=e If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It 2% wes | Che Guardian ¥ ~ %e ‘ HON. ANDRE Richard, left, Mr. ‘fied » ground on the are minister of works for New __ed up with the bulidozer in the Mrs. Margaret Rideout, Lib- Brunswick and Hon. J. Wat- background to mark the of- eral candidate for Westmor- pon MacNaught, minister of ficial beginning of construction land and Hon. Joseph LeBlarie Mines and technical surveys, of the P.E.I. causeway-bridge- provincial secretary for New @xamine a piece of sod which tunnel complex. In the back- Brunswick. Pearson Reports Swing Towards Liberal _By STEWART MacLEOD |, He dismissed the fu by say | “it doesn’t matter how of the New Temacratic Pasty. [ene sive to, Beindas Sreit About 400 persons packed a chenef. hétel ballroom and adjoining! He had told his Kitchener ao- corgidors in Kitchenr, Ont., to |\dience that this had been de- “Believe om, than_a vote for the Conserva- ‘99."— : bt most a heavy NDP vote sia ~~ aay ie best : neg lems facing la could could accomplish ‘“‘is another | Doleabehet felacrity: govers- fe tackled under the traditional ment,” he said. ode by_pills. Mr. Pearson | ied on with his campaign | te ard a windup rally here Fri- | day without giving too much | arance of being a flu vic- { don't think INSIDE TODAY the tour Wednesday because of | the flu. The prime minister was | | rs. Pearson had ta leave | j j important _prob- | ~irappening:% fortunate areas should not for- | Party |Bcitish’ system ef majority gov- ‘ernment Douglas had given lever forming’ a government \from- this election. As a result they cond do nothing best than help . ‘the Caon- atives, woou §=2nLGEaY aawnas [erent | }|tario Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” verre wee ve. s® WN, CANADA, SATURDAY, N Groun OVEMBER 6, 1965. ¢ 45. Sunday: cloudy, wor MORE SEVEN CENTS mor aAN WEATHER > Showers; winds southerly 25, gusts to 45, westerly 15 in evening; low -high 23 and cold, 18 PAGES - saa d Broken Friday To Start Causeway Job Final Countdown THE CANADIAN PRESS oaks ridifig of Prince Albert in ayn neal countdown has |Saskatchewan. started for Canada’s general| Two other party leaders were election Monday. pe concentrating on their own | constituencies in the final hours, | a see Bo ~, = New Democtat T. C. Douglas in electi ty of the 265 Commons Burnaby-Coquitlam in British | card any one party? Three |Columbia and Social Credit’s sat last four—in 1957, 1962 Robert Thompson in Alberta’s and 1963—elected minority gov- Red Deer riding. Real Caouette*#f the credi- Madiker outlook: Cold and tistes was winding up in Que- perhaps snow for the Atlantic [bee's Labelle constituency— Tegion; sunny and cool in On-|where son ‘Gilles is running— and Quebec; cold with |before heading to his home at light snow on the Prairies; |Rouyn, in Villeneuve riding. cloudy in British Columbia with | Monday the polls open at 8 coastal rain. fem local standard time and | ‘This weekend the 1,01) candi- |°0% at.7 p.m. = In 1963, when a Libera) min- dates Bee ercun eres government replaced Mr. ic tis Aaciaion $e ‘an eet: | Diefenbaker's minority ‘adminis- | For Federal Vote Monday. \9 and independents 2. Four seats |were vacant because of deaths |seats to command a majority. | Started tration, the election result was: |Liberals 129, Conservatives 95, | Social Credit 24 and New Demo- jerats 17. | When Parliament was- dis | | solved in Septemer the stand- ings were: Liberals 127, Con- servatives 92, New Demoérats 18, Creditistes 13, Social Credit and resignations, 133 MINIMUM q It takes a minimum of 183 Much of the campaigning was devoted to the argument over whether a minority government is good or bad for the country- Mr. Pearson hammered for | six weeks at the theme agg a! (continued on page 2 col. SENATOR DIES mated 10,200,000 eligible voters. | The field is 12 fewer than the | record 1,023 in 1963. Liberals and Conservatives | are contesting every seat- New Democratic Party has | candidates, Social Credit 96 ae the Creditistes 77. Another a running under assorted ic Campaign appeals on radio and television ended, by law, at midnight Friday night. ENDS. CAMPAIGN TODAY Prime Minister Pearson, who called the election Sept. 7 with an. appeal for a Liberal major- ity, was te close out his cam- barnstorming drive along north shore of Lake Ontario. “Conéervative dian history to stage a success- paign today. with a a der Diefen- fhuker “Bidding to” become the” fourth’ prime minister in Cana- ful comeback, travelled to his = 35 ARDA Projects Approved For Island CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA A total of 3% pro- jects under the Agriculfiral Re- habilitation and“ Development Act have so far been for Prince Edward Isla’ it 4s revealed in the ARDA catstogue, a summary of: yrearae, Cap | © Sete 1962 to 1985. = Inwalved.in. the 2%. projects ts. a sum of $473,730 and the federal | contribution is $329,992. Largest single project is an alternate land use program in Senator Norman Piatt Lam- bert, 80, appointed to the Senate in 1938, collapsed and died while visiting his wife in hospital, in Ottawa Thursday night. (CP Wirephoto) SONIC BOOMS SPARK ALARMS By A.C. HOLMAN { Federal Mines Minister Mac- Naught said at a ceremony at! Bayfield. N.B., Friday the mag- nitude of the causeway-bridge- tunnel to link Prince Edward Is- land with New Brunswick stag- | gers the imagination. | Mr. MacNaught was speaking | at ceremonies at which he broke | ground with a bulldozer to mark the start of construction of the first road link between the Island and the mainland. The big yellow machine tore a | swath of sod about two - inches deep, 10 feet wide and 20 feet long from the centre of a field formerly owned by Hollis Spense. | | It was about four miles west of | |Cape Tormentine. Before he | started the machine, Mr. Mac- | Naught got some instructions on | the operation from construction | |company men. | Time of the ceremony was 3) |p.m. The weather was cold, the | temperature just below freezing, | Proud Moment, Minister Says Richard to say a few words. The latter expressed his. at * being present at the sod-turning ceremony for, ‘‘a project which will bring many more. tourists to the provinces of New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Island,” Mr. MacNaught called upon Mr. Rogers, the retired director of transportation. for P.E.I., who stated he was there in the capac. ity of a private citizen, not as representative of the P.E.I. gov- ernment. Mr. Rogers paid tribute to the work of the designers and the engineers who have worked on the project. Mr. MacNaught read a tele- gram from Hon. George Macll- raith, federal minister of publie works who expressed his regrets at being unable to attend. He said the causeway ‘is an im- |portant link in a chain which | makes our gation.” PROUD MOMENT Mr. MacNaught spoke a few ‘brief words to the gathering of |with a brisk wind blowing. 8 he The — was witnessed by | Hon. W. Meldrum, attorney- | general of New Brunswick: Hon. | Joseph LeBlanc, provincial see- ‘retary for New Brunswick; Hon: Andre Richard, minister of works for New Brunswick; Mrs. Mar- and the BOSTON (AP) — Sonic - | many years, @ now Rideout, Liberal candidate 1. Prince County for the acquisi-| booms from attack bomb. {foe tha riding f Tenneson, ne ee oe | ers taki rt in a joint are being fulfilled. hn tion. and. development of |1,400 | king pa n |and Holl ogg hl his wife and|~ wr Ma¢Naught then went -to acres of land for community | Canadian - U.S. air defence | their oe children. the bulldozer and officially start- pasture use. Total cost is si10,-| exercise set off burglat ‘The only Islander present,|eq the construction of the catise- 000 ‘and the federal contributien | arms, routed persons other than members of the press|way. Following the sod-turning is’ $66,667. from beds and kept police jor Mr. MacNaught’s party, was|the members of the press, the “teen Island project is a| busy with telephone calls |B. Gra a representatives. of’ Cc $900: expenditure for a survey over some, parts of Massa ‘civil servant who was there as| struction Co. (co s for yothe feasibility of |, Chusetts early Friday. an ititerested private citizen. | first pliass of ¢ ), tep- stockyard. The|; A Spokesman at Westover; | There were no members of the | resentatives of Nor PB. Simi, pratecte” toca 1 .in' {Air Force’ base. ts Chicppee | Peter \Prince Edward Island govern- Consultants ( the land use category, | said supersonic attac pint ; |i the project) and the politie-~ - W im soil and water, two rural | ™ations of B-52, BT and» ae ceremony prior to! ians hurriedly left Hollis Spense'¢ development projects and other | 3-58 bombers -broke the ‘the ° ring of the sod, Mr. field and to their nor) sound barrier ‘at high alti- .;| MacNau ¢alled upon Mr. ‘maal antes OF devitg, , tudes,’ said the Kitchener | area, like many other parts of | ‘is Dursting at the | eventually employ 3,500. The southwestern Ontario area. is. “going to become a great automotive industrial complex—you've no idea what's But ‘Canadians in these more ‘wet there are areas of Canada| \without this. prosperity and a! lgreat deal more must be done for them. flushed and perspiring Fditorials ...... ........ va when he spoke for 35 | Summerside . f° ee in Kitchenr, predicting | Kings, Quee the “swing’’ would show. : oe : : Wel a the polis: Mobénn. niiieteesinetieyeneetniii ee ee eo | ae PRE er op eae ome ws POPPY CAMPAIGN OPENS Charlotetown, as Police Chief Sterns Webster looks on The ccbbiiba mathed ts off. cial opening of the annual pop- ‘Ernest. Fardy,.veleran__le-_ @onaire, pins a poppy on the lapel of Walter Cox, Mayor of b PC Leader Bombarded At Rally In Vancouver VANCOUVER (CP) — College utes. None of the missiles hit Coast election rally. Corp. of the United States will | balloons and paper airpines as. jhe spoke at his major West: | |youths penetrated police lines the Opposition leader. jand elaborate security precau- Police, who earlier searched a ceiling power room from which the youths were launch- The youths barricaded them-_ ‘ing their aerial bombardment. selves in a ceiling room of the) downtown Queen Elizabeth The- | The youths were taken by po- jlice, but no charges were atre and, as police combed dark Co™emplated. passageways, dropped balloons | Theatre ushers said at least through a floor vent toward the |a dozen youths had been chased stage below. Mr. si speaking as from the network of. passages Diefenbaker never jin the theatre ceiling before po- the bal- ‘lice broke into the power room loons and airplanes rained down where the two youths were con- over a period of about 25 min- cealed. Security Overruled For Cable Car Ride By DORIS KLEIN SAN FRANCISCO Princess Margaret cisco’s famed cable cars. © flam. py. campaign sponsoerd By. the Royal Canadian Legiofi which at 1 Leaders On Hustings (AP) — band, overruled were nearly trampled by the her security men Friday..and. crush of spectators and report |' sltook a ride of one of San Fran- ers trying to ride with them. cess and: her five-foot-five has the Earl of Snowdon, The trip. took the royal pair. The five-foot, one-inch prin- about eight blocks up steep Rus- sian Hill as photographers ran after the car and their own |motoreade trailed behind. The Snowdons sat on the out- \side of the open cable car, their ‘feet planted firmly on the run- ning board. As they boarded the dinky 5 study CANADIAN PRESS jittie car and the crowd swal- lowed them up, the princess ap- Pearson — In Oshawa. Port Hope, Cob. ourg, Belleville, a Bet the nectty ae on : ther In’ Regina, Sas. ¢Ted and smiled. after they had katoon, Prince Albert. settled down on the car. — In: Burnaby-Coquit- OPPOSED RIDE : lam, British Columbia. . Security men had advised In Red Deer, Alta, against the cable car ride. Caouttte — In Labelle riding, | Quebec. ||SUNDAY Pearsen—In Ottawa. Diefenbaker — In Prince Al- ' “We'd really love to ride on a cable car,” she told San Fran- | cisco Mayor John Shelley. ‘But lit doesn’t look as if our security men will let us.” The princess, sparkling in a Douglas — In Burnaby-Coquit- silver-and-white dress and coat Thompson—iIn Red Deer. |and a big black mink hat, re- ceived the keys to the city of Caouette—In Villeneuve, Val San Francisco at the mayor's d@’Or, Malartic, Rouyn, Que. MONDAY (Election Day) Pearson—In Ottawa. office in the city hall. . The mayor gave her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, a minia- Diefenbaker — In Prince Al- | ture ‘arte cable car. bert. And Lord Snowdon made a Douglas - In. Burnaby-Coquit-|complaint similar to -his wifes about riding the cable cars which rol! up and down the steep hills of San Francisco. lam. Thompson_-In Red Deer. Caouette—In Rouyn. research projects. The exercise covered an area from Newfoundland in the north to Myrtle Beach, S.C., and_ west to the Mis- sissippi River. Windsors leave. | N.Y. On Liner A police spokesman sald their NEW YORK (AP)—The Duke search of the passageways was) hampered by the ‘lights going of Windsor, who said he was on and off.’ A theatre official feeling fine, and the duchess, said the switch for lights in the | sailed for France Friday aboard | passageway was located in the the liner United States. The for- power room. |mer’ British monarch, 71, came | During Mr. Diefenbaker’s | Chnet 33 Sic tee Texel = speech to about 2800 people im | geon who last December per- the nearly - filled theatre, his | formed an abdominal operation , voice faded out several times. on the duke. HON. J. WATSON Mac- _ bulidozer whicit he used to turn Naught; federal—minister—of the.sod yesterdaymarking the_ mines and technical surveys, beginning of construct- ion on the P.E.1. causeway- is seen at the controls of the bridge ‘ 3 ~errt fer Premier Discourits Invitation Claim : | Premier Walter R. Shaw last | public OURS> tedster “told us |night discounted a statement yes-| when we called him “Thursday |terday by Federal Mines Minis- | a that he appreciated. the 'ter Watson MacNaught that rep- | call and ‘would: likely” be at the resentatives of the Prince Ed- sod-turning. “The statement !s inaccurate,” the premier said. ‘A man from Mr. MacNaught’s office phoned Mr. Matheson just to suggest that | Bayfield, N.B. the minister attend. No official Mr. MacNaught, who is Lib-| invitation was extended to me eral candidate in Prince County, |or my cabinet.” said “but we did get phone-calls|. Premier Shaw sald, “this {sa to both the New Brunswick and most.extraordinary thing in view Prince Edward Island cabin of the fact that the causeway . aS a. matter of fact, the Hon. | project is so important to Prince Philip Matheson, the Island's | Edward Island.” | ward Island cabinet had been in-| |vited by telephone to attend yes-| |terday’s sod turning ceremony \for the P.E.1.-N.B. _Causeway at the ceremony were Hom. _W.W. Meldrum, a over Taptaae, erect Skew tient eral of New Brunswick; ~ There were no Andre hard, New Bruns of the Prince wick minister and Hon. government present, bil 7 as