Ib. I's Good For The Island The Guardi VOL. LXXIX NO. 256: an Is For It” oo - IN SCOTCH SHORTHORNS, AN Island Cattlemen's yno - ~ 08 ouayay em Wiltys~ 2vnae Strong At Halifax Yesterday __ By NEIL MATHESON ‘AX — Prince Edward island cattlemen made wet ee: showings in Scotch Shorthorns oon seers enee te Ae tic Winter Fair Tuesday. STDDser REET se Morel $ By NEAL A MATHESON HALIFAX The Hereford —tteer-owned- Farms, Brigden, Ont., won ‘the _ championship "last night at Atlantic. Winter Fair; The Teen a pound. ~ ie Kelly, ond ° reserve gra’ mp- porate 4 $s.) for the afiimal at $6 per pou was IGA Stores, Halifax. . Fulton Sanderson and Sons, York—Point—-had_the' third place steer, another Hereford, and re- ceived $4,083. The price paid = ‘Sobey Stores was $4.05 teer announced Average price for the 26 steers pound. -g the other Island man in_ the Water Pollutions Convicions with cents fast year grand championship with his Herefords were up ad match. sp George Phelan’s Shorthorn een bull, Renivan Bon- highlights aoe or the dav? oichinr ma it was the grand chanipienship of. the female Scotch Shorthorns by Gerald Dollar and Son, Win- sloe. Mr. Phelan is from Mardi. JUDGE: PLEASED ' ‘ The Phelan bull is big and | the kind of bull we're Elliott, wy Ontario. had him i “Coven Prinze: Edward ‘Island’ Like The Dew” _ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1966. Prime. ew Martin Tuesday.” He informed Mr. Diefenbaker in_the-Commona_that the gov- ernment also is considering “other. devices” as an expres- sion of sympathy for the loss of life in‘ the on mining com- aay: By DAVE BAZAY MONTREAL (CP) ee H. Bharpe, assistant- general“ man- ager of the Ontario Water Re- _. sources. Commission, said Tues- day it's easier to catch pollut- ers than it is to convict them in Be he pollution He snaetied at the pollu’ ; Canadian wrinisters 4 ares to deal with wa- “by industry. Ip tesponse to a question. on - whether enforcement “Our problem in enforcement deals with the law rather than the technical side. Technically, it’s easy to pick out polluters. We find that when we get into court this is the greatest way to spin our*wheels.” ~ He said pollution laws, én- forced: under the Ontario Water Resources. Commission Act, makes conviction extraordinarily mes It and time - consuming. a as ticketing polluters just might be an easier way as police deal with traffic of- of Hu- Hon awe tr ee ~ jem, he gaid. g Radiouctiv fenders. ; “He “cited ore “® | though ‘mall cheese ey in rural Cloud Reported ‘Passing Over North America WASHINGTON AAP) — US, government weather scientists estimated Tuesday a high-flying radioactive cloud» from_China’s. latest nuclear blast already ifs passing over a wide area of North America. : for the U.S. public health serv- _ dee’. said. comparatively . tittle of the debris is expected to appear _§s-fallout in North Ameri¢a. and “they said .it should present no significant health hazard.. The leading edge of the 1,000- ‘Canadians Note No Increase OTTAWA (CP) — Canadian monitoring stations have not yet recorded. any increase in radia- tion as the me a a_ nuclear cloud. reported dri across North America. fo ‘ae the latest Chinese atomic explosion. Dr. 3. D. Abbatt, assistant chief of the federal radigtion protection division, said a care- |i ful watch is being kept but mile -+* wide cloud, swept from’ west to east at altitudes of -about 30,000 feet, is expected fo leave North America soon and head out over the Atlantic to- wards Europe. This was telated by Kenoeth diology branch of the U.S. com- merce department's environ- mental . services admin istration, response to a 4 porter’ 8 -questions.— increase in fallout’ has been ee ob | the, upper tros- phere (between 30,000 and 40,- 000 feet altitude) since China’s, blast .was touched. off Jast Thursday. Officials indicated that thelr Optimistic view about the lack Ontario where the commission found the factory to be pollut- ing a nearby stream with whey, a liquid leftover in cheese pro- “This “was a case where the a small factory, the only estab- ina rural area, and There was the whey in the ditch. court in proving - the drain in outlet outside the - building. We had to ae cabot Jegally a ale | He said the OWRC could take “all el people we have” and +avork -the* next = six.. months. untarigling legal kilets arising from pollution cases. And , it | borne wasn't @ question of lacking susie to Ty orders to clean up pollution. But there were 10 12 isolated, cases now before OWRC’s 4 pollution was obvious. Here was |. “we had great difficulty in| ment and destroying the coat onBins Meson to Omiarie and Heals | et dence of hoth business leaders: ictg- of “Cannda Ltd: ‘Tuesday tt Copal oat ott | Business, “operating ‘ Atlantic and Western provinces | Te. with any Smaller portion ° in the marketing of baby foods |0f the market. But: Toronto lawyer | hospitals Tuesday moves J because of high transportation, hind for its only eee. HH 3; Heinz-Co;-of- tween the two producers was -/mons~-investigating-“high~food- -|Connell-said- baby foods now A BRUSH. FIRE which ward ‘an caused the evacuation of 7 base on advertising and tion. costs, - It left a monopoly market be- promo- Canada Ltd. |— —which now has 80 per cent of the entire $27,000,000 baby food busipess in Canada. ae, after runing at losses fe while, ae Se ee aad slashed _in-the last-two years. The story of the battle be- played out before the joint com- mittee of the Senate and Com- and other consumer prices. Heinz vice-president John” A. represent. the biggest part of his company’s business. The long- time pickle manufacturer; who ‘made a household word of its-57 Lvarieties,.now produces 160 var- jeties_and_ sizes of infant and |. junior baby foods alone—and still makes pickles. Gerber vice - president ‘Carl Mentor inet. Cae the e _While the provin-_ cial eederoip of Premier Ro- barts ‘was open for discussion the national leadership was not. He said, however, that his committee's decision... could ; be WINNIPEG (CP): — . ‘Kenneth one ‘Tanging from -an_ air- jailbreak to stealing a fortune in gold, entering a guilty plea on all counts Tuesday and was sentenced to more than ‘14 years in. penitentiary, It could- have-been worse for the dapper and glib 34-year-old, already convicted ‘of bank ‘rob- bery, but County Judge Se ing. Keith allowed an ¢ term* for the gold the: concurrentiy with other a out earlier day of courtroom: appearances. The other six years and > ing months represents pired portion of a 12-year ‘Sar! holdup_sentence passed in. for which Leishman’ S parole ‘was revoked. He was sentenced to serve the time in nearby Stony Mountain INSIDE TODAY Dapper ‘Bank | Robber Given Leishman, faced with a-host of |-port- he might be, tfansferred’ nearby Hess Trv-+_ Lei i “| courthopse in downtown Winnl- Smith-said-his company has 3S bb cont, a coe aes 2 its. oP Mr. Connell said the $7 figure —— forest service crew —from—ad- jacent Riverside WEATHER Cloudy with a few showers; mild; winds soytherly 20. Low- 58 48 and 58. Thurs- aay, mild. — 5,500 Acres ‘Are Blackened. PACOIMA, Calif. (AP) — Seven to 12 juveniles were killed Tuesday while fighting a brush said Don Porter,.a U.S. forest service spokesman. -The—fire,—beginning in Syl- mar, was one of five that black- southern California. : Sheriff's . deputies ‘said the dead were believed to be young persons from nearby . work But a spokesman for County Fire Chief Keith Klinger said the dead were members of a stranded in the midst of burning brush, three 5 The victims pitals and threatening an army hospita’ hottest day of the year with 308° degrees recorded in downtows. Low-Anipsian, 25 miles soutent. The Setbek” tarvion the biggest fire had 1,800 acres in the ‘Mountains of Angeles Netioost Forest. —aaiiniasiaeibaibeindediaiaaemmimmem ante se pe EVACUATE PATIENTS Ambulaiices, buses, stations, wagons and trucks were used” to evacuate most of 600 patients View Hospital and 450 aa aoe — administration , patients and suffered scene from: smoke which invaded corridors: the edge of the grounds. The. soc aaa taken to other The smoke, in ina great pale ries te ‘however, ive firemen “hope that [fight besetting the wi shi eantis“lillins over the adjacent San Fernande. ao Fitemen and soldiess coed eeverdt Ues Pee os Nfid., $11,000: Sherwood, me $54.000. Ontarie — Waterloo, $40,000, $a Sma Sialisaiioats but there was-a re- later to a West Coast institu- tion. : MOVE WAS UNEXPECTED In a surprise move during his routine weekly. remand while awaiting-trial for his part in an armed, 10-man breakout from ry jail Sept. 1, ned trial by . and pleaded guilty. itagistrele Hareld. Gyles sexe escapade, during which Leish- man and three.-others stole an airplane from a private field at Steinbach, Man. He flew it to Gary, Ind., where two days of 1958, freedom: ended-in-surrender- be- fore a hail of police bullets. On a series of other charges connected with. the break—theft of -an—automobile. and_airplane,_| unlawful confinement of two hostages —.he drew concurrent two-year terms, Two additional years were added for his escape last Sun- day night from Vaughan Street detention home adjoining the Solicitor peg. Under supposedly tight se- curity in a former Death Row cell, he managed to dupe and overpower three guards. He/| surrendered peacefully to a. po- ova ig suburban West, Kil- donan 3% hours later. INVESTIGATES - - General Pes- West -—. Winnipeg, $308,600: oer Man., $33,237; Sheho $24,667; Jamesen, Sask., $20.70, -Whitewood, Sask., $15,- 333; Amrisk, Alta., $15,186; Daye aed. Alta., $17, 100. BOMBING LIGHT eet 59 missions Monday, about one third the usual number. For the third ‘straight day WTuesday, U.S. B-52 bombers from Guam pounded suspected i camps and staging areas generally | ulars _who—Ja =e ‘| were no an increased disintlination to stand and it anywhere, pre- ferring to old hit-and- run_tacties. = Elsewhere, action was + Seported..in_the. ground. war. in |* South Viet Nam. —_ aaa Saigon Celebrates fon i of North Vietnamese army reg unched five ag — units of the US. 4th tn , - | gles of South Viet Nam’s> tral highlands near the dian border. * ; US. Navy river patrol boaig te — in three- Monday night on ‘the My The | Saigon, the US. command re parted. A recess | Weather limited U.S. air | Aberde Cape Breton Coal Miners - Present Plea To Cabinet” ee — OTTAWA (CP)—The United Mine Workers union Tuesday carried its plea for stabilization of the Cape Breton coal industry to the federal cabinet. “Top officials of district 26, in a brief to four cabinet ministers, rejected. a federal inquiry rec- ommendation. to phase’ out the sninesin the Sydney, N.S. area. The union officjals. were part Montreal economist J. Ritchie Donald. “That's good,” Mr. Marsh * » The union brief called on/#