_..gnent-has beeen criticized by the if It’s Good For The Island The Guardian !« t+. it . “* SISTER WAVES AFTER LAUNCH Sister Rose Merie, a Mark- laghah. With her are her Pol] nun from the P ee ae, Gee re oe ee ee Wednesday, Ned O'tahegion of Phils. ‘the Destreyer Escort O'Gal’ delphis. ‘The: ship. was. named ‘Covets Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” pm Sige, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1965 Middle OfRoad Approachis Is Promised To Medicare : ‘By KEN CLARK CALGARY (CP)—Prime Min- ister Pearson Tuesday promised a middie-of-the-road approach tothe proposed national medi- cal care program and effective | ar® international discussions to pro- | tect Canadian natural resources, The Liberal leader flew into this Liberal and ad- dressed an overflow luncheon crowd of about 1.500 in a hotel ballroom before leaving for Saskatchewan. He said the Liberal govermr government out a suitable program “Swith the provinces. His govern- Pg ee New Democrats for alleged|1, 1967. weakening of the compulsory The federal approach, he said, aaspect of the proposed health | will be flexible. ¢ plan and giving way to the in- ‘We don't say we should cover 100 per cent of the peo- Wizard. til Silent Despite Court Threats WASHINGTON ~ (AP) — Im-|He said the white-supremacist gerial Wizard Robert Shelton (Kian would “find out who are left the witness box .Wednesday.|the true manipulators behind . ein Cot ee ot ee ae Klan and his own income, but D IN DUES under threat of a possible cita-| -The committee wanted tion for contempt of the U.S. tale about stout say. siae of Klan Congress. ceived of rally During two days of question- et nan ee surance companies. to re- ste a Diet Sees Deception n Viet Nam Reports By DAVE McINTOSH RENFREW, Ont. (CP) — Op- | . position Leader Diefenbaker “I challenge him Nain represent ‘gross confu- | clared, aidh -densentiag to deception.” «| w that _ gov~ aaiemaus an’ veel He told a crowd of about 250 | |fm the Legion hall here that the | ans lost all sense | |He was referring to a international’ responsibility letter Presi- | gov ance in Viet Nam. Mr. Diefenbaker said “Prime Pearson had stated eat he Johnson wanted Can- | ada to send troops te Viet Nam. | External Affairs Miniset | stated that for another a: The Rev. |Martin had ion TO Callaghan, Sf 0 \seuemé nak et anata Medal of Honor winner in- |troops. World War wr Wirephoto) Finance Minis tter Gordon, oa Liberal compe chairman, now said that the letter asked troops, Mr. Diefenbaker added, while Defence Minister ple,” he said,, “perhaps 96 per | cent should be covered in two or three years.” sition claims the Liberal gover mot will “let you down” in oil tr. Pearson said his goverrr ment will be effective in pro- tecting the export interests of any .of Canada's surplus re- sources. It was just a question of which government can best protect domestic interests in discussions with __ th e_. United States. Mr- Pearson aiso said there has been a good deal more dia- Heliyer said he hadn't seen the |monsense does this reveal?” Mr Diefenbaker said. “What “heights of ee po age Ree Aer denies baa’ oa ida to keep Canadians in the dark OTTAWA “those who have Wedne’ the capital of Canada. . Autumn ae by ag ays big tribe than dialogue in the Nov. 8 federal election campaign. There has been more abuse than argument, he continued in by ) Conservative Leader Diefen- tar on the Literal’ ‘govern ment's moral conduct. Mr. Pearson said he has tried to act with honor and Vy — he entered public life in be guilty of wrong doing or;con- doning it; but "T will neve® con- vict on false evidence or no evidence.” : Once again, he hammered pate his campaign theme ef the need for a strong majority government with strong repre- sentation from the Prairies, where the Conservatives held 41 of 48 parliamentary seats at ing by the House of Representa: ling of such ch amenities ex- tives , lee on un-Ameri- can activities, the Klan head W was carious ni to. whether Sarthe we | from the U.S. Air Force Wrapped himself ‘in the consti- tutional protection against self- | ¢ incrimination in refusing to an — | Guring the Korean War to help | awer questions, He told the com- | gut in a fami gonety as. mittee nothing but his name, bis /put promptly eS to work birthplace — Tuscaloose, Ala. |a tire company. —and his age—36. There were questions about | Temporarily excused as a wit- ‘cash cheques drawn on the ac- | ness. Shelton described the in-;count ofthe Alabama Rescue |. . vestigation as an attempt ‘to Service, which committee chair- | curry political favor with a’ /man Edwin E. Willis (Dem. La.) | group that has flouted the law called’ a “ all over the country.” for the United Klans of Amer- | ‘His statement, read to report- ica, the biggest of the various | ers outside the hearing room, | Kian federations in Ma og U.S. and | apparently referred to Negroes. ‘the one Shelton heads. \ SE Aa Riataceg +--+}? ~SchurmanFirmls Awarded Irish Moss Plant Contract CAPITAL BUREAU |vice of the department of fish- | OF THE GUARDIAN (eries. . here! enamelled steel and the} abe sh: |. The building will be pre-fabri- OTTAWA '— Schuraién mer. (eated and 60 by 102 feet. It will struction Limited of Summer- bagging, drying, sifting | side has been awarded a $168. |and gtading equipment and pro- | 500 contract for the construction | vide storage, laboratory and of- of an. experimental :eawood pro- fice space. The exterior wall cessing plant at Mininegash, it wre anhtunced here We">> dey }102 by 13 foot wharf to qrovidle by Public Works Minister Y docking facilities for boatr cam George Moliraith. INSIDE TODA aa i. aie a plant. saree Only the ome tender was re-| Classified . 18, 19, @ =a the har ceived by the due date of Sept. | CS ean tees cc céenkics ; 's Swe me a has mn tek 7 | ROME hss. s-rcigas > 17 lyear ofa 100-foot extension te Plans for the<establishment of | Sport ........ A 14 {the north breakwater. . 7 eres — pro: | Finance, mars ........ 16 Plans -— aes were seaweeds wat ingpunced | and eheebib .....:..-. | staéf of the building construction lier this year by Fisheries eee Editorials .......... vewees 4 branch of the department of ister H.J. Robichaud and Mi nes’ Summerside = ........:.... 3 ome “works. Construction witl se stat wal rt | cae eee? 8’ Oeere Cnerteticiowa dlettier of ‘s own plant will be operated the industrial [ply and sea water intake sye dissolution. Leaders On ‘Hustings . 3 TODAY Pearson — In Saskatoon and Ottawa. Diefenbaker' — In Ottawa and Brockville, Ont. Douglas—In Winnipeg and Vancouver. ‘Thompson—Ih Stony Plain and Wetaskiwin, Alta. Cacuette — In Lotbiniere, and roof will be of factory-fin- ‘structure will have a brick dado ‘up to the window silt line. Smaller structures will con |tain a weigh scale, chlorine sup- “— project also includes apparnt reference to attacks) He ‘said ‘he hopes ‘he will ave | ¥ Laughlin was ‘assassinated in October 1991, near the Boston waterfront. oP > Wednesday's shooting was the New Democratic Party lead- ex T.C. Douglas celebrated his i. eam ti gpl -@lst birthdoy Wednesday if {Pe candidate Ottawa Marks + Centu | Capital a (CP)—The nage sos of marked a ‘auiat 4 as and Mr. Johnson's letter must t ce made public 1% (Mr. Pear- | : that letter,” | : leader de- to . produce Conservative Mr. Diefenbaker said no | glossing over could hide that | . Hellyer apparenttly is not | attowed look at correspond: | dence affecting his department. The affair represented ‘‘bum- bling ineptitude.” The Liberals had substituted propaganda for action and sub- = Qpj. Vernon J... Perkins of son! the F ABOARD MISSING PLANE WEATHER Sunny, winds becoming southwesterly ‘ 20. Low-high 40 and 65. Friday: over- east. rain in afternoon. Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS 20 PAGES™ Oo _ O 0 : Q. O = | Independence _ Seen Next sponse to this appeal I now make to you at this lith hour. desia’s cabinet has sent an ul-| ‘Therefore at this grave hour timatum to Britain to grant the |1 repeat to you .. . that the white-ruled central “African col- | statesmanlike thing for you to ony immediate freedom or face |do is to grant us our independ- a unilateral declaration of inde- ence and to put us on trust to pendence. observe and to abide by the A letter containing the ulti | principles of the 1961 constitu- matum was sent to London after | tion.” being agreed to at a three-hour | SEEK ASSURANCE cabinet meeting. : Speaking in London Tuesday Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian British C Smith and his 11 cabinet col- | night, leagues also made their crucial |Secretary Art hur Bottomley and long-awaited ‘‘decision in | Said that’ before independence principle” on whether to declare | Could be granted there must be independence by themselves if | some improvement on~ the sif Britain refused. governing colony's 1961 consti- The decision will not be an- | Sestost in th direction of Negre nounced until Britain replies to |@dvancement. Wednesday's so - called last- By ADAM KELLETT-LONG SALISBURY (Reuters) —Rho on a flight from. Vientiane to Hanoi in Viet Nam. Both are with the Canadian truce team in Viet Nam. Plane vanished . (CP Wirephote from nce) N ee ae | Regina’ (left) and Sgt. James Sylvester Byrne, 36, of Ayl- r, Ont., two. of the Hees Seen oe ce Next Leader — eee (CP)—Fred Stin- .who once broke with Pro igrensive Conservative Leader John .Diefenbaker, says George Hees willbe the- next national support | him,” York Centre Conservative can didate told Armour Heights Ro- | tary Club Tuesday. Mr. cea “Bir * Sinden A teenage resident of Cape! were two wt the Conservatives | | Breton was killed about 6:20 a who broke with Mr. Diefenbaker | night when a farm tractor rolled | in 1963 but now have returned | over on him a short distance out- | to the party fold. Mr. Hees is | side Kinkora. in Northumber-: | land riding: Cape Breton Teenager = Killed Near: Kinkora Police identified the victim | | as John MacDonald, 15, of Point | subsequently lost control of the ———~"| Morien. They had withheld his |Vehicle but was. able te jump Ba" = NS, Man Guilty Of Murder declaration. Wednesday’s Letter — from, Smith to British Prime Minister Wilson—stated: “We have made our decision on what our next step should be. Its implementation and the con- sequences which flow from 1 BRIDGEWATER, NS. (CP). SASKATOON (CP) — Student |James F. Fieming was fat demonstrators blocked passage Wednesday of of Prime Minister Pearson's car | murder in the deaths of his wite for a few minutes Wednesday as and two children. now depend entirely on your re i by another worker from | hanherst RR2, NS, The tractor Demonstrators was towing a load of potatoes. | A member of: the Charlotte-| Block Pearson town .detachment of the RCMP | reported that the tractor collid- ed with a cow and the driver mame for a time until hie next clear before it rolled into a ditch,| jt: jeft the Saskatoon airport. Fleming, 22-year-old former ‘of win- was located. oe ath. The. students. said they were \€inance company mae rae _ He was. working’ on. the fate. eo coroner| neotesting the federal govern-hager, will be at. A>’ a 4 County, af au-| ment’s nuclear and Viet Namja.m. ADT today. of Linus Mulligan in the Kin- will be perf this) iolicies. The tery 2 bora area and was sitting on ri There ; ge no in- all-mate returned | the tractor fender which was j Twenty - five University of |the guilty verdict after deliber- — re-enactment of a hie. | Saskatchewan students lined up|ating for one hour and 4 min 5 single file outside the OP ae ee oe toric. ceremony. - The turnout was small, prob- | ably asa result of last: inate | make | 8rrangements, but i ee a warm sun, Sir J A. Macdonald and Sir Seaport Etienne Cartier crossed the new | eae d- r bridge to city | a carriage pulled by two The span between Ottawa, and | Hull, , Was named after the following autopsy here “ieee t= Ga. dob Wein ty bale te - Col. John By, Tuesday night of splayed by “actor John Fish, couple resulted tite oe turned up. Ottawa was known as | fired from a 12-guage - | Bytown for more than 25 years) giotoun in the hands of a third as tribute to the British Army uaa whe Welt the ii-mile(2 oe eS eee Rideau Canal system from the| The bodies of John Felsing, Ottawa to the St. Laawrence | 4, ail his wife Isabella, 51, Ze | were found by taxi driver James Actors Robert Christie, as) , Robichaud of Geary at 10:30 Macdonald, and Jean Cavail, as| p.m. Tuesday on a lonely, sel- Cartier, had their roles down | dom-used road on the Oroniocto after more than a year in| Flats, 11. miles southwest of . They have been tour- | here. Westin a centennial | 3 a cee a on Confedera- | an ae Corcant Nor , a to Canadian cen- Noaeial celebrations in 1967. |empanelled a jury | which view. ednesday’s bright ceremony | —with: bands, invocations, gifts, X= will be hetd later. good cheer and the usual, A black Labrador retriever blooper—was mostly arranged the couple had been walking by the Centennial Commission, | stood guard and growled before me S90 aR Sep ga ord. oat Be vd which learned of the anniver- police removed the bodies and ‘Sary only a‘ few days ago. ‘turned. the dog over to the - DOUGLAS CELEBRATES BI BIRTHDAY Moncton by blowing owt a secretary to Henry Harm, re-’ candle on a birthday cake. He gional director of the Canad- | presented with the cake ian Labor Congress. — ! Boudreau, (CP Wirephete) | was ty Mrs. Beatrice wh Death Of Couple # Laid To Hunter \ed the bodies and the scene. An | ing. A Saskatoon poticema back -a-few~ of the—stu- dents. The line finally gave way | were found by firemen in the and the prime minister's car couple's smoke-filled home at proceeded. It was part of a} nearby Hebbvitie. cavalcade that carried the Lib'|~ Fifty-nine witnesses testified _ | eral rei party to a Sask-|during the trial wich lasted hotel. leight days. = Cuban Exodus E2\Seen As Mystery By LEWIS GULICK ers without Castro's consent. WASHINGTON (AP) — Cuba The United States is making a sem a second note to the United ' private inquiry to the Castre States Wednesday amid mys-| government as to whether this tery here over Cuban Premier |was the case. iFidel Castro’s real intent on, Another question . unanswered letting refugees leave his coun-| so far. Why did the arrival of try. \refugees fleeing Cuba in smail parked a half. One puzzle for Washington | |boats suddenly stop Wednesday? sideroad death gegotiators is the release by |More than 600 refugees had janti - Castro exiles in Miami | Shown up in small craft in the who had been Tuesday of the contents of the |Florida waters since Castro let in the purchasing |first, hitherto - secret Oct. 12 down escape barriers Oct. 10. the provincial public |note from Havana on arranging In Havana, a foreign ministry , is survived |for a mass refugee exoilus. official denied that the Cuban sister, Miss Edna Felsing| Some U.S. sources figured government had. cut off refugee Falls, and a half- ‘the Cuban premier deliberately departures. . Thomas Lees of leaked the note this way in a ‘‘It is possible that boats wish move to score propaganda jing to leave have been delayed points and foul up arrange-|by weather, but there has been ments being worked out in the {mo cut off,” he said. privacy of diplomatic channels. |- Others speculated that -the document was slipped to report- | CAPT AIN PERISHES g yeni hs 2g 2» R » a i ; dl His wife, a daughter of the late Prof. and. Mrs. W.T. Smith Processor Says Crops Reduced The last of a series of meet ings called *+ the Federation of growers the problems ari-ivg |from drought conditions this year was held at Birch Court last night. George Wright, representative | of the P.E.1. Frosted Foods Ltd, 2 Survive 22 Hours After Boat Rammed <2: SHELLBURNE, N.S. +CP)— pital. the survivors told of fish- Frosted. Foods are reduced in Two fishermen who survived 2! ing Monday night about 35 miles |}comparison to previous years. _ clinging to the wreckage | southeast of here in clear, mild| Due to lateness of the growing of their boat in the cold Atlan- | weather with a calm sea. \season it is possible that a con- fic after it was rammed by an| About 5 a.m. Tuesday, after |siderable amount of broccoli, unknown freighter, remained in | setting trawls, they were in the cauliflower and brussel sprouts fair condition _Wednesday- vessel's forecastle.Suddenly a vd be lost eo frost ae ship, described by the men as tions occur in immediate owen fend aier womsees “a steamer,’ rainmed fhe ture, said Smith MacFarlane, by loss of blood, slip away be- Maureen Rose amidships. ‘chairman of the frosted foods neath the waves. “After ramming us the ship | committee. Head. te Al cnt & ot picked us up in its searchlight; A committee for Queens Coun- mon Smutn, 2, % |but kept on going,” one of the |ty was appointed to meet with Baccaro, NS., captain of the on said \representatives from Prince and 42foot longliner Maureen Rose. var e ; ; , They said they screamed Kings counties Monday evening His brother, Cleverley, 23, and and hollered’ for help several to decide what steps should be erew member Harold Coffin, 28, times. Other vessels came taken with respect to poor crops were under heavy sedation im | within their view. but they this year. hospital suffering extreme couldn't attract attention. Following are names of those shock, exposure, cuts and During that_time he youthful appointed to represent Queens bruises. They were. rescued skipper slipped away. The skip- County: Wiliam Nunn, Oyster Wednesday morning by Captain | per was unmarried. Bed Bridge: Stanley Nicholson, Harley Dedrick in the boat The Maureen Rose was owned Mt. ~ Buchan: Cornelius Maas, Sheila and Kathy. \by Cape Ann Seafoods Lad. of .Vernon. and Comeliug Atem, Before NS. ' | Brookftetd ing taken to hos- Port La Tour, Agriculture to discuss with _—