' If It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For kt VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 253 i i PAY OE BIGOaT DEAL o ber gores wee et 2 woos oni d¥ay ‘New Wheat Agreement ls Sign iy WINNIPEG ‘CP) — Canada has signed a new and flexible wheat agreement ‘with China jabundance in this year's Prai- that could mean a sale of amy- |rie- harvest because of leaf rust where from 112,000,000 to 466,-|and autumn rain and snow. 000,000 bushels in three to five! China will pay the going years. : wheat board export rate at the Based on past experience, time of;-each purchase. Lake said Trade Minister Sharp, “1! |head prices Thursday ranged | sm confident the quantities pur- {from $182% a bushel for No. 3| Chased will be closer to ‘the |northern to $1.72% for No. 5, | meximum figure.” jcompare d with $1.94% for He set the value to Canada |prime’ No. 1 northern. at from $200,000,000 to $900,000,- | 00. If China goes anywhere | CREATES. EMPLOYMENT fear the limit it will be the| Mr. Sharp has estimated a biggest deal ever concluded by ; bushel of wheat is worth $2 in the Canadian wheat board, sur- |Tound figures to the Canadian passing the $500,000,000 sale to | economy because handling and have preferre grades, of which re is an) (jhe Soviet Union in 1963. shipping creates employment in| puchels Grades were not announced. | addition to returns to the! io They will be decided at the | farmer. | DELIVERY NEXT AUGUST ‘ime of each individual pur-| ‘The agreement, announced by ed With China ment. The Chinesel/in the past |ference attended by Mr. Sharp, the lower | works this way: 1. A firm deal has been signed for sale of a minimum of 112,- 000,000 and a maximum 2 the Deginning next 186,700,000° bushels three years Aug. 1 in 2, Before Next May 1, “con sideration will be given” to increasing the quantities in- voled in the three-year pact to 168,000,000 bushels mum _. nd 280,000,000 mum. 3. It may be decided to extend the three - agreement to five yéars, a' minimum of 280,000,000 a maximum. of 466,000, In any case, delivery , s Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” | , ‘CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, Ee nar dia FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1965. f nor moat SEVEN CENTS ee WEATHER ee Sunny and cool; winds northwest : fight by evening. Low-high 32 and 40. x Saturday: cloudy and warmer, 16 PAGES ~ wee 4 Le saunas. hee - ments should be better adapted chase made under the agree- ithe wheat board al a press con- India-Pakistan Issue. UNITED NATIONS (CP) — The UN Security Counc’ met again Thursday on the Indian- Pekistan dispute, but did not re- solve differences among the big powers’ on how to strengthen its efforts to bring sbout a peace- ful. solution boycotted the India again meeting. The six non-permanent mem- —Terms are 25 per’ cent yy A | with the balance plus int ey OU (| |in 18 months, made possible by }) : }@ government credit guara’ Te ito the wheat board.: Mr. Sharp | (France and the Soviet Union jwere at odds over reference to iprevious council requests that \negotiations take oslace to re- |solve the basic political issue of |the dispute—the future of Kash- mir, The sources said the Soviet |Union opposed such reference ‘and Franee wanted it. India’ is boycotting the res- jsions on the grounds that the bers of the li-nation council jcouncil’s be determined later deliberations should were working on a resolution take up only implementation of that would approve steps taken ithe ceasefire and withdrawal of | already by Secretary-General U Thant to implement the council's’, demand for a ceasefire and steps, the original resolution ap-| DAD'S CLAIM troop withdrawals. Diplomatic sources said this | met opposition from the Soviet Union, which has criticized Thant for sendng new observers to patrol.the ceasefire line. The ‘sources said also that troops. In addition to asking those praved by the council Sept. 20 directed Thant to ensure super- vision of the ceasefire and. with- drawal. and called upon all states to refrain from action which might aggravate tension | in ‘the area. ¢ ‘Boats’ Cuban Exiles Await Details KEY WEST, Fila. (AP)—Cu- ban exiles waited on tenterhooks Thursday for official details of an airlift which would supplant sea lanes as a refugee route out of Cuba. Some — envisaging red tape and for priorities— redoubled efforts to bring out friends and relatives by boat be- fore being stopped by Fidel Castro’s order at midnight Thursday night. ‘Castro called a halt to the risky traffic across the Florida Straits after conferring with Swiss Ambassador Emil Stadel- hofer, the go-between in Cuban- | the U.S. negotiations. The Cuban interior ministry said__the boat” shuttle - would-! be suspended “considering ar- ’ ‘ rangements for an accord . . . for a safer transportation s ics sources said am agreement called for Cubans with. relatives in the United States to be flown. from Vara- eS 2? CREST RBS tO Pe start et the beginning. of 196566 crop year next Aug. The current three-year & ment, ander which China ordered the maximum 187 o bushels, expires next >. z July % Po level of more than $200,000,000 was re quired. fei As part of the pact, te eT nual limit on export to Can 1 from China of sensitive jtems— mostly textiles—will be raised. ito $10,000,000 from ‘$7,000,000. | “Canadian producers of 4 | sitive items are protected by fi said a revolving credit |individual quota limitations,” |) Mr. Sharp said. ‘These are to by agree- | ment between the two parties.” | SON: DOUBTS PROVIDENCE, R.1. (AP) Bryant College officials say | they recently received the | following letter from a sop | of one of their most iflustri:: | ous alumni: Tne ~ Mt you ae me a copy. of the marks of gas I am his son and he | is bragging about his marks. He graduated from Bryant College in 1960. I ami a stu- dent in the 8th grade. I would appreciate poe t would respond imedia a DAVE. MciNTOGH.’ as my report card is com- TORONTO (CP)—Prime Min. | ing soon. ister Pearson said Th Yours truly, there will be another in in baer a a year or 18 mouths ff. the Lib- dero airport, 8 miles east of Havana, to Florida, at the rate of about 20 a day. The US. government is expected to pro- vide and pay for the planes, which will be civilian. ~The agreement is be. made. public in Washington and- Havana today with flights beginning perhaps 10.days after » announcement. A US. an said on minor technical questions re mained to clear up before fitial reached. | agreement was Pope Pu Five Documents VATICAN CITY (Reuters)— Pope Paul Thursday promul- | gated five Vatican council docu- ments which bind the Roman Catholic Church to reform its | structure and look more kindly | on Jews, Moslems and other | non-Christians. Stamped with the seal of his formal avproval the decrees were issued to the world as offi- | eial church doctrine. They are: 1. Chérch government. A church” opens the way to re’ forms of church government, It says the Roman Curia depart- to modern needs and gives bishops a share in “collegial. re- sponsibility’ with the Pope. - | 2. The Jews and other nen- Christians. From now on ‘Cath olics who speak disparagingly of Jews or accuse them of being i “God-killers,"’ or snéer at Mos- | lems. Buddhists or Hindus as “pagans’’ will be going against the teaching of thelr church. | | A council declaration exoner- | ates the Jews from collective guilt for the death of Christ and says that the church “renvroves, as foreign to the mind of Christ, | any di-crimination against men) or harassment of them because | (of their race. color,. condition in| life or religion.” SUGGEST MERGERS 3. Religious orders. A decree on religious orders says tun down monasteries “and commu- | nities should merge with others. formal . approval blishes monks and nuns to avoid every appearance of ; 4. education. A de- cree says that civil authorities should make available public subsidies so: that ovarents can choose schools fort their children according to their conscienee. | Prudent sex education is recom- mended in schools 5. Training of student priests. The last decree suggests how student priests can. be given hbet- ter intellecttial and spiritual can’s new policies. Pope Paul pfomulgated the texts in Saint Peter's lica at a public ceremony attended by the. Roman Catholic bishops. The bishops earlier voted their in a haliot | counted by comouters housed in| the ehapel of the basilica. The council, the first for) nearly a century, has so far is-| sued 10 document: since the late Pove John XXIH opened it in 1962. Previous ones deal with ways to promote Christian | unity. reform of public worship and other important questions. Six more documents are await- ing final approval. INSIDE TODAY Sport a ae 9 Wonren’s _ piss Sccetas & OO OE Le ; Kings, Queens, Cily ...... 5 Prince County ..... y Visees 2 ‘Pension Plan ({mi- expected to | - The Canada Pension Plan was | ‘month at age 65, plus. the pres- | ber were both members. of the " ‘ streets j erals don't win a majority Nov. 8. He made the off-the-cuff re- mark in the ¢ head- quarters of David Hahn, Liberal in Toronto Broad- | view. The riding corresponds. to the . provincial constitu _ of Riverdale where’ the New Dem- ocratic Party beat.the Liberals im a byelection: last ‘year. | Mr. Pearson, after. encounter- }ing—some- good-natured. political | guerrilla warfare. from’ Conser- |vative candidate Richard’ Lyall, Sabotage Of | ils Charaed | SEMCOE, Ont.’ (CP)—Payment | {Of an additional $25 a month te jold age pensioners ont of the ;Canada Pension Plan tind would | wreck the contributory retire- jment pension plan, Finance Min- | ..iq the Liberals are. the only tem when Mr. Pearson was four Gordon said Thursday | party with a chance to’ win a |2?°Ut to address a huge throng | . : . | ina speech to a Liberal cam- a * Oe eee paiga smecting here. Mr. Gorden | vit Stes Ceuaca were said the proposal made Pro- i “ gressive ruauavanon Oe ei, | going to have another election Dieefenbaker, if carried into ef- |i" ® yeer or @ year and & fect, ‘‘would simply scuttle the | half. new Canada Pension Plan.” ‘Who wants that?” he asked. There was a thorus of boos. \introduced by the Liberal gov- ernment, Mr. Gordon said. only campaign headquarters of Lib- jafter ‘“‘a tough fight and bitter eral candidate Marvin Gelber ,Opposition.”” When it is in full| who -is running against the operation it will mean retire-| NDP’s David Lewis im York ment pensions of up to $104 a| South. Mr. Hahn dnd MP. Gel- ent $75-a-month old age pension. | last Parliament. Mr. Lewis is a. The Conservatives now are | former MP. \promising to raise the $75 rate|} The committee room of \to $100 and to finance the in- |bearded Mr. Lyall is only five jcrease out of the contributory doors from Mr. Habn’s. pension plan fund, Mr. Gordon (WON BY WHISKER said, adding: The Conservative | “Canadians should not be de- me: rated e i mean: It would wreck the Cam | os in. his car...Mr.. Hols. Wee jada Pension Plan. Conservative ; ‘members in the last Parliament ¥Y @ Whisker but Mr. Lyall alse, hem | to’ go into Mr. Haha’s a -/T. C. Douglas has given up hope ll, bf stic: e eae. too, o< ee one Mr. Peatsen by saying the audience —there were about’ 100 jamed into the single room—could do previous night: Hear the prime in a Mr. Pearson algo visited the |: weighty decree ‘‘concerning the training to carry out the Vati- \ceived as to what this would {oan -_ a aa onan ee i.Prstoral office of bishops in the woe : —- headquarters t© get warm. Mr: Lyall was ‘handing out A reporter remarked the bags didn’t seem very good advertis- ing for the Conservatives. { “No, they are rather silly,” gaid Mr.- Lyall cheerfully- Hahn introduced Mr. something it couldn't minister. ~The reference was to the fail ure of the public. address sys- Sean ae aoe PC ————— 3,500 Cheer Dief At Coliseum Meeting \Coliseum last evening that he in- friend,” the premier said as re- jtended to pay 75 per cent of the ‘viewed the benefits received by | costs of establishing agricultural schools, the same as is done now \for the building of vocational | schools. A guarantee price of $4 thundred weight for milk and the ‘raising of support prices were jother measures that would be ‘implemented by a Conservative ;government, Mr. Diefenbaker told the gathering. | Mr. Diefenbaker wore a heavy overcoat in the chilly building normally used for cattle exhib! jtiotis. He asked the crowd te |imagine it was a frock coat simi lar to the ones worn by the fa thers of confederation when they ‘met in Charlottetown in 1664 [ Mr. Diefenbaker made refer- _ ence to a motion passed by one of the Young Liberal clubs ip ‘Central Canada where they mov ‘ed the abolishment of the Queen 'from Canada. “No member of \this (Conservative) party is go ing to stand for the abolishment of the Queen,”’ Mr. Diefenbaker told the cheering crowd. | ‘See additional stories on page | 3.) \ OLD AGE PENSIONS 5 Mr. Pearson said NDP leader of ever ing a government. Somebody yelled: ‘That's what you think.” At Mr. Gelber’s headquarters a little later, Mr. Pearson used | a microphone that worked. } He said Mr. Gelber would join | the “150 to .250" Liberals in the | next Parliament. Mr. Gelber told a reporter | fater he hadcome to his head | quarters early to make sure the microphone worked, even. though one’ wasn’t really..needed | in. the -single room... -_- commercial flight at 11:40 p.m. rally there tonight. — ° TARGET JOB PERMANENT , England (Reuters) —Jobs on offer at -the employment. exchange here Thursday include one for a girl to act as target for a circus knife thrower. An exchange spokesman said: “The job is perma- nent.” Tt pays £24 $72 a week. a Leaflet Raid Made On Hanoi SAIGON (AP) — U.S. planes their first propaganda leaflet raid on Hanoi Thursday | while American mechanics) \worked to repair some of the, damage by Viet“Cong attacks om ithe marble mountain and Cha made Lai air strips. A-=U.S, spokesman said the | | Speaking on the old age pew | |sions Mr. Diefenbaker said, “‘if | you want the $100 a month there.i¢ only one way, elect: four | Of Prime ‘Minister Pearson's statement that the inctease in the old age pensions could not be paid out of the Canada Pen- sion’ Fynd, _Mr. Diefenbaker wondered why it couldn’t when over $2,000,000 worth of adver- tising.for the plan would be paid out of the fund. “The biggest fund in the hands of a govern- ment in all: history,” was the ..,\description of the Canada Pen- sion Fund by Mr. Diefenbaker. The Liberals are becoming less and less confident of viictory on Nov. 8 the former prime min- ister told the gathering. ‘when this campaign started they were going to sweep.” Now the prime minister has threatened a. new election with- in 18 months if he did ‘not get his | majority. “Which is the most _ unusual : planes didnot fly over the Com- | statement ever made by a prime Mr. “Pearson. was scheduled to |munist North Vietnamese capt- |inister,” said the Conservative reach Vancouver by Air Canada |tal, but dumped 640,000 leaflets leader. Mr. Pearson need not into the wind over tried to sabotage the Canada j {Pension Plan. It is clear they | and wished him Tuck. jhave not stopped trying.” | I hope you have all the inck | you deserve,” Mr. Pearson shot |) back at the Conservative c date. : : Snowfall Sets Que. Area Mark SHERBROOKE, «Que. (CP)— A all of more than Seven inches paralyzed much activity in the Eastern Townships area of Quebec Thursday. Almost. no city biases were re- ported here in operation. Cars | were stopped in deep snow and on hilly streets.* Snowfall at a weather station near here was reported at 5.9 the blowing snow in front of; his headquarters handing c air d' board hats with . the “Lyall” printed large’ on them) Leaders On. Hustings FRIDAY inches between 1 and 8 am, more than two inches above the —In record one-day snowfall for any |town, and , in October day in the last 50 years, |Prince Island; M Other Eastern Townships cen-|ton and Sackville in Svea. tres ‘also reported four te five |wick; and Amherst, cw rans inches of snow. Londonderry Mail delivery in Sherbrooke was expected to be several y: hours late because of the storm, |lam riding, British Columbia. Thompson—In since the city buses mailmen |use on their rounds were off the | shook hands with Mr +. Pearson” Earlier, Mr. Lyall was outsin) to passing children and» urging | John Diefenbaker waves to crowd yesterday as he leaves the Princess Pat Theatre in late in. 1 Prince town t nonetheless there was a crowd of over 700 eee jammed into the small movie house, The Conservative can- didate for Prince; David Mac-' Donald, and Premier Walter R. Shaw made speeches and Tommy Common, the televis- ion singer, provided entertain- ment to those waiting te hear the former prime munister. be- . was sche- at 12:30 the Red EDT Thursday. He addresses a Rivet valley in which it lies and ithe wind did the rest. | worry about a new election be- |cause the Conservatives are go- | ing to win this one, he went on. | BUILDING TAX TO GO | Mr. Diefenbaker said he would | give, “urban dwellers the right to deduct their municipal taxes from their income tax,” and he also. said the Conservatives would abolish the 11 per cent sales tax on building supplies. Mr. Diefenbaker,~ |to the Liberals plea for a ma- jority government said, “nobody ever strengthened a wheel by adding extra spokes after the ‘hub was gone.” The large crowd rose to its feet and gave the Conservative leader a standing ovation after he was introduced to them by Premier Walter R. Shaw. Prem- ier Shaw said the people in the Maritimes were a-frgotten peo- ple under the Liberal govern- ments prior to the Diefenbaker years. ‘‘The only word in the Li- berat-dictionary was ‘no’,” said the premier with reference to referring | this province between 1958 and 1963, Each of the four Conservative candidates in the Province made per brief addresses and welcomed Mr. Diefenbaker and his wife te the Island. : Today Mr. and Mrs. Diefen- \baker meet with Mayor Walter Cox at City Hall shortly after nine o'clock. Follawing this. they will leave to view the new fish plant at Georgetown and from there they will go to Souris for a rally late in the morning. After the Souris rally the Diefenbaker party will travel to Montague for lunch and an opportunity for the people to meet the former prime minister will be had when he makes a brief stop at. the ontague Legion. He will leave Montague early in the afternoon to catch a regu- lar scheduled flight to Moncton where he will join his campaign train for a twoday swing 'through Nova Scotia. | New Point | Is Placed | In Platform t -eetvative baker put a new point into. his- |party’s national platform here | Thursday, promising that a gov- ernment under him would pay | one-third of the capital construc- | tion costs of new community | hospitals. | Mr. Diefenbaker told a party rally that the Conservatives |would share hospital construe- ition costs equally with the prov- | inces and the communities ' in- \volved: Ottawa now matches provincial contributions in this field, which are below the level Mr. Diefenbaker mentioned. The new policy would require |prior agreement of the prov- inces. Mystery. Reported MOSOOW (‘Reuters)—A Rus- | sia space satellite has picked | up ~ powerful mysterious radio | waves, possibly emanating from jone of the planets, the Soviet jmews agency Tass reported | Thursday. Tass said the unknown beam, ;100- times Stronger than any- thing expected, was discovered and measured by Zond-2, a re- s@arch satellite which has been in orbit for 11 months. Tass said it was not yet pos- sible to pinpoint the source of the radio wavés, which were “of amazing great intensity.” Zont 2 was launched Nov. 3, 1964, toward Mars, data needed for prolonged manned space flights Some'experts helieved the ra- dio emissions came from a great planet, most probably from Jupiter. Wislon Trip ‘Nears Failure By GEOFFREY WHITEHEAD SALISBURY (Reuters) — British Prime Minister Wilson's iMth-hour bid to prevent a final break between Britain and Rho- desia appears close to failure. After three days of. talks, in- cluding two lengthy sessions ‘with each of the two restricted irival black African nationalist jleaders, British officials said Thursday night there were no Signs Of any significant © shift that could help break the inde- ‘pendence deadlock. a 10-minute stop Wilson flew here Monday in jan effort to.forestall Prime Min- ‘ister Ian Smith from declaring after one independence unilaterally on be- ’ jernment Smith ana the British prime minister.’ who has conferred with 120 white and African Rho desians since his arrival. met for luncheon talks Thursday. LEADERS STAND FIRM So far Wilson has been unable to talk either of the two nation- alist leaders — Joshua Nkomo and Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole— into softening their demands for immediate African majority tule. There are 4,000,000 Ne- groes in Rhodesia and fewer than 220,000. whites. The adamant stand of the two African leaders has confronted Wilson with an almost inenper- able task in trying to halt the threatened independénce la- ration by the ‘white n Leader Diefen to gather . Assistance | der / i awa