eg SBS VOL. LXXIX NO. 257 — -. = Matters pertaining” “to “the - —betie, assistant general map the operation ‘of the one-half — “@peration of the Adlantie sagéer of the Pavilion; and © Million dollar building which Pavilion at Expo 67 were dis- George V. Fraser. director of tussed at the Charlottetown ors evenly St poe Travel -. From the tion. Also discussed were the if It’s Good. For The Island ‘The. Guardian Is For It " DISCUSS PAVILION ‘AT EXPO. the Prince Edward Island ind+Like The Déew” 4URSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1966. a will tell the Atlantic World” theme at the . Exposi- ing between Hon. M. Lorne LEFT are Dr. Bonnell, _ Mr. selection of guides. production | To ater ga56 i) a eS eae act ine keamcinea ‘tourist developmeit : RA. Pic- jects discissed pertaining to role of tourism in the Pavilion. ter ~ Under Heavy Opposition iy NEIL MATHESON HALIFAX — eS bitor banner in the Guern Mand ct [ring sad sarrowiy mined‘ | in jae ‘show a a the Atlantic Winter Fair, | ford, N.S: These “are the twe W. Saunders, peadache eget the fair. Ayles- Sa ee Sher gee Of Absorption By U. = of -creeping “ ontinewtalines Whose ultimate end is economic and political absorption by the United States, New Democratic Party Leader T. C. Donglas aid Wednesday. -Mr.. Douglas cited as éxam- ples US.-Canada Columbia ~ OSs Treaty, the Canada auto trade pact, the apparent defeat of former finance minister Walter Gordon at: the _recent_Liberal _confer- nee. and: the°routing of. a _sec- ‘ga —-—. _natural_gas pipeline : ZCensde. could-act_mehe-@ val. - @0tt_by shoppers against super- through the U.S. ~“faterim money “supply debate i 5 » ‘the Commons, he said he is not anti - American but. believes - there is a Canadian identity Gable independent contribution t6 the world as part of the U.S. because its decision - making sewers would be “infinitesi- ma : CITES -PM’S SPEECH ~~"Mr. Douglas” referred to a Sunday speech by Prime Minis- ter Pearson which" said Canada could never enter a pon-trede serve political “What the prime says and what the government does are completely at vari- ance. “The. prime minister sings ‘O Canada we stand on guard for thee’ ‘at the front door, while out- the -back “door-heselis- our resources.” Alvin Hamilton (PC — Qu’Ap- pelle) said the NDP: is “60 mister years out of date’ and that its opposition _ to theU.S.. natural arene a “PREMIER CAMPBELL blems. t}them solve their financial pro- | “We believe that the province —— Premier Jayst TOV vince ing the full construction. costs of both plants, and fishing™ fleet. We are deeply coficerned:ias to how far the government ean go in committing: public funds to the management, to finance the day-to-day operation of. these ih- dustries. Various proposals designed to.enable the George-/ town companies to resolve their | current” financial diffiewities"""~ The premier said that as soon as all parties have had an oppor- tunity to examine these propos- als another meeting will be held. | Mr. Campbell stated that’ the “and -ship-— ping agent. The arrest appear- ed to be the start of the big- “SCOTLAND YARD officers ina dawn-raid- on~his~seaside~ home 40 miles east of London Wednesday ‘arrested William Cecil 41- LONDON (AP) — Yard officers arrested a busi- biggest security investiga since the Second World War. Scotland’s Yard's special se- don real estate and. shipping agent, ina raid on his seaside- home at Southend, a nearby re- Mulvena’s arrest followed re- ports that British security [were—watching— here to nearby Westport drown- |. ed- recently. when only 10 miles from their destination, # was learned here Wednesday. ‘ The animals were in a scow ‘Wal [pay these deficis and vet the nari finds itse committed pay these costs under an p! ontinaed ap page-S, pak} pironts —— Gets Reports’ | On Rural Development Plan the federal departments and five | _ Ottawa Area Food Prices Decline To Bargain Levels . By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (‘CP)—Retail prices of many food products in Ot- tawa. have: .tumbled ‘to bargain > levels im recent“ weeks, accord- ing to a check of this week's Compared - with three. weeks age. ‘prices are down on most commodities ranging from sugar and grapefruit to canned soups and-even bacon. In -a*. few cases. however— such as better cuts of beef— prices this week are higher than f weeks ago. but off markedly from the nationa! av- erage quoted by the Dominién Bureau of Statistics for ndist. | Market sources said prices ar- down on many commid‘ties that now are in abundance .at the end of the field qrop har- vesting -season. But other Sources indicate the price re-|' ductions may have ‘been forced by publicity given to high “prices by the’ Commots-Senate + prices committee, and a boy- of a long téerepentative list of groccries, en ¥ or more cities ‘across LONG TERM es Bot retailers say the national Laverages are .a statistics! exer- | cise and really meaningless be- |; cause they indicate prices in a strange mixture of communi- ties. Moreover, the DBS figures are published about three fy + sity H workers ‘erate union = er “ — tind . oe oe a ar Saree epee ee : 7 in Charlottetown to review the i i raral elopmeant in. Since up to that date, and to chart the servatives had long fought to| Snowfall of ap’to a foot was \that time ministers and officials (future course toward final com- ‘preserve a distinct Canadian | expected in the province's Lake |a¢ government have been study- (pletion of a comprehensive de- nationslisen snd-~the-—pipetine cn ae Lake Erie, Lake Hu- ling these reports: while awaiting |velopment plan and agreement. ee EO eee Te ee ak fret fore “detailed —re-| “We are all_most anxious to|” "At the pipeline to southern On-|Cochrane regions... bs. sea, |move forward “as quickly as = : at ays | Premier Alex Campbell, last |possible on this plan and I as- tario was not completed in one| West of the Hamiltot-Yoronte= stated that on Nov. i4th,|sure you that your government zor eer cone meee [Meets 081005 Se far sont feast pevacalle cig ove tit ers ee w ith snow was : 3 market in Toronto and Windsor |heavy snowfall in a band | ering Committee which is 4. eee ae to U.S. fuel-interests. __—_—_| stretching from Windsor tej — oe SVE. © bell: “By its opposition, the NDI Negth Bay. je was “driving a- stake into the|. The heavy snow sea hearts of people seeking a lower | spread to the. ceanginhett = cost = s fos Dt in Eastern Can- Bev tnd =. the TORONTO. CIVIC Angry Metropolitana Toronto Tuesday enecative walioet Gi peinlyes gortags: eireet repairs on Metro roads. - =, » » ¥ * * minarets seer noe © fh 8 8 et at, ei ie acta a ee ils ne At A Glance. By THE CANADIAN PRESS WEDNESDAY, Nov. .2, 1966 Opposition Leader Dief- enbaker appealed it ‘suc- cess for a government state- ment on the seperted sect RIKE TODAY government: remains firms in its in determination that these indus-| gest security: probe since Workd . | arsed im los. Angeles. Monday tries continue te-operate for the; War H. .(AP age bY | 46m: Sane thy see ae ew cable from London) People they serve and the gen- TEAVES CANCELLED. — eral economic welfare of the |. Informants said jeaves of all province. @pecial security’ branch detec- ecial # tives in Britain were cancelled | as the transatlantic spy investi- | Sheep Are Lost gation, described as a major In Scow Sinking |¢ <1 elena ental d Some 278 being .transport- ed by water ffom Mud Island off |< night as the. workers callections in ‘Toronto’ and Water and seweraserviees may a mem- . voted to ‘strike. Thursday. The _ aise he affected <P. Careptate west the An- geles National Forest, was con- trolled after blackening more "| than 2,100-acres.. = = = 4 that -10- firefight- Siegler Yard Makes Arrest. Scotiand | for use - against the Britain. There was no - messman Wednesday in what/| diate indication who was to use rappeared—to-be—the—start—of the 1 : : tion | SEEK BLAKE LINK © - Seotiand Yard is in the possibility George Blake, a fi Ss i the finding of more bodies fs _ Police spent 12 days in house eause of a ay in domestic car Purchases during Britain’s cur- rent pay and price freeze, trig- gered a wildcat ‘strike two weeks ago by the men’s 1,200 fellow workers at a BMC factory turn- ing out radiators, gas tanks and exhaust units. A meeting Wednesday at- tended by 275 workers decided assembly ee ‘of vital compo- ments without which thousands of other men cannot do their. The development promisés to deal another hard blow toy Bek tain’s | export-witining auto in- dustry, hit -at an industry « of. ‘i Fes to continue the strike starving | Briti ne ¥* factories in the industrial Mid- lands, and the total is expected to jump. to 34,000 today. The 750,000. workers employed: directly: or indirectly in build- jing cars and trucks have be — come among the highest-paid n I ; ‘a Metta. “A quently taking home between £30_and- £35- ($90. and $118) .@ week. Last July ,20 the Labor -gov- ernment clamped on an eco nomic squeeze: intended to eut spending and deprive some i- —- of work so skilled ~ could be “‘re-deployed”’ - itt : tories whose output oe veel “Domestic” sales of care slumped immediately and manti- facturers began laying off mea. Auto workers pleaded that, work should be shared among all du- Ting'.a shortened work week father than. have dismissals” _ . Nearly oR Ne | already have been inid off at 4 BMC workers’ 2 notes ave