If It’s Good The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 202 For The Island ' parent onsgoe’ BIG FAIR OFFICIALLY OPENS Exhibition Is Described Farmers Show-Window The provincial exhibitién pro- vides a show-window in which the province's agricultural ‘in-' dustry may be portrayed, Hon. 1. W. Akerley, Nova Scotia's min- ister of agriculture and market- ing said last evening: Mr Akerley, who declared the show officially open at a cere. mony-at-the Charlottetown Driv- ing Park, said “‘today’s. ex- hibition should previde an op- portunity for farm people to show their urban neighbors What the -agricultural industry of any district, or any province, or any country, means to the over-all economy of the area." | TIME FOR CHANGE He reminded the large crowd | gathered at the Driving Park that such events used to be only | exhibitions and gathering places for farm people, but it was “time for the complexion of exhibitions to change." It was up to the agricultural, industry to ‘show the world just what an important industry in the over-all economy agriculture is to us The wining of prize money, important as that may be, is of secondary importance. The show, “Wtself, and all it represents and portends, is the most important consideration of all." Back Of Moon | Mountainous, Soviets Report MOSCOW ‘AP)—The new So- viet photos of the back of the moon show jt has’ fewer seas and is more mountainous than the visible lunar surface, a So- viet scientist reported Monday. The part the earth can't see has numerous chains of° minor craters extending for hundreds of kilometres. a feature not found on the side facing ‘the earth, wrote Dr. Yuri Lipsky of” the Shternberg Astronomical In- stitute in Moscow. Lipsky’s: article -wasdistf-~ bufed -by the official news agency Tass along with several of the moon photos. The pictures were taken in | 68 minutes July ® by the So- vit space probe Zond-3. The. probe passed the moon at a distance. narrowing from Mr. Akerley was introduced by Agriculture Minister A. B. Mac- Rae. Other speakers included Allison Profitt, president of the Exhibition Association and Act- ing-Premier M.A. Farmer and Mayor W. J. Cox, who extended greetings on. behalf of the pro- vince-and-city. A highlight of opening cere- : wows monies was the crowning of the, | 1965 Dairy Princesses. | Jean MacPhail of. Meadow. | | bank, this year’s senior prin- | cess, was crowned by the 1964 es, Elaine Bryenton of Brackley. Phyllis Jones — of) | Pownal, runner-up for the title, presented Miss MacPhail with a bouquet of roses. Art Gallery Here To Get Council Grant SASKATOON (CP)--Art gal- leries in Regina, Saskatocn, amilton. Saint John and Char- lotietown have been chosen this year to particspate in the Can- ada Council's special purchase awards. .program, the council announced Monday. Under the plan, the galleries are offered matching grants of $1,500 each and travel grants of $500 each for their directors to travel to other parts of Canada to purchase works by living Canadian artists.‘ Social Credit Leader Robert Thompson says Prime Minis- ter Pearson would be irres- ponsible if he called a general election on the present elec- toral boundaries. M?. Thomp- son says the government has _____11,000 __kilometres ‘7.208 “mile§) | no -need—to-eall-an-election-un- to less than 10.000 kilometres (6.213 miles). The pictures were transmit- til after next year's redistri- bution of ridings, since it had little difficulty getting legisla- i fed back to earth beginning. tion through the Commons July 29. as the prehe sped on during the last session. : . into an orbit around the sun. | i (CP Wi phgte)- eS sree rrgnmemeperree aes are eo sami ETT aan ibe epee ve eater as eg ietemue atte! hi Sa Thunderst ase] ATARI we ormsRum Tien Che a ST A C | Crowned junior princess by the |1964 holder of the honor, Irene |McKinley, was Wendy Wilson of | |Cornwall. Dianne Jones — of | |Pownal, runner-up,’ presented Miss Wilson with a bouquet * of roses. The brief ceremony, which was! dampened by a shower of rain, | was presided over by Lincoln| Dewar, secretary of the P.E.I. ¥ederation of Agriculture. In addition to the speakers, platform guests included Lieuten- ant-governor W. J. MacDonald, | Dr. H. H. Pierce, vice-president | of the exhibition association, | and Parker Jewell, secretary. | The band of the P.E.I. Regi- | ment was also on hand. ; | Following the official opening, | harness racing program began, featuring the $2,500 Invitational | \Pace sponsored by The Evening | Patriot. Airliner Into Lake CHICAGO (AP) — A Boeing- | | | 727 passenger airliner was re- | ported to have plunged into | Lake Michigan Monday night. | The control tower at O'Hare International Airport reported it lost radio contact with a United” Air Lines plane as it was ap- ‘proaching Chicago over Lake Michigan _on_a flight from New York. 4 | A United Air Lines spokesman | said the plane was believed to} be its Flight 7349 with 23 pas- sengers aboard. ~—Persons—along—a—25-mile—front from Chicago toe Lake Forest reported hearing a loud explo | ‘sion and seeing a_ brilliant) ‘orange flash over the lake. | These reports came about the! time that the U.S. Coast Guard trol tower at O'Hare that it Kad proaching plane. Full Control | convinlOs..andio..contact...with..the..ap-...Crownipg the 1965 dairy prin- (second from. left) last ye - CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, Curfew Cla ee . niet we "21s Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” AUGUST 17, 1965. k- Guardian ‘ "+ nor Gore SEV WEATHER Clearing early this afternoon: warm; winds light. Low-high 60 and 75, Wed- nesday: sunny and warm, EN CENTS 14 PAGES THAN mped Again On Los Angeles Area Happy smiles gleam despile a drizzle of rain which felt last evening during the crowning ceremony honoring .this year's cess, Elaine Bryenton. Wendy Wilson of Cornwall (left, seat- Dairymen’# As soci ation. ar’s junior princess. Dianne Jones Jean MacPhail of. Mea- cess, ‘DAIRY PRINCESS CROWNED AT EXHIBITION dowbank, is last year’s prin- (left), runner-up for junior, | ed) was later crowned junior The ceremony was held _dur- —*———_received.a.. the.-eon-..representatives of the _P.E.[__£C__ Was 0 er eee ony a meen aaNet lentes princess “by irene MERINIEY, Ing the” Sificial opening | Worst Over, ; Governor Says | By JAMES BACON and WALTER GRAY The answer was the same from 20 others interviewed, and the clusters of Negroes who LOE ANGELES (AP)—A eur- gathered around and listened. few was clamped Monday on Many of them were admitted the riot-wrecked Negro section rioters and looters. Mr. Hieks of southern Los Angeles for the wag the only one tr permit use third successive night. of his name. wee —— — GUARDS* TO REMAIN roung om me. - - The governor, who inter- ,has now ended,” Governor Fd- rupted.a Furepean vacation te mund G. Brown ordered the take personal command in Los ere see on a day-to- Angeles, said 15.090 national ag Toamwonlte the littered streets guardsmen will oe here ar: ie shed sharply’ dlae- “until Los Angeles is safe | greed with the governor's eval- again.” He said they will vig- ae orously track down “hit-run uation that ‘‘the worst is over.” , om Monday's daylight hours were boodiums and ——— . \terror-free, except for scattered activity continue even as e sniping, for the first time since |SPOkKe 0 newspaper men. 3 riots erupted six ‘days ago. But{ The rot toll rose to 5 ead fear remained. -and-812 injured. All but six- of Sale of concealable weapons the dead were Negroes The | jumped 250 per cent in Cali- others were five whites and. @ | fornia during the weekend. Most Japanese-American x of the 2,038 sold last weekend Prior to’ the outburst here, went to white residents of Los only 45 deaths relatingsto eivil ' Angeles. and neighboring rights activitieswere recorded Orange, Riverside and San Ber- 0 the United Slates since the ‘pardino counties. ) 1954 U.S. Supreme Court deci- | No official records are kept of sion banning racial desegrega- lrifle and shotgun sales. Some tion in schools 'stores sold out. Others removed Property damace will rum iguns from their shelves. inte the hundreds of miu'lions of | “Guerrilla fighting with gang- dollars + sters’-continues;’” the--governor—Arrests increased ta 2,995, told feporters, ‘‘but- the worst large]y for looting, or assault- ‘is over.” ,ing officers. \ Police and national guard Augmented courts began the officials agreed with Brown's massive task of arraigmng revaluation; : fthese-—arrested,—almost all gf them Negro. Rail was’ generally ¢ But a survey feam of Asso’ ciated Press reporters heard an entirely different view in the Negro community of Watts : where the violence: started last 4- Parker told reporters: Wednesday when a white pa- are now In what I hope we jtrolman tried to arrest a Negro M/sht call the recovery period. set at between $500 and $1,900, Even as sporadic sniper fire continued,. Police Chief Witham “We ve princess, presented Miss Wil- son witha bouquet of _roses. Proviticial Exhibition at the ‘Charlottetown Driving Park. | Pope’s. Health Reported Good VATICAN CITY ¢AP)=Pope pee eee Oe a oe Gandolfo summer residence in and.-no-longer-—overtired. Sources here said the country- | side air and easiér_ pace, plus an initial period of reduced .au- ———— \the..Albanhills .Was-teliably.-e-.-—-M- . ported Monday in fine health motorist. ee IVIOLENCE SPREAD. = “The riot is not over, it’s just The governor and the police }a quietness,”’ said Rev. FE. L. chief made their optimistic re- Hicks, a Baptist minister. marks less than 24 hours after ‘There will be rioting here un- racial vinlence Jeap-fregzed to til-policebrutality—stops."* t-(€ontinued-on-page-3-Col.—-§) sper f ! c Of Forest Fire Expected Today diences right after the Roman Catholic pontiff arrived July 18 at Castel Gandolfo—aceount for forid aritime Horse Fanciers Have Big Day” ‘comment ~ Across The the rested look he has had- in Spark HALIFAX (OP) — Thunder- was badly damaged when lightn- MILL VILLAGE, N.S. (CP)— 7 y ,REUTERS ‘and to “the myth of the Great : ots ri 7 teen! recent public. appearances. Ane r 3 in | Ghatatet? a storms rumbled across wide sec-| ing struck its chimney, but A Canso water bombes on loan The Italian weekly magazine. iE Accebe deeabae ee peo yes by Presi- tions -of- the -Maritimes- Monday night. The Fredericton area of no- one--was- injured. Three barns were burned ifrom Quebec was expected to put the finishing touches on a New Brunswick was shelled by , after being struck by lightning 2,500-acre forest fire near this big hailstones and a severe elec- and power failures were numer- south shore community struck’ nérthern ous ‘in Pictou and Cumberland ‘and bring it under control. trical storm Nowa Scotia. Counties. today. The amphibian did not reach ______ The weather _ office here said __ Radio station CKEC jn New__here— until—_late--Monda: -after- hailstones as big- as golf balls Glasgow was off the air for noon, delaying takeoff a Hali- — —A-wemarir received—minor in on Chile Declares Disaster fell in Fredericton early Mon- less than a minute as an emer- | fax day evening. juries when lightning struck a home in Frederictod blowing out a television set and light fixt- ures . : The storm lasted about 90 minutes in the Fredericton area, with heavy rain reported in the city ; \ house and three barns were struck by—hghtning -in-the-New-— Glasgow area—_of Nova Scottia. A house at Stellarton, N-S.. | gency Power supply was turned International Airport —be-. ‘cause of fog covering Medford The weather office said the disturbance, which , entered the Maritimes from Maine was ex- pected to cause showers and thundershowers in parts New Brunswick and Nova Scotia throughout the night. There was thunderstorm acti- vity—in-—_Prince-.Edward—tIsland- during the night but no reports of damage. ‘ Bay where it will pick up water. A lands and forests depart- ment spokesman said flames jumped the fire break in two ‘places Monday, but in both in- stances men moved in quickly to douse them. Although it had not. advanced. along its 10-mile _perimeter. on wr sa naweid. perimeter, it was still consid- ered out oO: comrds “Following Winter Storms | SANTIAGO. (AP)--The Chil- ean government declared a na- tional disaster Monday after a week of heavy snows, high winds and lashing rajps took nearly 100 lives, ravaged 40 per cent. of the country’s farmlands and isolated hundreds of towns and villages ' ’ Blizzards raged next door in western Argentina and snow avalanches thundered -down the men. were rescued The cutter had been on a mission to rescue a patrol boat blown aground in the storm. It was one of Chile's worst naval disasters. MANY OTHERS KILLED Ashore, avalanches, floods and other storm - caused incidents killed more than 50 other per- sons in Chile. Communications breakdowns Andres slopes.-One report said 41 persons were believed killed when an avalanche swept away a railway workers camp near the mountain village of Las Cuevas. The toll of the storm in west- ern Argentina: Four known dead, 18 injured and 51 missing. Chile's worst single. disaster necurred at sea Sunday Forty- five navy men perished in the wreck of the cutter Janequeo, bashed against rocks in Bahia Saan Pedro: 546 miles southwest | od Santiago The navy said 27) eee / INSIDE TODAY Classified ~........2.. 12, 13 BHU ccecccascccesee.. TF Deaths +2. 0c ccesss- bouts: 3 COMES... vucevessevevesa te WE 56s 60 ss Nee wee Finance, markets “yer bt) WOW hc takes cc Soa veweesed esses 4 We ees Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 Prince County ......... prevented the government from learning a full picture of the |storm disaster. But officials de- ‘scribed the storm damage as worse thai that.caused by the | earthquake last March which killed more than 50 -persons and caused more than $100,000,- 000 in damage. The storm smashed railway lines and battered hundreds of fishing boats and docks along the coast. In Santiago, U.S. Ambassador {Ralph A. Dungan presented to |President Eduardo Frei a_letier from U.S. President Johnson of- ‘fering American aid. | Pan American Grace Airways (Panagra) announced it is ship- ping all blankets available from its South African installations ‘and said Panagra planest would and said Panagra planes would “with stiff opposition everytime As Exhibition Classes Judged Horse fanciers had them- | selves a field day as they watch- George Kitson, Hampshire ‘place Standard Breds,~ Road- sters, Ok-desdale, Draught and General Punposes through yes- years of age, and they just may have been sold yesterday for ~$1,000; though —Mrr—Gillis — said he would be reuluctant to part |.terday—and_occasionally_second-,.pred-py-Chifford-Bryanton,-Rollo-- s guessed him which the right of ringsiders, particularly, es : when it’ horses that are being : Mr. Gillis told The Guardian shown ' yesterday afternoon that a visit- Two of fhe outstanding win- f ner during the -day—were—Rob- Bay. ert Humphrey. Kensington in standard breds-he had the Champion _ stallion and the champion —mare— and reserve and__Lorne_Fergu-on. Crapaud, | 1 he i ee ee ee | SALMOUTE, Besland Mrs. Robert Manry had a re- } the dra : paver pape au = union Monday with her sailr : union Monday with her sailor OUTSTANDING. TEAM husband in the Atlantic and said Outstanding team of the day he was just -as fit as when he was the Clydesdale'pair of Rean rode ftiis 13'-foot Tinkerbelle Nipper, a gelding, and Julie‘te out of Falmouth, Mass., June Grace, a registered mare owned 1. and shown by John Gillis, St. Peter's Bay. Plain Dealer newspaper man Nipper wasn't a Ided until he “sailed out to meet him 55 miles was two years old and he has off Cornwall in the afternoon inity omaha ge yer and came back with the expec- 1,800 ide and the 1,750 tation that he would arrive here The: a. i mare «(late tonight or Wednesday morn- Vv are brother and sister. jn5 The -wife of the Cleveland “Robert is a methodical. man, New : Effo rts and he plans everything he \does,”” she said. ‘This is his plan, and he will do it his way, and he seems not to have done To End Crisis Due In Greece = ** Pally.” The 46-year-old mother of two (Reuters) T wo Was emphasizing her husband's leading members of Greece's Character, which made it possi- strongest political party _de-,ble for him to plot one of the clared themselves independent Most incredible. sailing voyages Monday as a prelude to efforts in history out of his pocket to form a new government. money—3,200 miles from Fal- Former deputy premier. Steph- Mouth, Mass., to Falmouth. anos Stephanopoulos, °66, and England—and make it. work. Elias Tsirimokos, 58, a former _Manry was sighted for— the interior minister, said they first time in a week shortly .he- would try fo solve the country’s fore noon Monday .70 miles out ATHENS fly supplies from Miami. Fla., political tangle at- a meeting and dead_on_course_in-spite_of ‘at, the request of the Chilean with King Constantine Monday three or four days of Satine government. night. ———— - ae (AP)— | One is four and the other five ‘or asked him what he would | yjcer was “expected take for the big team. - Gillis said $1,000 quickly, and the man-said--he. would. probably.be back to see him. horse fanciers pay considerably more than that for big show teams they bring in for show- (Continued on page 2 Col. 4) Cleveland Newspaper Man -Nears End-Of Lone Voyage © Mrs. Manry crawled down from the trawler at 3 p.m. Mon- day and boarded the Tinker- belle. “Well, I just hugged and kissed _ him,” Virginia Manry said. ‘‘He said to-me: ‘I’m just going to kiss mother earth when I land. On second thought, I'll kiss you first and mother earth second.’”’ Manry developed sailing skill on Lake Erie and also became an_accomplished carpenter as well as a keen amateur pho- tographer, and he put all of, those skills into a six - year: project: To re-build his tiny 30- year-old sailboat into something which just might make history. The Tinkerbelle will be the smallest. known boat to cross the Atlantic non-stop. “Robert was very fit and well,” Mrs. Manry- reported. “He is five feet 11, and he weighed 200 pounds when he left. I thought he had lost quite a bit of weight, which I always wanted him fo do. and so I sort of punched him in the belly. Then I realized that he had taken off a lot of it.” Her husband told her that he had ‘lost one rudder, but. still was all right. He had one prob- lem_in-having lest _an_oar, but he said he would manage when jhe —gete inte -harbor.— It sounds like | with them. The animals were a big price for a team of horses, publication, however, a Vatican but sce _ of . the Nova Scotia | press office—official -said--Mon- Il Tefnpo has prepared an arti- \cle for its next edition saying |that. a newly-detected stomach to impede a. hoped-for rapid recovery” of the Pope's energy after a heavy | workload in the ‘spring. On the eve of the magazine’s day night that the Pope has no history of a stomach ulcer, jeither from the past or at pres- ent. In a report from its New York correspondent the Soviet Com- per headlines around the world {again Monday with — several leditorials noting that the race munist party newspaper said lclashes exploded, ironically, the riots had seriously frizht- ‘when things seemed to be get--ened the American authorities, CITES POLICY ABROAD “A commenator in the Chinese Communist Party newspaper People’s Daily said the Negro Fiots—were—linked—with— protests against the Johnson administra- tion’s foreign policies abroad In London, in an_ editorial (Continued on page 3 Col. 5 | tim g better for U.S. Negroes. South African newspapers suggested the sudden uprisings ‘might make American leaders ‘More tolerant of South Afriéa’s | apartheid, or race separation. In Moscow, Pravda said the |riots were a new blow to the prestige of the United States RORERT Maury, who cross- ed the Atlantic alone in a midget boat, enjoys a hot cup of soup and the company of ms wife, _seme—_50-—_miles off the coast of England Monday Scene aboard his 13's foot + pana ae Le Te gdm poe ome ee me « 7 fg ed 7 48 ee ert Ps the Cornish Tinkerbella — off nonstop, 79-day voyage His - coast of Falmouth, England. wife’ went out in a trawler tr When he reaches Falmouth in meet him Manry, 44,-is -a@ two days it will mean he has Cleveland Piain Dealer news sailed - the smallest _h oat man known in--htetor. 3. w (AP Wirephote via cable from jmules across the Atiantic ina. Lendon). ; , t at