SA y ie Vor rio. vs if It’s Good For The Island The Guardi hind his back after capture an Is For It operation near Chu Lai, South > a5 5 ty woe “=| Guardian . vers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS WEATHER Cloudy, snowflurries; winds westerly 30, gusts 50, northwest 20 by afternoon. Lew- high 32 and 35. Saturday cloudy, milder. 16 PAGES (AP ‘“Wirephoto) NEVER FELT BETTER ~4and, it depicts a girl looking | | pastel. Titled To Prince Edward Is- M ontreal Plans through binoculars, - apparently from the deck of a Northumber- - |land Strait ferryboat. The acry- e : 9 lic polymer emulsion gives it a : - |Yealism similar to a glossy-fin- oints Proud Finger 2s ; . ; |’ Should a buyer be interested - | at the $6,000 price, he will have to contribute an additional 10 ‘per cent as commission to the fair. : At New Auto ~ A RB EDGR AEE ALLEL ee OL AGES. sed , By STEWART MacLEOD LONDON Ont. Minister Pearson carried his election campaign back into prosperous southwestern Ontario y pointing a proud fin- ger at the auto agreement and taking. a strong swipe at the campaigning tactics by Con- servative Leader Diefenbaker. The Canada - United States Mito Agreement was one of “‘the | biggest things we've done,” he said at a Chatham reception, and he assured his audience of ‘more benefits from the pact. In an_ obvious reference to Mr. Diefenbaker, Mr. Pearson said he was ‘‘sneered at ty per- haps the most accomplished »sneerer in Canadian history." 'And he said _New Democratic leader T. C. Douglag ‘“‘jeered” at the agreement. _ Z agreement, months, has resulted in an 18- Agreemen emmamig ose ee |per-cent ifcrease in Canadian (CP)—Prime |some 250 that they could expect ‘auto production, 20,000. new jobs }and expansion or announced ex- |pansions. by 170. companies —in jthe automotive field. An auto firm was spending $128,000,000 }im new facilities. | After Wednesday's flat - out schedule, the Prime Minister ‘had a somewhat easier day Thursday... Flying -te—London The prime minister said the from' Toronto in the morning, he; OAK ISLAND N:S. in only eight drove to Chatham for the noon | Digging operations on this small : (Continued on page 3, col. 4) DeGaulle’s New Term Bid Has Element Of Surprise By PETER BUCKLEY PARIS (CP) — President de Gaulle declared himself a can- didate Thursday night for the “historic” presidential election of Dec. 5, seeking a further jin which the 74-year-old general seven-year mandate te shape France’s destiny. The long-awaited announce- ment was made in a nine-min- ute television and radio address Shorthorn Breeders lop Island By NETL MATHESON HALIFAX — Prince Edward_ts- land’s dual purpose + Shorthorn breeders topped all other winners from Prince Edward Island at the Affantic Winter Fair. Among them. Sterling Wood and. Son, Robert; Keith Barrett, Dan Jewell and Waldron MacPhee, | took just under $2,400 out’ of “¢y pele ring on show day. Woods took $710 in prize $650, The money, Mr. Barrett won jappealed in nakedly partisan |fashion for. the majority he is | considered almost certain to get. Recalling that he headed the the liberation and that he was recalled to power in 1958 at the first post-war government after the liberation and that he was recalled to power in 1958 at the time of the Algerian crisis, he Gaulle told the millions of French ‘viewers and _ listeners that he felt it was his duty to be ready to continue the. job. He left the voters in little | doubt of what he thought the re- sult would be if he were turned Winners were, Details ‘had slipped his memory but he thinks perhaps! somewhere between $500 and | $400. Compare that with | what) he could have taken home under | the Hays formula and the — cop.,| trast is evident. Talking of top winnings at tHe | old Maritime Winter Fajr} though, reminds me that Geor a Callbeck of Summerside. was ‘the top money winner there for sev-) the ‘MacPhee herd $550 and R. eral years. I can’t recall the ae- | Jé@weil slightly less than $500 The Wood herd took consider- ably more than $2,000 this year at four Maritime fairs. They won approximately $635 in Char- lottetown, $500 in Truro at the, Nova Scotia provincial show, and, just about all of top prizes at Pictou and I'm not sure of the total winnings there For readers who are interested in detailed purses offered for cattle, first place brings $190 even, second place $90, third pos- ition is worth $75: there is $60 for fourth, $50 for fifth, $40 for sixth, $35 for seventh, $30 for cignth $25 for ninth and $20 for the tenth vlacine WINNERS OTHER YEARS 1 talked at rinkside this week with Guy Rodd, Brackley whose 17 first places is the most sen- sational group of. top prices I can remember at the old Mar-) itime Winter Fair at Amherst. That's when his Brackley Guern- ‘sey herd were among the top in the Maritimes—-certainly. they. were tops that year in the Mar-! itime show ring field. Prizes were low back in those days, so 1 asked Guy if he could! t tails but the figure $940, or! something close to that, sticks in| my memory as the amout Mr. | Callback won one year. I talked with Mr. Callbeck in Summerside the week before came over here, but we were concentrating on old fox stories that day, and I forgot to ask him for detailed winnings in these years. George did tell me, though, that he won so much several years that the fair committee | stopped giving out his total win- nings. The Summerside man ‘Continued on page 5, col. 5) INSIDE TODAY Classified .......+.. 4, 15 WS ikea se Bates 65 15 Deaths Veseeee Seveesesy 3 Gommles \ivve® ocviesuecces 13 OE Fs sues os ans 10, 11 Finance, markets ...... 12 We’ 6 isscsiciinercees ena Eéditerials . 2.1 .....-..-4 Summerside veestvece Kings, Queens, City .... 5 Prince County ee out. France would be left in the | hands of political parties which | |recall what his money winnings had brought her near to ruin in the past. and her social, diplo- | matic, political and: material progress could be expected to| end. } g While de Gaulle’s decision had | heen widely anticipated, his vio- | lent condemnation of the opposi- tio and his all-out bid for per- sonal support came as a sur- | prise from’ a man so conscious | ofthe dignity of office. PLEASE SUPPORTERS But it was bound to please his supporters. De Gaulle came across strong, clear-eyed and. determined. His main Opposition, after I\ months of hesitation ad false starts, has been campaigning strongly in the hope of revers- ing public opinion polls which give de Gaulle a formidable lead. It.will be the first time the president of France has. been elected by universal suffrace. If one candidate doesn't get an ab- solute majofity of the more | than 20,000,000 votes expected to jbe cast, the two leading candi- dates face off in a second ballot two weeks later. The principal opponents for de Gaulle will be Francois Mit- terand, candidate of the com- bined Socialist and Communist forces in France, Centre-Party representative Jean Lecanuet, and extreme right-winger Jean- _,Louis Tixier ~Vignaneour. The \final list of candidates will not be known, however, until nom- inations close in another two weeks. . ” Forty-three © works were jse- | tected for hanging out of 185 en- i : | tries. Ruth Wainwright of Halifax + Police Turnout MONTREAL (CP) — Every |available Montreal policeman will be on duty for the federal election. Monday although the \eity department says it expects \little trouble. | “We have arranged a system which will le full police pro- tection to~ re peaceful and |legal voting without creating too ‘much of an overtime pay prob- lem,” Assistant Director Walter ‘Boyle said Thursday. | took first prize for abstract oil Di gging Reported Underway -At Oak Island’s Money Pit (CP) iis |Nova Scotia island have uncov- ered the second: of - two . under- ground water tunnels that have flooded a ‘‘money pit’’ where Robert Dunfield a Los Angeles petroleum geologist hopes to find a multi-million-dollar’ for- tune in buried pirate treasure. for .more than 170 years’) said jan elated Dunfield. ‘Now that |we've found both nothing should |stop us from finding what was |buried here more than 200 years ago.” located on the south side of the island about 50 feet below sea level, was uncovered Wednesday |by a 70-ton bucket-carrying, dig- ging crane. The first, on the east side of the island, was located in he 1860s by the Oak Island Association. : More than 10 times in the last “These two tunnels have foil-- ed treasure hunting operations | The second flooding tunnel, | 150 years, treasure seekers had Mr. MacNaught was unavyail- able for comment, but his ex- ecutive assistant, James Mac- , i : rota Iness, said “no special invita- jin a private nursing home here tions” had been issued. Bayfield is about three. miles | northwest of Cape Tormertine. | Parliament Awaiting... Emeroencyv | - By LOUIS NEVIN LONDON (AP)—The British |cabinet met Thursday on the | Rhodesian crisis and the govern- |ment prolonged the present Par- \liament for two days to face ‘any possible weekend emer- | geney over_the issue. H could not be learned i | } | NEWSMAN DIES Harold G. Long, 77, pioneer Lethbridge newspaper man, died in Lethbridge Thursday | after a heart attack. He join- ed the Lethbridge Herald in 1911 as a reporter and at his death was chairman of the newspaper's board of direc- tors. Is Base For Viet Cong US. Ambush Sprung -OnNorth Vietnamese From AP-Reuters SAIGON \day dropped three bombs short (CP)—United States of an enemy target and killed ‘a South Korean soldier and wounded three others American military sources said the accident—latest in a séries of mishaps involving al- i\lied firepower—was blamed on |a faulty bomb rack in the B-52. The accident took place 275 _cavalrymen’s ambush of a col- jumn of North Vietnamese regu- | lars added fresh material Thurs- | }day to Saigon's old charge that | Beutralist Cambodia is a haven for Communist fighters. | The ambush was laid Wednes- |day night on the final three-mile | stretch of a jungle trail running | miles northeast of Saigon near . |from South Viet Nam’s Central Qui Nhon. | Highlands into Cambodia. | Military sources disclosed American participants said | Wednesday that gun fire that their Claymore mines, grenades killed six American paratroops and automatic rifles killed at | and wounded three others last \M. A. MacPherson! VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 259 Anthorted sp Seosed Case Ma. east Oiticg Deparment, =§=CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5) 1965, Ca Starti | auseway Starting Plans” M d By Politi | Gulf | BAYFIELD, N.B. (CP)—| Conservative Premier Walter | sentative of the P.E.I. govern- | Work on the first highway link Shaw of Prince Edward Island | ment had been asked to attend, | between New Brunswick and (said Thursday he had not been! and this was ‘‘one of the most | A Prince Edward Island was invited to attend ceremonies | extraordinary pieces of imperti- | A? ‘}seheduled to start near, here jhere marking the start of work nence’’ he, had ever heard of. today. But preparations for the jon a New Brunswick approach! Mr. Shaw said it was unusual | event were marred by a dis- ito the causeway. ‘that a ceremony for a project tinct gulf at the political level.! As far as he knew, no repre- of such importance to Prince " ~— | Edward Island would be held in i | New Brunswick and that nobody a a was invited ‘‘aside from a, few. political friends.” p ' Theme Paintin New Brunswick Works Min- |ister Andre Richard said Thurs- ebests day he would represent Liberal ; . |Premier Louis J. Robichaud at . s s the ceremony at ‘Cape Jour- , main, in which Federal Mines Minister. MacNaught will oper- | ate a bulldozer to turn over the | | first ground for the approach. HALIFAX (CP) — A_ $6,000, paintings with her Assissi. How- . ry painting by Alex Colville of ard Shankle of Italy Gross, NA ae Rin ston eld he pre- SS Sackville) N.B., has created con- | was first in the watercolor class. | sthed aay other: awitelions | re ee siderable interest at the Atlantic; Other winners were: Seat come: from _ Mr. Mac: | a a ae Se a . Winter Fair fine arts exhibition.| Michael Raw. of Halifax, best Naught, as the ceremony in- | Se aetna “a PN eh NETS 5 SEB Mr. Colville entered an eye- | drawing, Peggy's Cove: Gay | volved the federal level. stopping painting in acrylic | Lloyd of Fairview, N‘S., aoa oF the contract for the VIET CONG SUSPECT TIED polymer, a synthetic emulsion, | graphic, Solitude, ‘St. Albans; /¢.¢ phase of work. on the ue * | im this year's show and took first Ronald L. Goodwin of Canning, |. ceway - bridge - tunnel proj- U.S. Marine ties hands and on Iarge search and destroy Viet Nam, by Marines Thurs.” |Prize in the class for media |N-S., best realistic oil painting, act was announced in Ottawa feet of Viet Cong suspect be- ; day. jother than oi], watercolor or | Mountain River. | Tuesday. ; ‘Is Il In Regina REGINA {CP)—M. A. Mae- Pherson 74-year-old Regina law- er was “resting comfortably” least 20 of the North Vietnamese week came from a South Korean as they hiked, laughing and tak- | battery. ing in the moonlight, toward the frontier. | The trap was sprung by Bravo company of the Ist Squadron, | 9th U.S. Cavalrv¥—a regiment of | the airborne Ist Cavalry divi- | |sion--about 200 miles north of | Saigon. |June Allyson announced Thurs- ° The surviors fled without fir- ing a shot, but regrouped and later staged four counter - at- jtacks. These the company beat |off with the help of airlifted re- |inforcements and the rocket-fire |@f armed helicopters) A U.S. | spokesman said American losses were light. One U.S. helicopter |was shot down. Over-all casual- \rates.. expert who twice con- -|suffered a stroke Oct. ; : ties among the North Vietnam- 1 @ family spokesman said Thurs: | ose wend undetermised: oi a freight | South Vietnamese authorities Mr. MacPherson |Communists were using Cambo- dia for staging, supply and rest % but centres. Prince Norodom Siha- |nouk, the Cambodian chief of | state, has vehemently denied it, tested the national Progressive Conservative party leadership has shown some improvement | repeatedly have declared the | June Allyson Plans To Wed HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Actress |day that she will wed Chicago theatre executive Dirk Sum- ;Mers, |. Miss Allyson widow of the Hate Dick Powell ,recently re iceived her final divorce derre¢ ifrom Glenn Maxwell, who once jwas Powell’s barber. | She said she and Summers jplan to be married during the iChristmas holidays, probably in |Chicago, and will honeymoon in the Greek islands. Threat Made . weak" the spokesman said. mand KILL SOLDIER a listens to the radio but is quite’ A U.S. B-57 bomber.-si ‘ing South Korean troops Thurs- Douglas Rejects Watch By RCMP dug toa depth of deeper than Whether Prime Minister Wilson’ TORONTO (CP)—The RCMP Mr. Douglas said he does not had received a reply from Salis-' plans to provide protection for know whether the RCMP or the | bury to his proposal that all the|ay federal party leaders until federal government initiated the 150 feet in the money pit only to have sea water fill their excava- tions. In, locating the second un- derground tunnel, Dunfield. has ended a search that has cost se- veral- groups over the years more than $1,500,000. The digging crane was taken to the “‘money pit’’ Thursday af- dent there would be no more flooding from the two tunnels. In the evening the crane had dug to \a depth of 22 feet in the money pit, tearing up wooden cribbing left by hundreds of treasure- | Seekers in: the past. “The operation is going well |now,”’ said Dunfield, who first {became interested in the legen- jdary treasure of Oak Island as a schoolboy. ‘‘The hole at the jmain pit measures about 30 feet jin diameter. We're confident |that, unless something unexpect- fed happens, we'll find whatever |has been hidden here.” ‘Rhodesian people be polled to find out if they want independ- ence on the basis of the existing | constitution. | ; Prime Minister Ian Smith of|that his office ‘in Burnaby-Co- |S0n’s |the Nov. 8 election is over, |NDP Leader T. C. Douglas said | Thursday. He told a press conference protection idea. SWARMED HOTEL Police swarmed to Mr. Pear- hotel in Peterborough ‘Rhodesia says the people do. |quitlam telephoned him about |Wednesday when someone tele- The constitution, however, se-|the RCMP's plans and said he /Phoned the private line of a ra- the almost There are 225,000 whites. nesday his government would not be bound by the results of | a poll on such a basis. | Wilson's. reservation appar- | jently caused the Rhodesian gov- | ter Dunfield said he was confi- Verely restricts the suffrage of will tell the RCMP he does not 4,000,000 Negroes. 'qwant protection. dio. and television station with the threat on his life. | An aide to Mr. Douglas said he prime minister was not Wilson told Parliament Wed- |the protection was decided on told about the telephone call. ibecause of the anonymous tele- phone call Wednesday to a ra- dio station that an attempt on Prime Minister Pearson's would be made when he was ernment to take another look at [eaving a hotel in Peterborough z Ont. the proposal. | in Salisbury, the Rhodesian capital, Smith was non-commit- tal as he left a caucus of his} ruling Rhodesian Front party. A- government source said no! statement could be expect from Smith now. { ~--- PRINCESS. MARGARET, ‘vi- siting the United States for the hiret time, inspects mo- del of new BOAC termizal which will be built at Ken nedy airpott. Explaining fca- tures of the terminal to ‘he Princess and her husband, Lord Snowdon, center, is Fd mund Ward right, the arcli- E TREE em ‘tect. The couple stopped brief- ly at New York en route to California on start of US. tour. (AP Wisephote) |thoughtfulness \I'm in any danger." Mr. Douglas said the RCMP was planning to provide a plain- clothesman for him when he teaches Vancouver Friday. “T am going to ask the RCMP to withdraw’ Mr. Douglas said. He said he appreciates the of whoever was responsible, but ‘I don’t think Princess Margaret Gets In Montreal Tuesday police \found a home-made fire-bomb in the hall where Mr. Pearson had just finished speaking. | Canadian political leaders us- ually travel: without security of- lficers, although the RCMP jsometimes sends a plainclothe man with a prime minister whe he is travelling abroad. After the assassination of President Kennedy a_ plain- iclothesmag was with Mr. Pear- son for several weeks before he asked that the protection be ,withdrawn. ipport- Diefenbaker EDMONTON (‘CP)—An- anon- ymous telephone caller to city police Thursday said Conserva- |tive Leader Diefenbaker would ibe “knocked off’ during a visit ito. Edmonton Thursday night. | City police said extra med jand RCMP officers would min- gle with the crowd at the North- ern Alberta Jubilee auditorium | where Mr. Diefenbaker is sched- iuled. to make a campaign | speech. | A_ similar assassination threat |agaist Prime Minister Pearson was telephoned to a Peterhbor- | ough, Ont., television — station | Wednesday. A home-made fire-bomb was discovered in a Montreal audi- torium where Mr. Pearson ,spoke Tuesday night. Leaders On ustings By THE CANADIAN PRESS FRIDAY Pearson—-In Kitchener, ilton and Toronto. Diefenbaker — In Edmonton, Vancouver and Regina Douglas—In Vancouver. Thompson—In- Vancouver and Calgary. Caouette—In Quebec City. Ham Welcome To California “By DORIS KLEIN SAN FRANCISCO, (AP) Princess Margaret heads for the once wild west and awaiting her are the glittering Golden Gate, the glamour of Hollywood and a western-style barbecue. Accompanied by her husband, the Earl! of Snowdor, and >~ en- tourage which includes two foot- men, a lady-in-waiting, the roval hairdresser and a squad of se- curity men. the princess was scheduled to arrive at San Fran- cisco International Airport at 9:05 p.m. EST Thursday. The airport was enclosed in a peasoup fog and was closed for seven hours early Thursday. But it cleared long before the royal couple's arrival time. On her first trip to:the United States, 35 - year - old Princess Margaret will begin breaking old habits in the new world as soon as she arrives. She'll have a préss_ confer- ence—something royalty never does in Britain. But it will be more the style of Gen. Charles de Gaulle than of President Johnson. “The royal family do not an- swer questions from the press,” says a British official. ‘‘They only make statements. And { when they're finished, so are the newsmen.” j So eager are Ameéricans to meet the princess that $100 tick- Stop Is Made At New York NEW ORK (‘AP)—Princess Margaret, accompanied by her husband Lord Snowdon, arrived at Kennedy Airport at 1:32 p.m. EST Thursday on her first visit to the United States. The princess, younger of Queen Elizabeth, three-week visit The couple was greeted by several members of the British diplomatc corps, headed by Sir Patrick Dean, British ambas- sador to the United States. The weather was sunny | and mild. Fifty stands of red and white roses tied with blue rib- bons decorated the reception area, i i Police arrangements were de- scribed as normal despite an anonymous bomb threat at Lon- don Airport which delayed the princess’ departure- i Sister began a ets for the world adoption inter. national fund charity ball she'll attend in Los Angelés are being scalped at $1,000 apiece. One of her first hosts, San Francisco patron of the arts Whitney Warren. has never met the Snowdons On Saturday, after touring the Univer ity of California’s campus at nearby Berkeley; the Snowdons will flv to the pie- turesque Monterey Peninsula south of San Francisco for a wild boar barbecue luncheon They'll be guests of Stuvve sant Fish, ba helor grandson of Mrs Stuyvesant. Fish, leader of Newport society in the old lays of the 400 f In the evening, the visitors fly back to San Francisco for another small dinner party given by Charles de Young ,Eheriot, -publisher of the San Francisco Chronicle The Snowdons fly to Los An- geles Sunday for a look at | Hollywood. They'll visit a studio to watch how~movies are made and. at private parties, hobnob with such hollywood stars as Bob Hope. Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, Rock Hudses ‘and Frank Sinatra, To Knock Of ne sare nN a A rt ae me