sg? ‘Bumps’ and spills were plen-: tiful at, the 8th annual Little Britches Rodeo at High River, Jue Exchange Not Ready§ _ To Give Up Se By LARRY DWORKIN TORONTO cent wide -- spread demands for tighter controls over the »Tor- | onto Stock Exchange, its new | «Chairman isn’t ready to surren- \der all its self - policing /pow- ers. John §, Deacon, 53, elected last week for ‘a term, .agrees with outside cri- ticsthat.Canada’s biggest se- | curities centre has to. be oper-{ ated as a public institution. - -two - year} WILD RIDE Alberta, Monday, as young- sters under 16 competed for riding merece —e from If-Policing lalways be a few - people who | (CP)-—Despite re- practise unethical business | methods within the law. There- ifore, it is up to the TSE to po- ‘lice , this type of person. er (JOB BEING. DONE- : | Mr. Deacon says the ex. change’ has made jong strides - Cleaning house; - especially since the report last year of the [oval commission into the boom -‘bust trading 6f-shares-of | Windfall Oils _and Mines Ltd. in july, 1964. jin yng 6f Deacon, Findley, Coyne 1 all over the province attended the event in the: southern Al- berta town, -45—miles south of Calgary. He_ succeeds Marshal Stearns, | president of .T. A. Richardson | and Co. Ltd. 1 UC Appoints _ Co-Ordinator | } TORONTO (CP) — Rev: Ware ren Bruleigh, 33, of New. Water- | ford, N.S., has been appointed | c0..- ordinator of. the United | Church's national project , of | evangelism and social action. Mr: Bruleigh now is-staff“as-| y-/Tuesday approved a ‘new c6n-| afternoon. Many of the city’s} 1,100,000 residents were in safer, newer office. buildings. closed imfnediately- But it ap-. peared they might (CP Wirephote) | than those in the earlier quakes, | | United Presbyterian Church © In U.S.A. Revises Confession BOSTON ‘AP)—The govern-, However, ‘the action by the jing assembly of the United representative le is lative as- Presbyterian Church USA ee meeting ih garded as decisive in the long is™ fession of “beliefs,_the— church's. ifirst _credal revision in three process ‘ centuries. v gSince . 1649, Shexhyterlaniem te on. the 4.600-word decla-"55° used the. famed ‘Westmin- ee been going on for ser Confession. as its doctrinal eR Ee hs . ; 3 guide ‘An historic -mément,” com- ~ _|mented the presiding modera- The revision: -seeks-~to tor. Rev. Dr. Ganse Little of render Christian-».phmiciptes cin Pasadena, Calif, affer the cli- More understandable " contem- matic vote. porary style and to focus :them The approximately 1,500 Pres- 0! moral“ issties of modern byterians then broke into pro- times. longed applause and singing of/: Under - diesaaine amend i tne Pe the doxology, Praise God from |3,300,000 members of whom all Blessing Flow.’ noniination. for the last The new. confession now goes the new confession was debated to the denomination’s 188 area (intermittently for seven days at units (presbyteries) for ratifica-“the assembly- here before thie tion. Assent of at least two- approving vote. Only. scattered year, ithirds is needed for final au- negative votes were heard when 2 hata the decision came. Russian City Of Tashkent™ Hit By Quake For 3rd Time | MOSCOW (AP) = The Soviet No central Asian city of Tashkent, | given damage. — estimates. were where 100,000 already - were [EIGHT WERE KILLED homeless, suffered Tuesday its! First reports ‘from the city third major earthquake in less lafter last month's bi¢* earth than a month: — ... »| quake minimized the disaster. |Later it was admitted ‘that at ‘least eight. persons” were killed, 1,000 injured, 100,000 made homeless, and ‘67,000 buildings |destroyed or damaged. Even these figures are con- jsidered low by Western observ- be lighter | jers in Moscow, since the dis-; aster apparently hit most of the The earthquake “struck in mid. | No casualty figures were dis- | 8 The Guardlar Cnartotieion ‘Wed, May 25, 1966. PM, Dief. Te-= ~Tsaid’ Thursday he: would -review— | the protective, ar‘angements on On Secutity—. an apparent attempt to throw. a | j'sulted on any 2 ° <5 Is — ; F Are Agreed ~ ~|% 5 ‘*@ OTTAWA <(CP)—Prime Min- ister. Pearson and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker’ , agreed Tuesday that- Parliament's’ se- etitity.system should *-not "be ~ tightened without .q prior de- | bate in the Commons Mr. Pearson said no agant measures’’ are needed to ¥ protect, Jegislatérs. He ~hoped | that day proposed change in se- curity: arrangements would first be discussed in the House. Mr. Diefenbaker “said’” there has’ been. considerable comment on Parliament's «security “since Paul Chartier killed himself in a washroom last Wednesday in * “extrav- bomb into the Commons cham- 1% ber The Conservative wWeader said preteetive °.measures around politicians in — othet . countries often ineite violence, rather | than prevent it. He asked for.’ an assurance that’ MPs be con- added security steps Sneaker. Lucien Lamoureux - Parliament .Hill and aqed MPs } @> for their views” % The. subject ‘also will come under scrutiny at Chartier’s in- ee expected in about two ~ MUNSINGER HEARINGS ADJOURN: weeks : Harold Winch. (NDP Van- Mr. Justice Wishart Spence’ scandal, drives from Board of | were adjourned Tuesday. He couver Fast) said- 45,000 tour- ists—25,000 on Sunday” alone— conducting the inquiry into the ’ -said it was always possible Munsinger sex and security there might be another session, Transport Commissioners com- mittee Tdoms’ after hearings-. Joey Calls Conference On ‘Electronic Education Aids~ JOHN visited’ the Parliament. Build- ings during the ictoria Day |(Dem. N.Y.) ee weekend and he praised the | chairman, called for govern: | Commons protective. staff for efficient handling of the influx. LSD Seen Start | ment co-ordination on supervis- ion of the ‘drug, which he said }has become .a social problem. Yolles and Dr. James L. God- which occurred at night and qq ‘city in Tashkent - and in dard, commissioner of the Food _ ST. ’S, Nfld. .- (CP)— |foundland, will vale the can caused heavy damage .to ‘Many | volved hospitals, hotels a n- t Jand Drug Adrfinistration, re-|Premier Joseph Smallwood ‘an- ference. * old. frail homes. E | echoois- : of New Aids In peated the U.S. administration nounced Tuesday an_ interna- Mr. Smallwood said an ‘“g % The news agency Tass said| The Soviet government * has : : _ | Stand against making. posses-tional conference on the use of ious increase and sees te the quake.-was the third-strong-‘/ refused” to let~ Western * corre: Mental Health. Sion of LSD a federal crime. (radio, television and other elec-.o¢ this great. new technique” is est to hit the stricken city since’ |spondents into Tashkent. the April 26 tremor, described} Since April 26 there have been as the worst in Tashkent in 98 | more than 300 of minor quakes |years. The sécond big quake! Tens of ‘thousands of the came. May. 10. homeless are living in. tents The third quake registered 7| Outdoor medical stations . and: on the 12-point Soviet scale, | stores have been set up. Tanks }compared with 7.5. for tine April | and bulldozers work around the 26 -quake....... Me Tass said that. 40 ambulance OLDER WOMEN QUEUE | UP” cases had been reported, in-|. MONTREAE - (CP) The cluding. 33 heart patients, two \YWCA—found that, most appij-" /Premature. births and five ™ cants for Vistas for Wome, an | juries, No deaths were reported. educational and guidarite serv- lice, were 40 to 49 -years old. sociate ofthe Atlantic Christian | Day was 100 aeaaeaial= “deaths The service—is so popular_there | clock to, clear away the rubble. | scientists ate ‘ , ‘The nature and magnitiide tronic~aids~-in--education—is-—be- ing called here for late August [needed to NIp— the 180,000 seu 2 WASHINGTON (AP).— Theo the LSD abuse problem is! I director of the U.S. National still a. matter of speculation,” bases September. ee er Me Newteuudices: Institutes of Health described | he, Said... | In a prepared statement, the onocis « ~ Kennedy: said he had written Premier said the idea resulted the medical directors of somefrom talks and discussions with ; | 100 universities and had ‘re-) Chairman. Andrew Stewart . of Specialist technological colleges ceived about 50 ‘feplies, which |the Board of Broadcast Goy-|and. schools in Canada, the indicated that less than one per ; ‘ernors, Acting President M.. 0.. Unitéd States, Great Britain and cent of the students were in- Morgan of Memorial University,’ | other countries. the drug LSD Tuesday. as a Invitations will be-extended te prototype of things to come for mental health. ; ; Dr.. Stanley F. Yolles said ‘very close fo a Pejeersie SRR eet eee volved in LSD. |President -Don Jamieson—of |—“‘I--am...anxious_.to_have the hopeful of: having new meang| .The subcommittee's hearing | ‘the Newfoundland” Broadcasting |CBC play an important part ‘in ot nly of all ting the dis- | CODtinues. |Company, Newfoundland educa- this conference,” Mr. Smdll- not only»of alleviating the dis- wood, said, '‘I hope to make. this t i . HeR. B. tress of the mentally ill but of | AUTHOR IS SEEN - at ee ace Paes | curing such illness. | Earle Stanley Gardner ap-| Mr. Jamieson “LSD. is_a_prototype of what |pears as a judge ih the final ,the most comprehensive \confer- lence of ‘its kind yet. held” any- where and it is our strong hope whose, com- ipany operates radio and tele- | But, he argued in an inter. | Training Centre, Tatamagouche, |in 1952. Last year, 86 died. 55 in is a 10-day waiting list; says: di- is being developed,’” he -told | episode of ,the nine-year Perry. vision stations CJON and-CJON- that Newfoundland ean -pionder “But. we’re not finished yet ~ Save Seals -. resumption of, operations view, this. doesn't ° necessarily | mean the exchange has to give up what a recent: Ontario royal | cotnmission called - its private-¥ club , aspects. “A Jaw cannot ‘fully protect | “the public because fhere will-! Italy Backs * Proposal To > HALIFAX -(CP)—The ~ Italian government has sent a letter to the International Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fish- | eries supporting a proposal for conservation measures in seal hunting off the “coasts of New- | foundland and Labrador. .. The other 12 member coun- tries of*the commission—includ- ing Canada previously had agreed to the formulation of such9 measures. A’ federal fish- ~*éries department™ official ~con= firmed Tuesday the Italian let- ter had ‘been received by the “commission. The Canadian government moved two years ago to pro- tect harp. and hood seal herds in the Gulf of. St. Lawrence.. year-there tightened regulations on under- Lae was harvest writing speculatives and disclos: | Hmit of 50,000 harp pups in the | Gulf, while there was no open season on the disappearing hood seals However, the herds which breed on the ice off ‘Newfound- land and Labrador are being | decimated by hunters since the | hunting takes place outside Ca- madian territorial waters. Now chat the necessary una- nimous agreement-of the mem- > ber’ countries has been obtained, the * commission is—expected—to-} draft international laws limiting | the .kill, of seals, governing | methods of hunting and decid- | ing on ‘the season! Canadian: and Norwegian ships, anc French vessels, have taken part in the offshore hunts. Dow Brewery Plant Closed | MONTREAL (CP) —A eokes. ‘man fot w' Brewery Lid. said Tuesday the company’s plant-in Quebec City is, shut down and. no. decision — about a has yet been made The plant was Shut down | “March 30 in what Health Min- oo ster Eric Kierans.of Quebec ‘ealled a voluntary step taken | by the company -‘to Be oS The action was taken after it became known that 18: men in the Quebec City. area had died of cardiomyopathy, a rare de- generative heart Msease ——“fll- the victims were heavy b@er drinkers. Investigators said ‘no particuplar beer is-to be blamed.” | Beer ‘may “have. heen—one—of “an association of several fact- ors’: causing. the disease, the tn vestigators said The Dow spokesman said to- day the investigation by provin- cial, federal and—1tndependent- experts ‘ts not thiite finished."" Dow's— —tn—_the—pro— vincial capital have been sup- ~—plied from the firm's Montreal brevery, ‘6 and _/sometimes—Russian— facilitate | research and reassure the pub- | and we still have two impor- | ed but sticky areas to clean These “as primary . distribu- ition — the selling’ of a com- \pany’s treasury shares through the facilities of the exchange— \and professional trading, in |which a brokerage employee | trades for his own company or ee Primary distribution hasbeen leriticized on grounds it canbe used _by promoters to manipu- | "late trading in speculative is) ‘sues. The practice is illegal in |the United States: “‘We have a committee working . on. the prob- jlem,” said Mrs. Deacon. | “But no one has been able to isolve» it and at the same time lensure these companies: get ad- lequate financing.’ The- U.S., unlike Canada, .has | ia large over-the-countef market where speculative companies | can raise needed capital. KEY 18 POLICING : On -professional trading, he, says,..the problem is. policing. | “The rules are there, but for the present we can only carry out spot checks on traders," He expects. it will be--un eontrol_in about a month. In the last year as. part of its jclean - up program the‘TSE has | ing information; increased min- imum ~ financial - requireménts for Companies listed on the ex- change and started policing un- | ‘usual trading activity * Mr. Reacon is president of F. | |H, Deacon and Co. Ltd. He was elected to. the board: in 1960. He also is president of Pen- sion Mutual Fund. Ltd. and Riv- erside Yarns Ltd.,. and vice- president of the investment .tres operated by ‘the Church. é Mr. Bruléigh will have - re- | sponsibility for carrying the church's centennial programme | of evangelism into every con- gregation during 1967 4nd 1968. United | 125 Deaths | ‘Recorded In Ardent By THE CANADIAN PRESS In the wort fatality toll on record for a Victoria Day—holi- | day, 125 persons died accident- ally on the three-day weekend, ie of them in traffic accidents- In addition, another four-may | be added to the drowning total of 30, with four Toronto men }missing-on-Lake Ontario, The highway to]l was in: ex- cess of the- prediction of 56 by the Canadian Highway Safety | Council. Provincial totals-were: N e w-. foundland 1; P.E.I. 3; N.S. 9; | NB; 1; Quebec 45+—Ontario—43; Manitoba 5; Saskatchewan 4; | Alberta 3; B.C: 11, | guvvey from 6 p.m. Friday “to ‘midnight Monday, local also included five deaths in two separate plane crashes. and three fatalities’ from. exposure. | The worst three-day holida N:S., one‘of five lay training cen-_| traffic. Senate subcommittee on U.S. The total in a Canadian Press |— times, | rector, Phyllis Poland *This year the highest » SWIMMING. IS RISKY ;cial-total for traffic was in Que. | More than 200 types of fish, bec, with 31 deaths, Ontario | (sees stingrays and— some | roads claimed 29. : : itypes of shark, -are venomous. ‘Dia oes PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE (© CAMPAIGN CALENDAR QUEENS COUNTY ql . May 26th NORTH RUSTICO- STELLA ~ MARIS HALL .. ° Hon. Angus MacLean, M.P., Heath Mac- Fri., May 27th quarrie, M.P., Lloyd McPhail, Philip 8:30 p.m. Matheson. ELDON “HALL: ~ Hon; Walter Shaw,.-Hon. Angus.MacLean,,_ Sat., May 28th 8:30 pm. Sat... 28th JAMBOREE — COMMUNITY . May 26th CENTRE, CHARLOTTETOWN “-M.P.3 Heath Macquarrie, M.P., Bennett 8:30 2m. Hon. Angus MacLean, M.P., Heath Mac- government. opetations —_investi- gating use of ‘the hallucinatory drug: Senator Robert. F. Kennedy: + fe Carr, Dan Compton. CRAPAUD HALL quarrie, M.P., Alban Farmer, .J. Daviil Stewart, A. Walthen Gaudet, Tom Davies. period since CP began recordi | ing accidental deaths in 1948 was' the 1963 Dominion Day weekend when 172 persons died, 85 of them in. traffic. The previous high for Victoria Hon. Walter Shaw, Frank Myers, Heath KINGS COUNTY Dr neeitty MP. Wed., sr 25th ST: PETERS HOLY NAME HALL Mel. McQuaid, M. P., A. Walthen Gaudet, 8:30 p.m. Leo Rossiter, Walter Dingwell. Mason TV ries, TV here and ethers in New- iin this whole field.” ULE bot oe ® ne _ PROGRESSIVE ¢ CONSERVATIVE | CAMPAIGN CALENDAR CFCY-TV. = = Wed., May 25th s 6:15 p.m. J. David Stewart coe _-* Hon. Angus MacLean 7:15 p.m. M.P., Bennett Carr and Dan Compren t “ThurseMay 26th ce ele 7:15 p.m. ____ Heath Macquarie, MP. en Gaudet, Tom Dave Fri., May. 27th a ‘Me! McQuaid, M.P., Kelthi MacKenzie, Harry MeCon- nell, 11:30 p.m. Premier Walter Shaw 5'45.p.m.. CS ———— . Thurs. May 26th SOURIS HIGH SCHOOL - a. CFCY-RADIO. roc ett fore’ ‘Ss 8: 30 . AUDITORIUM . . pn ee Hon. Walter Shaw, Mel McQuaid; MP.,’ Wed M 25th ~~ Peter J. MacAulay, Keith MacKenzie. 1: 05 = H 20th Anniversary Sale . Fri., May 27th MONTAGUE REGIONAL, — | 74h pie Hon: Reams Moncoak MB 8:30 HIGH SCHOOL . oe ~ iit ateeelebeee on. Angus Mactean, ee McQuaid, M.P., Preston MaclLare, - ; Bennett Carr, Den Comip=- L ree. raw. Tom Curran, Willard MacLean, Robert z} ee — ~— DoreanHarry McConnell, Dr. Cyril Sin- £4 ton sau WINN ae Thurs., May 26th eters = ERS” | “PRINCE COUNTY: ~ 1:05 p.m. Tom Davies: - 1—FLORENCE. A ol ben as : : ] oS iEsher Street, cy ~ *. Wed., May 25th O'LEARY REGIONAL 6°25 p.m. __ Mel McQuaid, M.P. : .00 paidup charge- account. F a aN -2n HIGH SCHOOL : é : | ins 3 vectra. ; 20pm fn, Walter Shaw, Bert Rix, Gerald _ : 1, 8 ROCHFORD STREET - eR ; : =" ney ieee Pa Robert- cies Fri., May..27th.. ee ene x : ee : n« 11:30 Premier Walter Shaw i %- VIOLET: KNEEBONY. ~ Wed., May 25th ST. PLEANORS : pn | 1—only Kroehler Piatform Rocker - Coe 8:30 p.m. LIONS HALL clas ‘ 3 - Eric Jessome, Ron MacDonaia, «Tes Upper Quects eDONALD : Heath Macquarie, .M.P, CJ RW-RADIO : 1 Set Fables 2 Step Tid Coffee Table, . ~ Wed., May 25th SUMMERSIDE” . ne 1 MRS. E. E. JARDINE, fm, x 8:30 pom. > ter, MeNeill_ and Arnold. MacLennan. us Weil May 25th .. | Q Ipper. nce Street j 1 palr table isrips to. value’ of $2000 a Thurs., May 26th BORDEN LEGION HALL od 12:40 Keith Wacngies 6 to 10—Paid un Charge Account $10,00-each. ; 8: 30 * m: : Ron MacDonald. a, id econ - pe 45 m. David MacDonald, M. P.. _6—MRS. IRA SAUNDERS, ~ : ; Erie Jessome and oe en Soe pee Fri., May 27th TIGNISH LEGION HALL 2 * Arnold MacLennan 7—Mrs, Robert Pigott 5 ie? ce Alban Farmer, Orville Phillips, Bert. Riz, es pe Mt. ‘Stewart 6 8:30 p.m. : Getald Rooney, David MacDonald, MP., ° X Th ‘ MRS. LESTER yor INKER oe Hubert Gaudet . ve urs.,. May 26th ~ 9MRS sires LANE ' Fei., May 27th HIGH SCHOOL =l2:36: = - Hon. Henry wedad North Wiltshire : < ; os ; 8:30 p.m. —rew Wedge, Keith Harrington. r : : Pas ‘on, PET , Sat. Ma S'SIDE_CIVIC AUDITORIUM _ “cae 3 redericton, PLE. 5 [ ® : N Dra od - y 28th » David: MacDonald, M.P., Hubert McNeill, 12:35 p.m. Hon. Hubert MeNeill _ Names wn by Sid Stead 8:30 p.m. “ ArnoldMacLennan, Premier W. R. Shaw. “es 11:30 p.m. Premier Walter Shaw 0 4 ' . ae el iota... . $ ve Sal , t nny