster, drowned Saturday near Gagetown when their boat began to take in’ water. Louis Drapeau, 34, of Dal- housie» N.B., was killed, Satur- driving collided .with' a truck JE. 0f Moncton. Soar Wirenhate ae about 30 miles northwest « St. Quentin, NB. _ full-scale search involving a vision may be able to find tem- ot day when a cat in which hé was | |Two Hunters Are: Missing HARCOURT, N.B. (CP) — A helicopter; ground parties and a ‘\tracking'‘dog is to open this morning for two deer-hunters missing in woods near. this east- ern New Brunswick community. Antoine Gougen of St. Mary, NB. and Jean-Paul LeBlanc of St. Anthony, N.B., both in By. CLAUDE. HENAULT QUEBEC. (CP) -— Opposition Leader ‘Diefenbaker Saturday night told ~ Conservative — mili- tants to stop fighting among their early 20s, were last seen at noon Saturday. They ‘failed to join two companions at 5’p.m. at an arranged meeting spot. An RCAF from Chatham, N.B., will enter the search. today along with ROMP, forestry and RCAF volunteers ‘and the RCMP dog Shep from~ Moncton. Problems Discussed - YRURO (CP) — Although the image of the Royal Canadian Legion is changing with it’s in- creased activities, it’s members war,” Bob Kohaly, chairman of Mr. Kohaly, chairman of the elinic held here, said the two- ‘discuss ways and means of ae * [membership of the legion in the Maritimes.” He said that since the Maril- time Provinces have the highest percentage of eligible member- | °¥ ship ‘in the Legion already, it is more difficult for these pro- vinces to increase their ranks. Nova. Scotia has 121 branches, with a membership of 17,000. personne], _g,|Diefenbaker said: themselves, or at least to stop rn in public. . Diefenbaker, in adopting ait fighting stance, was refer- ring to a movement spear- headed by Dalton Camp and aimed at the calling of a lead- convention. © Mr. Camp, national president of the Progressive Conservative - | Associa! has been cam- paigning = two. weeks for a convention at which there would de a re-evaluation of leadership. Speaking to delegates at the weekend annual meeting of the Quebec wing of the Progressive Conservative Association, Mr. “Out of this meeting I hope will come a new resolve in every part of the province to fight grits. That is what we are here for, not to 7 among our- selves.” REFERS TO LIBERALS which” nena to the Liberal “They have’ he ee bay T sine ambitions and ” at MMe. as many clashing ambitions as ssaoent ‘have but the diference is hea heen Liberals: -don’t-~- advertise,- in ties don’t get up~en housetops <= om ‘I reailas that ea ux oe re as- LS os, See a. caderhip wile Jetidn't expect that there wouldn’t /eratic = ee ery’ annual meeting there, hae” The. Saturday. meeting. be-|been ia vote of confidence.” < tween the two men was their Q . whie® first since Mr. Camp launched |follows the oath -of — his campaign. before a dinner at 5, col. 6) By CLAUDE HENAULT QUEBEC (CP)—Dalton Camp, national president of the Pro- gressive Conservative Associa- tion, said Sunday he not only wants to re-evaluate the ques- tion of party leadership, but oo - 3.¢ Speaking at a press confer. ence, Mr. Camp said his pro- posed re-evaluation of the lead- ership would merely be the first step toward building a new Con- APEC Opens Talks Today HALIFAX (CP) — Delegates xegistered Sunday night for thé annual. meeting of the Atlantic Province’s' Economic Council which opens today, wad —_ ‘Tuesday; . Theme of the meeting ie “de- veloping a strategy Speakers will include federal Finance Minister pare servative political. philosophy. The present one has not been changed si 1956, he added. He felt there was a lack of contact between the general membership of the party and the leadership, and that this membership had no say in the development of party policy. “We haven’t had a serious, deliberate re-evaluation of pol- icy for 10 years. You certainly can’t look at this country through --the-—-glass--of--1956;-in 1967,’’. he said. ._~ In 1956 Mr. Diefenbaker was elected Conservative chief and over-all party pol- |’ Stop Fighting In Public Dief's Advice To Party $1 Million Loss Is Possible In Kentville Plant Fire: — |men’s estimates ranged up to |broken out in what was describ- Leader, Camp Attend Meeting In Quebec _{which Mr. Diefenbaker gave. ‘his speech, the. two met. The Con- servative leader neithen canted Mr._Camp nor singled him out for special attention. The two shook ‘hands whea Mr. “Diefenbaker arrived “but when photographers asked him to repeat the performance for the cameras,- the. Conservative chief declined, saying. he had al ready fulfilled his duty by shak- ing hands once. PASS RESOLUTION Earlier in the day, the con- |- vention delegates voted over- whelmingly in favor of a resolu- tion which, if approved at a na- tional convention, would Mr. Diefenbaker, who war seen making several alterations to-his text before the dinner, . oe don’t waste my time ‘Camp Wants Leadership, © Policy Re-evaluated at the general meeting, on ‘the development of a NO. POLICY ee But, Mr. Camp said the ne Oe no longer has a policy and at ate made from aap “Public apathy, concern, dis- may, a indifference, lack of confidence in the political in- stitution” all resulted from this lack of a statement of poy ang tiatae mass ef ‘onservative ‘ But the Conservatives could not move to develop a policy “until there is agreement withip the party on this question.” : The question of re-evaluation of leadership would have arisen no matter who was party chief, the national president said. . 1 . is arising now “because - .we-- have been 10 years with - five elections.” r Mr. Camp has, for two weeks . been-spearheading. a .campaign for a leadership colmiteuae and was attacked Saturday’ night by Opposition Leader Diefenhaker nef Calvin happell was taken to the “A Sherwood man, inite Edw. Island Hospi- tal by an ambulance from the Cutcliffe Funeral Home 4 ‘ the membership ‘was See sregihd 10.30 last night alter the car he was driving left the road. on the St. Peters .high- way. Seen here is the Tri- umph &porte car, bearing complete were tim’s- condition ‘for his stand. available