Evidence of security pro- cauflons were to be seen al- most evenvxdiere in Char- lottetown yesterday in the areas where Her Majesty UANOLBTRUSI‘V'E BUT interns“ was to travel. Here two members of the Royal Can- adian “\Iouniecl Police use binoculars to keep a close check on proceedings during IO The Guardian. Charlottetown. Wed. Oct. 7. 1984. - 1 C a n 3 cl t a n - connected can- didates are running in Britain's general election to form a pint-l ‘sized legislature of their own. About 20 such candidates, in-l eluding at least t'iree born inl vCanada. were among the g ord 1.755 hopefuls in the field special Canadian interest “a, when nominations clns day for the Oct. 15 contest. 34~year-old daughter of Prof. George Catlin of McGill Lliiver- sity. Montreal. is a Labor can- didate By JOSEPH MacSWEEN . LONDON ice» — Sufficient rec- 0!!- Mrs. Shirley Vivien Williams, in Hitchin. son. rancher in 13 bin in 1923-30; Cmdr C E Donaldson. ’ 20 candidates In Britain 7,5 Hove Canadian Connection shire, where her Liberal oppo- nent is Mrs. Elma Dangerfield, 57. who went to school in O 1: Bay, Victoria, briefly as a girl. The Tories. who held the seat in the last Parliament. are run- ning a man, Martin Msddan, against the two women. Amon other candidates Conservative: E. S raised . T. John- pfiael rltish Colum- in British Columbia. served in the Cana- dian Navy in the Second World Hertford-‘War; Neil Jamieson, former actor of the Rosy-n - Nos-ant Press in ; Tom Stacey, former reporter with the Mont- real Star; Ian Percival, son of a Canadian who was formerly assistant to the agent-general for Ontario i.i London; and Peter A. R. Blaker, educated at the University of Toronto. L . Malcolm Macpherson, former lecturer at the Univer- sity of New Brunswick, who served as a major in the Cana- dian Army during the Second World War; Bruce Douglas- Upper Can- 'roronto; Miss of Joan Lester. born in Vancouver but left at an early age; Ra- Herman Tuck, former professor at McGill and the University of Saskatchewan: Brian Walden, toured Canada for the International Institute of Education in 958 Liberal: Hewlett J o h n s o n.‘ born in Montreal. manager of the British hockey team in the 1936 world chunpionshirs: Mrs. Verdun Perl, “year-old violin- ist born at N tal. B.C.; Mrs. Agnes Scott, educated in Ham- ilton: Dai G. Reeds, educated at McGill: John E. C. Perry, ucat in Vancouver; Cyril Carr and Eric Lubbock. both leducated at Upper Canada Col- ege. Signs Appear On Que. Walls QUEBEC (CPI—“Signs calling on Queen Elizabeth to stay at home appeared on walls Mon- day in two different parts of Quebec City. The Queen is to arrive here Saturday after her stay in Char- lottetown. The signs. In large black 1“ tors. appeared to have been written with some kind of liquid ye. They both said: chez-vous (Go home). One appear on a wall at the rear of a large store. the other on a wall along a street leading from Quebec's Upper to Lower' Town. They were not along the route along which the Queen will pass while here. D. 2'. 'Zabetn' FLASH FLOOD STRIKES LIMA (AP) - A flash flood struck the Peruvian mountain village of La Merced, 15 miles east of the capital, and reports reaching Lima Friday said six persons perished. 10 are miss. ing and scores are homeless. Dispatches from the scene said the Tom River went on a ram- page after heavy rains. the afternoon while the Queen was at the Confedera- tion Memorial Centre. They are located on the roof of one of the buildings in the complex. Survivors Of Roosevelt's New Deal Forlorn Group By OVID A. MARTIN are forlorn days for the few survivors of an ardent group of officials the Roosevelt New tgelists. Among them were a equal to that enjoyed by their'cating elimination of the farmi WASHINGTON lAPi — These number of farmers. agricultural. urban ' ‘ economists and farm education- talists. They held a \‘isinn of a syg. cousins for ilabor and capital investment. l But as time passed. the size istration is proposing a study of; lot this militant group dwindled Deal recruited in the 1930:: and 19m \vhir‘h would give farmers‘ through retirements and deaths. 19405 to help build strong fed- bargainlng p0\|‘pr in the market The vacancies were not filled oral farm-aid programs. This group. headed in the beginning by the late Henry A. Wallace, the first secretary of agriculture under Roosevelt. be- lieved in and fought for these programs with the zeal of evan- ‘place equal to tiiat exercised by organized labor and industry. Their banner was stamped with the word “parity.” By this, they meant a level of farm prices and income that would give farmers purchasing power lrust, loan Companies ‘Doing Brisk Business By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA iCPt — The trust and mortgage loan companies are doing a land-office business in attracting deposits from the bh'c. Just - publisth statistics for the first three years of the cur- rent economic expansion. up to the end of June this year. show these trends: The trust companies have in» creased lllPll‘ deanits receipts and guaranteed investment cer— tificates—a form of notice de- posits—by a w'iopping 67 per cent to 31.413.000.000. Meanwhile. their ordinary de- posits and demand have almost exactly doubled to $911,000,000. About half of that Mortgage 1 an companies also have doubled their deposits and demand certificates to a total of smomom In their case as well, about half is in chequing deposits. Deposits receipts and deben- nies have risen about 44 per cent during the [dad to S907.m0.000. That is how these two groups of companies raise the great tliree~year pe- = .bqu ofrt‘ieir money for mort- gage lending. .LOANS RISE ‘ Trust company mortgage and sales agreements soared by 131 per cent in the three-year period to a total f $1,238,000.000 in the second quarter of this year. In the same period. the mort- 5 loan companies had estimated Timer-0PM increase to $1.1lfli.0fi0.000 in their mort< ‘gage loans and sales agree- ments. These figures are drawn from financial institutions' balance- DJ 13 certificates sheet estimates prepared by the‘ Dominion Bureau of Statistics. ‘ ' Total assets of both groups money is in chequing dcposits. ‘ have SWPHCd agordjngly in they three-year pert . Trust companies assets hN'e shot up 75 per cent 000,000 This includes only the [company funds an money ‘ rawn from deposits and certif- ;icates. Excluded are the pri- i ‘trust companies. Mortgage loan companies in i e same period have boosted their assets by about 68 per ‘Cenl. f0 551.691.000.000. to $2.590.- ‘ with others of equal enthusiasm. FAR FROM GOAL Today, the parity goal seldom is mentioned. Farm prices are farther away from this goal ‘than at any time in 25 years. ; These holdovers from the [New Deal days were on the .staff of the old Agricultural [Adjustment Administration, or- iginal farm-aid agency. :‘name was dropped some years iago. Duties once performed by l the AAA now are carried out by Agricultural Stabilization ii the ,. and Conservation tion. I Thes 1pcsStrn to be stir regarding future .of an agriculture based on fam- ‘ ily farms. It was the goal of the 'AAA to preserve family-type yaizriculture. Now they are fear- ful that in time farming will b e c o m e industrialized with 9 men are inclined ' ' the management in the hands of a: few large agricultural corpora-I ficers have retired since May tions or big food-processing and? distribution concerns. These officials first began to see things turning against them ‘when the Eisenhower adminis- tration took over in 1953. The administration's secretary agriculture. Ezra Taft. Benson. ‘sought and obtained a turn in direction from strong federal farm programs to an eventual elimination of such programs. Spirits of the remnants of the original AAA band were revived with the election of President Kennedy in 1960 and his advo- zand supplies. HOPES DASHED ‘ These hopes were relatively "l 3' i? Administra- i cacy of strong farm programsl to help farmers stabilize prices dare“? 0rd” equivalent programs from strong farm commodity stabilization programs to new ' at helping rural communities develop new job opportunities and new eco nomic facilities. ; hese officials put much of. the blame for what they see as darkening shadows on farmers} themselves. They point out that: farmers are divided on thei question of federal aid and that the strongest of the farm organ-1 izations, the American Farm: Bureau Federation, wants its‘ eventual elimination. i w the Republican presiden-l tial candidate. Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona. is advo-f to 10‘ within five years. And the Johnson admin? the program by a bipartisan commission to determine its: future feasibility. ; These old-time officials are? gloomy indeed. 3 l t l procurement tshort-lived because a reluctantl tures sold by these loan comps-i vate funds administered by the , Congress refused to go far with .Kenncdy and his secretary of ‘agriculture, Orville L. Frec- man. The group also has seen some [departmental s‘iift in emphasis SPECTATRS ICK INE r hiya-tardwflhssitegava Magoodviewolpro- coatings In front of m Why-tho $ In Choice Of Jobs Retired Officers Said On Own | OTTAWA (CPl - Armed: forces officers aren’t requu‘edi to notify the defence depart-v merit of civilian jobs they ac- cept upon retirement. Defence Minister Helyer said ere. He gave this reply in a Com-t mons return for Robert Cl Coates (PC—Cumberland) who asked how many retired of- ficers have reported acceptance of jobs in defence industries which have contracts with the defence or defence production departments. Mr Hellyei- also said 669 of- l 1. 1963. Mr. Coates had based his{ question on reports that somel retired senior officers havel jobs with companies: which have substantial defence? contracts with the government.§ Outside the Commons, offi—i clals disclosed another case of; a senior officer with detailed' knowledge of some equipment; plans in the de-; fence department recently re tiring long before normal tirement age, to take a job with a company now seeking a bige K LEAVES MOSCOW MOSCOW (AP) —- Premier Khrushchev left Moscow Wed- nesday on his first vacation since last April. The premier’s favorite holiday spots are Ga- gra. at the eastern end of the Black Sea, and Yalta on the Crimean coast of the Black a. height of 109 miles. ROCKET LAUNCHED CANBERRA (Reutersl—The Anglo - Australian weapons re- 1 search establishment at Woom-' era. South Australia. launched its 100th Skylark rocket Wed- nesda e rocket performed successfully and reached a a 9': COAL m srocx . 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