If It's Good For The Island The Guardian ts For It Authorized as Second VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 255 Otaes, ade ' the steer. class at the Mart- To ONS ee reat ne Wier Fa, Hallas, o2 ehampion — on the hoof — im. Saturday. The animal, an An- fom cil x postage te can tor payment of By NEIL. MATHESON HALAFAX — If Irving MacDon- | ald’s Angus steer retains the ©! grand championship if the At- | | lantic Winter Fair he won on noon, he will make approximate- the hoof here Saturday, after- | houses the cattle and horse show ATLANTIC WINTER FAIR, | for the big fair. ly $5,500 for the York cattle breeder. Mr. MacDonald took his 1;160 pound steer to the top of one of the most colorful class- | es that has ever entered a Mari- | ful. Dominion Stores paid an even | ‘HARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1965. Island Exhibitors Head Potato, Steer Sections a HORSE SMELL — ~ York Steer Captures On The Hoof Class PROTESTED LONDON (AP) To the Queen's Household Cavalry it’s a goo? ~en-sir sme!’ To their ‘neighbors at the minis- | try of works it’s just,a stink. The - ministry staff moved into new offices at We tmin- ster i’ the centre of London recently. Then somebody opened a window. At the back of the building were 200 cavalry horses in temporary stables while their | | quarters at Knightsbridge are | being rebuilt. “It’s worse when they take the bedding straw out and | fling it in the courtyard.” said one office worker. gus, shown by Irving Mae- time _ring. He nosed out another Angus steer, one shown by the CFRA Donald, York, is 17 months and: weighs 1,162 pounds. - Georgetown Man Killed In Crash Near Cardigan MONTAGUE BUREAU , Francis Gardiner and Earl Mac- OF THE GUARDIAN | Donald, both of Cardigan were Frank McCormack of George- || other passengers. All three men town was killed almost instantly | were taken to hospital in Mon- last evening when a car in which | tague but McDonald was releas- he was a passenger was involved | ed after treatment for a cut on in a four-car collision on the | his head. Daniel McCormack Seven Mile. Road, about two | and Gardiner sustained multiple miles from gan. injuries and are patients in hos- The compact-car;-in-which he | pital here, was a passenger was believed | The deceased was thought to driven by his brother, Daniel | have died almost instantly. His McCormack. also of G-orgetown, | body was identified by J. W. Search For Refugee Boats Pushed In Florida:-Streiits (AP)—An) , Eddie Resillez of Elm- for Cuban ‘hurst, Ill., had become tost is refugee boats*was underway on the rough water and ‘Resillez the wind - whipped Florida had jumped aboard another Straits Sunday as <the known boat, the Little Colonel, to rg- toll in the Cuban exodus stood |dio the U.S. coast at one drowned, five «missing help. and vresumed drowned, While Lopez was alone on . Havana Radio reported only board, the Hildegarde was six boats were permitted to dashed against a third boat, the leave Camarioca Saturday be- Tina J.. and was shipping two cause of bad weather. Camari- feet of water when it returned. | oca is 90 miles south of here. The Tina J. and the Little Col- | Small craft warnings were up jonel. also escorted back by a| at Key West. ‘coast guard cutter, were un- | “Meanwhile, “a h no witicement damaged a ey was awaited of a U.S - Cuba’ Cmdr. C. W. Wahl, Key West agreement for an airlift to sup-|coast guard ¢hief, said the 911, | plant the hazardous do-it-your- foot cutter McCullough brought | self shuttle. ifrom its Boston base for the; Three boats manned by exiles Cuban rush, was on guard with | KEW WEST, Fia. intensified search returned here Sunday after fail- radar 10 miles from the Cuban Roy O'Connor, all of Montag ing to complete the trip to/debarkation coast. Camarioca. One was severely; Four cutters farther to the damaged but no one was hurt. north back up the McCullough The. damaged... boat was . the.in. intercepting distressed. craft, 40-foot Hildegarde. One of itsiWah! added. About 30 miles crew. Jose Lopez of De Kalb, north of Key Wert is a line of Til, was said he had been mak- four %5-foot patrol boats, he radio station farm at Ottawa, lor’s Windfield Farms at Tor- onto was down in 11th spot when Judge J.C.. (Bill) Bennett got through placing the 24 splendid beef’ animals. Some of the top beef breeders in Canada were and a steer owned by E.P. Tay- [ “Can't see what all the fuss is about,” aid an army spokesman. ‘‘The smell from those stables is a good, honest open-air, country smell—infi- nitely preferable to bus fumes.” * ey 2 : STANDS FIRM |’ The Archbishop of Canter- | bury. Dr. Michael Ramsey, | Sunday night stood firmly by | his statement that Christians sétid $1.10, and this time the bid was from Canada Packers plant’ at Charlottetown [BJ, Family guard for | Lavers of Georgetown at Mon- tague Hospital. Dr. G.S.A. Inman ordered an inquest. The accident, about 6:30, is be- lieved to. have occurred at a spot where two cars, driven by Wallace McDonald of Primrose and George a. of Ane were stopped changing 4 i Two other cars’ approaching frcm opposite directions collided | at the spot end ail four became | damaged. The fourth car was said to and Mrs. George » e of St. Géorgesas occupants. ( ; believed to be is his early @0s,.14e survived by two brothers, Daniel, and John of is and by two sisters, Mrs. Mary Giddings and Mrs. James. Lanigan, both of Cam- bridge, P.E.1. His parents are | | Frank and Daniel, had been | Jiving for two years in the | Merigomish area of Nova Scotia Bil Cunningham | did a fantastic job. | Silent On Actually the matter of | steer will emerge as grand | L sf pl | uc's F'ans STIRS ENTHUSIASM champion will depend for the If Mr. MacDonald out- JOHNSON CITY, Tex. ‘AP)— standing honor to the Island | find in the carcasses after the President Johnson and his fam- when he topped a class which at- animals are slaughtered. The ily kept out of sight on a quiet tracted attention from Prince | live judging counts only 8 (Sunday at the LBJ ranch—and Edward Island to Ontario, the | points out of the 100. The re- ‘again kept quiet about any ‘price of $4.75 cents paid for the | maining points are assessed on marital intentions of daughter grand champion by Sobey’s | carcass grading. ‘Luci and boy friend Pat Nu- Stores stirred wild enthusiasm | Istand cattlemen really dom- gent. among a virtual sellout crowd | inated the big steer show, with In advancé™ of the return of in the Haliifax Forum which | seven out of the top 10 animals. Luci. and -Pat. te Washington | Norman Spence, Newport Stat- Sunday night, the Texas White ‘competing for supremacy: it was a tremendous wfh for the Vikable York farmer and potato grower and shipper. F Y h = = aoe sag rian ‘House a oe the im- with a Hereford; |pression it at our out Ss | -| Sanderson was fourth with an- Ithe raieh: beats other Verein ‘ oe P. | Luci, 18, and Pat, 22; flew in Kelly, } was fifth, an /Friday ‘night reports they Angus: Buddy Loane, Xihmuh, ;wantéd SP ae as and was sixth with another Angus; |wanted a blessing from the R.C. Acton and Sons, Midgie; |presidest and Johnson. | N.B. wae seventh with a Short- ;The reports went undenied and horn—this was the first Short- |unconfirmed. horn to place; Claude Craswell, | If there was any family. erup- | Winsloe was eighth with an An-. tion over the matter at the | gus; Mack Dixon's Angus steer ranch, there was no évidence of | was nine and: Johnny Sander- ‘that, either. son's Hereford was tenth. | The acting White House press Mr. MacDonald’s steer. was S¢cretary, Jim Moyers, told’ re sir Y is sen- |Porters: for heed GA Ee tee pe ae |' The. tamlly” has ebloved be- t now heads the Angus ing together this ~weekend.” Are Wounded Four.youths from the Fortune | area received shotgun wounds | Saturday tight in the Little Pond area. | The injured, reported to be In good condition were treated at the Montague Hospital and later released. Names of persons involved | were withheld by the Souris De | tachment of the RCMP until a Crown prosecutor could be con- sulted. | - to keep order in Rhodesia. But. | he said his statement had been misrepresented in some quar- ters. | | could approve the use of force (CP Wirephote) ive Isrciulis. DieInClash AMMAN (Reuters) Five Israelis were killed and six wounded during a two - hour |clash_ Sunday between Israeli ‘and Jordanian forces neaf Lat- roun, 15. miles north of Jeru- salem, a Jordanian spokesman announced. ; Friendly. Bombed By JOHN T. WHEELER SAIGON (AP)—Incorrect_ map| directions from South. Vietna- | mese ground troops sent two U.S. Air Force fighter-bombers t : * | } nor “ons SEVEN WEATHER 4 CENTS 18 PAGES Nova Scotian Wins By NEIL MATHESON ATLANTIC WINTER FAIR, HALIFAX — Raymond Vessey, York, won the table stock potato championship and the reserve championships at the Atlantic Winter Fair this year, but Nova Scotia took the grand i Seed Championship grown on Prince Edward Island \this year, and that is partly \caused by the fact that only a@ jlimited amount of seed was |available the first year. |LIKED SABLES | Incidentally Warren Dawson, and reserve grand in seed |Uisg, who is one of the better erelses for the first time since Potato growers, liked’ his Sables this fair began. so well this vear he’s thinking of Walter V. Huntley, Sheffield \shifting his Kennebec acreage Mills, N.S:-won the seed title |t0-Sables for next year, The with asample of Sables and | Guardian has been informed re- and had only recently returned to resume residence at their old home in Georgetown. While in‘ Nova Scotia they had been ‘ina traffic accident-in which Daniel had lost an eye. Members of the jury are: H.M. | Smith (foreman), John Hughes, Cecil Beck, Richard MacLean, | John Shaw,: Harry Gallaway, Leaders On Hustings MONDAY the ..Easter.. Beef Charlottetown last and was the best car- Attendance Up 30 Per Cent warning on a friendly village if the central highlands, U.S, ‘in-' formants said Sunday. Forty’ =~ eight~civilians were into a blazing attack Inge i | HALIFAX (CP)—Paid atten- killed and 55 were wounded in casses of them ali after the dance on the first two days of animals had been slaughtered the Atlantic Winter Fair showed By THE CANADIAN PRESS | and hung on the rail in the Can- 4 : ada officials of the show announced 30-per cent increase over 1964, ing his first sea voyage. said, and helicopters also are Lopez said he and his com- ‘used in-the operation. Diefenbaker Heads On Final Campaign Swing : By-BEN- WARD jand would withdraw the present HALIFAX (CP) — John Dief- | government's submission to the etibaker headed west Sunday Supreme Court of Canada for. his. final campaign swing | which seeks a constitutional rul- across the nation after winding |ing on the control of British up a four-day tour of the Mari- |Columbia's offshore mineral _ in which he drew over- | rights. ’ ‘ow vi be crowds at almost every sip PS STATEMENT ‘\ Saturday night more than 850 | In 1957 Preside ) persons -jamed a high-school ;had granted to the states con- atiditorium at Digby, N.S., to |{rol of minerals within their hear him attack the Liberal , historic boundaries.” Mr. Dief- government as one “floundering |eMbaker indicated that he vould from chaos to chaos.” |favor such a step in Canada but The Conservative chief said | Sidestepped a flat statement to one of the reasons that the gov. ‘hat effect. ernment called the Nov. 8 elec- _ However, he noted that Nova tion is that it is heading to: |Scotia_has been mining under wards a difficult financial posi- |the sea for decades, a historic tion brought about by thig |Situation. In recent times the year’s rapid increase in im. | federal government has granted ports. permits for extensive oj] and Earlier he told *1,100 at an | 888 exploration off Nova Scotia afternoon rally in Yarmouth, |4& 4 Newfoundland, bringing N.S.. that Finance Minister, outcries from the two provin- cial gvernments- Mr. Diefenbaker_also prom- Walter Gordon is reported ready to introduce tight money Eisenhower, measures after the election. He charged that this would be a ‘‘nolicy ot disaster,” para- lyzing business and sending liv- ing costs higher. Mr. Diefenbaker called the 15 revorters on his campaign train into his private car at. Yar- mouth to talk about his stand on offshore mineral rights, sub- ject of a dispute between the ’ provinces and Ottawa. He said a government r him “would not insist on entire ewnership ef those resources” | tsed that a Conservative govern: ment would increase ‘research, particularly in the | field of utilization of waste prod- iucts, and establish a federal | fire-fighting service to aid the provinces in emergencies. In his speech to the Yarmouth rally, a standing-room-only af- fair, he attacked Liberal legie lation establishing a 12 - mile |fishing limit, contending that it isn’t being enforced because it can’t be enforced under inter- national law, fisheries § | The jury: viewed the remains | and then was dismissed to the | call of the coroner. aie! Douglas Starts On Final Blitz , BURNABY, B.C. Leader T. C. Douglas starts a | cempaign blitz of five provinces | today after pledging to supvort a minority government which agrees to put a large portion of his party's platform into legis- lation. , During a chat with supporters at a coffee party Saturday, Mr. Douglas said if the NDP- holds a |. balance of power after the Nov. 8 election it would be willing te “sit down with whichever party |} is most amenable to implement our program .—. . in exchange for voting support.” la ‘line for implementing legisla- jtion on NDP proposals,on pen- sions, medical insurance; educa-. tion, tax exemptions. manpewer training and curbing foreign jownership of Canadian industry jand resources. Grand Dragon Of Klan Dies READING, Pa (AP)—A man jtentatively identified as Daniel Burros, the grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan in New - York, was found shot to death here Sunday after publication of a iNew York Times report which |said he was a Jew. Police said the death of the 2%-year-old Burros apparently /was a suicide. | The Times says klancman \Burros told its reporter, Me- \Candlish Phillips, that if his re- jligious background were pub- jlished : : “T'll have to retaliate, do you understand? If you publish that, I'll come and get you ‘and I'll Brantford, Ont. burn, Sask. Thompson (Alta-) riding. Sunday night. | A total of 7,343 paid their way | into the show Sunday. Added: to | |4,637. admissions. Saturday,. this game a two-day total of 11,980. Total for the first two days last year was 7,343. The fair opened Pearson—In Winnipeg. | Diefenbaker — Hamilton and NO PAPERS A really good steer owned by Dougias—In Regina and Wey- |l:P. Mclsaac and Sons, Mer- | maid was unable to. In Red Deer | when it was found wrong papers had been sent to | the fair through an error. The Caouette — In Beauce (Que) ithe strike in which the planes dropped 260-pound fragmenta- tion and phosphorous bombs, iwhich cause deep, excruciating | iburns. Many of the victims were. | rite tiie to be women and chil- ren, Both..U.S, embassy-. and-mili- tary officials cleared all Ameri- can personnel of any respon-.. sibility. The attack took place | t on a Friday in 1964, on Saturday Saturday on De Duc, about 40 | handed the Viet.Cong and North pee Viet Nam a propaganda plum. | Rodd; 3. Chester Birt, R |Wallace Moir, Amherst RR 5 won the reserve with Hunters. It: was shortly after the reviv- al of the old Maritime Winter |Fair, after World War Two, that \a@ Nova Scotia farmer won the seed potato championship. More jinteresting is the fact the seed jtitle went to a sample of Sable | potatoes, and this is the first .lyear they have grown. They look much like the Hunter var- lety; they are very smooth, shallow eyed, and the winning sample was beautifully selected and most uniform.Eye appeal is important in seed potatoes. They won because they were the best sample of spuds in the show, Glen Ramsay of Charlot- tetown told The Guardian. He was one of the judges. They are reasonably early in maturing, Mr. Ramsay added. Elwin Steele, Scots Bay was a seed winner once, and he was the on- ly Nova Scotian to win at the Royal, I was told. Only 182 acres of Sables were Village In Error disembarkation pert of Qui Nhon. The U.S. officials said the U.S. forward observer for the pilots of the two _propeller- driven Skyraiders requested confirmation of the map ordinates on to the pilots - after getting confirma‘ion from the ceiving Viet Cong fire from huts in a village given in the co- | ordinates. | Actually, the Vietnamese | troops were under fire about 10 miles from the village, near the a stronghold ef Bong | CLEARED OF BLAME Although Americans were cleared of blame, US. officials expressed belief the attack |liably. Mr. Dawson also grows | Fundy, another comparatively ‘new variety-_ The Sables. are in a clase for “any other variety white.” second in the class was Alton Rodd, North Milton; Chester Birt, Peake’s Station was third. Sebagoes — 1.' Mrs. Alex Ro- bertson, East Baltic; 2 was a Mr. Robertson, East Baltic, $. Raymond Vessey, 4 Erie Laird. * AOV, -colored — 1. Raymond Vessey. Other placings went te Nova Scotia and New Bruns- wick. In Hunter Robert “Moir was first and every otlier prize also went to Nova Scotia. Another seed class was also. dorninated by Nova Scotia growers. ; In Katahdins Raymond Vessey was. first, J. MacAulay, East Baltic’ second and Gus Bailey, RR 1, Elmira fourth. | Irish Cobblers — 1. Russel ©. | Mills, “Annandale, 2. Raymond Vessey, 3. Eric Laird. i Green Mountains — 1. Levii Jay, Mt- Stewart, 2. George Do- ver, RR .2,_ Peakes, 3. Arnold Younker, Winsloe. TABLE WINNERS Tablestock placings: Mr. Vessey won the tablestock grand championship with a sam- ple of Katahdins, his reserve championship was won with Kennebecs. Mr. Vessey has se--- veral times been a _ tablestock champion at the Royal. Other .placings in Katahdins included .2.- Alton Rodd, North Jae 3. Gus’ Batley, Elmira, Sebagoes — 1. Raymond Ves- sey; 2. Alex Robertson; 3. Erie Irish Cobblers — 1. Russel C: | Mills, Annandale: 2. Raymond Vessey; 3. W.R. Lacey; 5. Erie Laird. Green Mountains — 1 A, Lacey, Tracadie. Cross; 2. Levi Jay; 3. Walter Douglas; 4. Ray- mond Vessey. __. Netted Gems — 1}. W. Wool- over, Canning, N.S.; Raymond Vessey. . Any other variety. white — 1. Allison Vessey, York; 2. Alton R 1 riding. {miles northwest of the U.S. (CP)—NDP |“ He said in an inteeyifw any | grTeement must includé’a dead- (Continued on page 3 Col. 6) ‘this year. < kill you. I don’t care what hap- | pens. I'll be ruined. This is all I have to live for.” Ht wasn’t: all ghosts and gob-- ‘a very acceptable Saturday Riding Weld aad of the cacti look too pleased with the role, | might. This fine big dog made time provided protection for but the treats undoubtedly DOG PARADES IN HALLOWE'EN COSTUME Little Red = his small mistress: He doesn't helped sweeten things wp for | toll. U.S, rules call for no warnings to precede air attacks on vil- lages where fighting is under way. When no fighting is inv- volved, villagers are warned by |Raymond’ Vessey; 3. | Rodd. The fact that the attack came | Peakes. AOV colored — 1. . without warning apparently ac- | nard Brown, Centreville, N.S. ; 2. counted for the high csualty Altfa The domination of the seed competition by the Nova Scotia growers had a sobering influ- ence on Islanders who had beeen feeling rather smug about their leaflets‘ or aerial loudspeakers long-held -superiority ‘‘We'll before the strike begins. Since have to pull up our socks next the South Vietnamese reported | vear’’ was the way one man ‘mt they were under fire, no warn- it, and next, year will probably ing preceded the strike on.De | produce a .major_ effort toward Duc. | improvement. him before the night was over. ALBERTON — Hallowe'en was }reported fairly quiet in Western | Prince County with damage in Alberton and Tignish confined | mainly to the removal of a large |number of signs. | Fires in vacant buildings oc- peupiec the attention of firemen |in both Alberton and Tignish. Alberton firemen were called out early Saturday night to a vacant house owned by Gus ‘House, Barn Destroyed ‘By Hallowe en Blazes. Shaw, now living in Toronto where a fire in a mattress was quickly extinguished. Near Elmsdale a vacant house foremly owned by the late Henry Matthews was destroyed by fire. Both blazes are believed to have been, started by pranksters. At Sea Cow Pond near Tig- nish a large barn belonging to , William O’Brien was destroyed ‘by fire along with two binders, a hay mower and other machin- ery. A straw stack owned. by John Ready was also burned. In Kildare a vacant house belonging to Mrs. Paul DesRoches was des- troyed by fire alse believed start- ed by Hallowe'en pranksters. Along with the removal of street and railway warnisg signs, flares were removed at two bridges under construction near Bloomfield leaving the by- passes over the bridges in a most dangerous condition. : Alberton RCMP are investi- gating alt cases of vandalism c@ Hallowe'en Night. INSIDE TODAY