i je. cae oe « By NEIL MATHESON A Hazelbrook zirl,-Miss Paula Coady, Princess, over the activities of the Jer- | _ Sey breeders at the Reyal Win- | if W's Good For The slanc The Guardiants For Hazelbook Gi FS Canadian Jer t&_presiding as Jersey | for-Canada this week | ter Fair. Miss Coady and her | oa or It | Lf to Toronto Monday- Miss Coady was offered the post of national Jersey princess | %- @ year ago, but had to turn it down because of her studies at Prince of Wales College. This yeer she was able to accept it, _ though she is still a university student at PWC.- Paula is a natural choice for a, national Jersey prinéess. The ysome Hazelbrook lass not only has been an admirer of she also developed a fine herd of Jerseys on her own: The Coady herd is known im the Maritime. as well as here}. on P.E.1. One of her heifers showed earlier this month. af the Atlantic Winter Fair.in Hali- . fax. Last year one of the Coady- heifers won the Jersey fu- stakes which had been Organized Prince men. Se la started ber herd with Edward Island Jersey + Jersey calf as.a 4H Club mem- when she was only 11 years - of “age. She has never looked back : Her 5 le Acme S. Claud-| ' : | Doberty,i “OTTAWA.(CP) .— es and arranged by/|) = Dou PAULA conformation score of 83—that’s | that the cattle show much as high as an animal that age can go. ? A serious young Jersey breed- | she er, Paula told “The Guardan” | them when sey Princess COADY when evening; inds light northerly. Low- 30 $a. Weiteoday. msmay. coal a o.Re « GES Se 16 PA . ur f -* Ba ting MPs Pep i ; i i Cripple Due To La Fila. (AP) , —Gemini 12's calm, ¢ool space- | Fuel became a precious item, hat” Gemini 12 got the ~“go- 7 ahead” for the full, ee __¥oy, to end in the At- tawhe Oces at 2:22 p.m. EST today. Its pilots spent Monday afternoon taking pictures “and conducting experiments. Pilot Edwin E. (suzz) Aldrin Boost Veterans Pen Spaceship nd Today me spent outside, feet with the " |COSTLY IN. FUEL Afterwards, Lovéli -sald: “That _was_a—pretty_expensive EVA (extravehicular activity) in the way of fuel” Within. minutes, something went awry in the third i jet. “We're running out of thrusters,” Lovell said. i ivi ae i f ft gt feared I g% ‘ll 2% a | epee ! L i —" ; % 3 tf a | F i | i : i - a _ a ~ *» e 10 E i it il wee ed i ¢ } | ‘5,20 - ada's ‘ , re ‘ Groun ' MONTREAL (CP) — Air Can- entire fleet of 86 aircraft An airline spokesman said all the aircraft are being nes‘ed down_-in Canada except one nada Planes which was rerouted to London earlier in ‘the day on a flight} jem Parks Dine © developed’ Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg and_ Vancouver. 5 3 ‘The strike against Canada’s largest airline began at 4 p.m. EST when pickets of the In‘er- ists were set up across the coun- try. The walkout was reported to be orderly in all centres. It was 5 p.m. im the Mart times and 1 p.m. local time in Vancouver as the strike began simultaneously at all points on directions from the Montreal | The official announcement of the strike syved their jobs with, Air Can- vill : : ! 3 8 7 2 8 3 i im EE syed li rfielt tl ; a : : li a8 z 9 i £ tl He a g z , i fs i £2 F i af [ f 98 f Li i i | i | # i nine TAM’s last ‘ing a final offer from the union. 4 " to Ottawa immediately talks. When the deadiine drifted by, Air Canada officials were blam- ing the union for ending all EST’ Monday. |hope of an 1lth-hour settlement Monday and sending its bar- , caused the stalemate by re ss Postal Delay Only Minimal OTTAWA (CP) — The strike by 5,200 Air Canada mainien-’ employees, scheduled for jlate Monday, will cause only minimal delays in movement of “Mir. Diefenbaker wh his glasses, peered out o (RING Mice For WI Namec Hon. Daniel J. MacDonald, Minister of Agriculture has an- nounced that Mrs. Julian Her- pointed Acting Director of Ho- men’s Institute work in the pro- vince. Mrs. Herring's appointment is effective as of November 14, 1966 and she will be available =e , Wednesday and Fri- ~_ Mr- Diefenbaker_received _} Most applause when. quoted from speeches made in Tast ‘PM Lists ee ee 1Prioriftes " OTTAWA (CP)<Three major bills ‘must be pasted by the Commons before debate. starts The ringing of the cash reg- ister could be heard by dele- gates 50 feet away. AE i t QUEBEC (CP) — A funeral , Quebeé Wed- ‘ried im 1908 3. Completing ¢lause-by- clause study of the medical care approved in OTTAWA (CP)—Ptemier Ro- Murder Charge Laid In N.B. HAMPTON, N.B. (CP)--Lay- iton Ralph Boyd, 60, of_ Poco- , N.B., was charged Mon- day with the capital murder of Frank Edward Boyd, 64, of igibtyl: i = ¥ 7 To Needy And Disabled OTTAWA (CP) — Increased: parties said the increases didn’t ,creases will be welcomed a8 pensions for disabled and needy | go far enough, = far as they go by the 4,000,000 war veterans were announced! George Chatterton (PC — Es- | Canadians, veterans: and their today by Veterans Minister | quimalt-Saanich) said an im- | families, affected by the rates. Teillet. crease of 15 per cent in disabil-| But he was certain the >ro- He told the Commons there |ity pensions is “totally inade-j posed rates would not satisfy @ill be a 15-per-cent boost in dis- | quate” and will be rejected by |the requests by the Royal Ca- ability pensions, retroactive te | veterans. The “soaring cost of jmadian Legion and other veter- Sept. 1 of this’ year- living’ had not been taken inte Og in, a he ecg The. veterans’ - pension rate account. permissible maximum 1m- will rise to $105 a month from| The minimum pension rate |come would not allow many $9! for single persons and to|for any disabled veteran should veterans to receive the old age $175 from $161 for married re-| bring an income equivalent to | pension payment when they be- cipients. There new levels, ote |e towel of decked ber oe ‘ isso See ee ee ; REVIEWS | sioners are allowed before their | imadequate the increase in the lio take the question of review- pension is reduced from the |™maximum allowable imcome. ing: pension rales out of par-|. maximum level also. was re-| H. W. — |tisan polities. There should be} vised. Kootenay West) said the im/a rate review at set intervals. For single sioners, the in- - A. B. Patterson nT geome —c etn 2 —soes- to $145 ge pete Aw “said -he hoped met menthly from $133. For married INSIDE TODAY creases would “go much far- vet*rans, it goes to $245 from) jog 2 ther” than the-interim boosts. eo aefcee There was no reason why @& ” Mr. Teillet said the increases — W. Honaceasen +++ 3 | veteram, in effect, should have. will add $20,500,000 a year to|, Eéileriahe Seeeeecees oo to lose $75 a month from his disability pension payments and'|. SenOrua’s ...---.--:..% -- & | pension when his wife became $16,000,000 to war veterans al- oe Queens, City ...... 5 | eligible for the old- age pen lowances. Z OMENS -------.---eeseee 7 | sion. ” Cheques covering the in- Finance, Markets ........ 1 - This was supposed to be « erease, along with retroactive = Serene ne eee universal pension paid by the payment, would be mailed be-| (TTT i government and a Veteran ; Classified ..........-: should mot have to pay for his fore Christmas.—— fSipokesmes fer aii eppositio® Halifax business woman, hoists gavel on being elected president of the Progressive Conservative Women's Asso ‘ ~ CONSERVATI VE WOMEN’S ciation at Ottawa Monday. Aulay defeated Miss Kaye McFarland, Napanee, Ont, PRESIDENT ey . ; vice-president of Old Chief Packs Hall” . 90 Minutes Before Talk OTTAWA (CP)—The old chief Maloney For President.” still draws them. - | The Camp supporters tried to Ninety minutes before Cen- | tear down one of the red, white Leader Diefenbaker | and bite banners; but it was | |was scheduled to address his ‘hoisted again, torn but _un- party’s annual meeting Monday | bowed. The Camp. colors: are night, the convention hall in the | blue and: white. Chateau Laurier was plugged to} The ‘annual. meeting had‘ rout- Rs sit doorways. line business to go through be- Camp or Maloney signs, | Camp placards out- | 2 to 1. At normal political conven- jthan* full during such business |preceding the leader’s -address. |HALL FILLED EARLY Ti this case, however, sup- porters of the two factions filled ithe main hotel ballroom long’ before Mr. Diefenbaker’s ar- rival. Each- tried. to prevent the i faction said his would hold a demonstra- only as a “defensive meas- group supporting re-elec- tion of Dalton Camp as national ing. Mr. Maloney-was-the -first- of \the principals to arrive, but the jcheers of his supporters were idrowned out by “We Want |Camp” demonstrators as. he tee 5 his — but | threaded his way te the plat- fime for a chagge ‘form. ee leadership. | The Camp men kept this. up ’ \for three minutes, until Mr. a ietieny, se peat: | CAMP himself showed up and a chant, “We want ™oved to the front of the hall, wy where he shook hands with Mr. ~ : { Malone: supporting Arihur | y- a daaller chant The two raised their arms to on behalf of its candidate, but the crowd. For the next 20 min- drowned out with “Go utes the walls shook with shout- Go.” - é | ing. group got to the| The meeting began 20 minutes hall first with -big|late, with Mr. Camp im ‘the > they. Camp Given Support a By Ontario Premier — the —crowd- carried | fore Mr. Diefenbaker’s~ speech. |: tions, the _hall is more empty | other from packing the meet- Mr. Camp said he tried“ to de - all he had been to do as president. Ne “Including stabbing the leader?” somebody the floor. ax as a possible third candidate for the of the Progress- | Canada. : . Eagleson. 33, tn Mr. pers ~he~-was~ oe voting delegates about running . Tor. whe