oo ang eg If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It - “--org Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” HARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1965. Che Guardian WEATHER Cloudy with a few scattered showers; winds southwest 15. Low-high 45 and Sie. . Thursday: cloudy and cool, " Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS 22 PAGES SHARP CONTRAST Crowds Pack Stations | To Cheer Diefenbaker | crowds varied from six to ,; By STEWART MacLEOD bert for Mr. Diefenbaker's five. | sharply tic meeting of the western cam- and Glory. Drowning | Cheering Rhodesians stand fn the rain at Salisbury air- port Tuesday to welcome don with the British govern- best interests of Rhodesia the | ment on Rhodesia's hopes for independence. Smith told a it was in sharp contrast to | Dew appearance. CHARGED Smith Promises. | Early Decision SALISBURY (AP) — Prime “‘Oncé they realize the die te Minister Ian Smith said Tues cast they will become more rea- * day on his return from fruitless sonable and responsible.” negotiations in London. ‘'I think He told a press conference he SWIFT CURRENT, Sask.{and. at one point the special minute stop. _" |T would take an even bet'’ that wants a few days to collect his 4 a4 (CP)—Spurred by local organi-|train ‘war running 10 minutes More than 400 were on _ |Rhodesia will be independent thoughts; but “I feel that, in the 3 si BS Ie Se ae zation, Conservative Leader|ahead of schedule Swift Current, along with |from Britain by Christmas. | interests of Rhodesia, the sooner . 7 aT Dief - cori whale etapelag | “Following the’ most enthusias- ladies -choir—to greet the smil- Hundreds of cheering support- a decision is made’ the better. RHODESIANS WELCOME PRIME MINISTER tag lender wilt Laet he ere—simost ail white—stood in| He sald be would have some |a drenching rain. to welcome’ talks with his ministers immed- | Smith back to this central Afri- ately. news conference he wanted a the better. Monday when campaign organ-| pousiInG WELCOME They ‘ellie ter: tad 6 | eae cide — Prime Minister Ian Smith on few days to collect his (AP Wirephote by cable from |izers were openly tisepcolated | While the first stop, at Mort- ence from Britain and shouted: the African-Asian bloc,’ Smith his return from talks in Lon- thoughts but said that in the Salisbury) with ae ee ee en near Moose Sm, boone John H. Campbell, former |. ‘Good old Smitty.” said, a pemeee: Lesheieen |out only four persons—' director of the Ontario Secur- | Men, women and children| “They are ready to give us i. : ‘no idea, the Chief was aboard,” | : ities Commission, has | joined -im-- singing For He’s a independence on condition we s. At oer naa volition (ear ene rousing welcome | a CS ) e- charged with committii® 4 Jolly Good Fetlow as Smith i sutrender our inde- x complai t were wait the next stop, \ breach of trust in connection ‘emerged from his airliner. He pendence... . A Calson a eS EC lon Old about Mr. Diefenbaker’s arrival "ie: pen walled wid with the trading in 1964 of smiled broadly and waved. : , until minutes. before the train some 200 cheering supporters | shares of Windfall Oils' and Britain wants to keep control WANTED REFERENDUM came through. jand -Mr. Diefenbaker stood .be- | 5 Mines Ltd. Ontario Attorney- until Smith's government takes| “The British government z s Only 13 people were waiting in fore the band and ditected it | = General Arthur Wishart also | steps that would assure eventual! Wanted a referendum to decide 4 Regina Monday for the train's | through: a march. OUrIS announced Tuesday a third (rule by the Negro majority.) f we wanted independence,’’ he s ‘ |15-minute stop. Mr. Diefenbaker| High school students were | fraud charge has been laid | Britain, with backing from the| %#id. “They wanted this referen- 8 remained on ‘the platform for there by busioads, and the Can- | against Windfall promoters United States and various other) dum to be on the basis of one , ive minutes before going back | servative leader told them that. SOURIS — Walter Joseph (Al-| George and Viola MacMillan | countries, have threatened to | ™an.—one—vote.” ‘into his car for A press Cig Loe will make your contribu- jlan) MacDonald, 54, of Souris, | (CP Wirephoto) é#mpose an economic boycott He ruled out the possibitity of QUEBEC ‘CP)—Prime Minis: premier to talk to the press and |shortly, but not before the Nov. | ence. ; (oe te a greater Canada.” idrowned early last evening | ; ‘against Rhodesia M it seizes in-| further talks with the British’ ter Pearson made his first elec. \drove 16 miles down the south |8 election. a aw . More than’ 250 waited at Her * itt here. T | dependence. | government “unless something tion campaign foray into Que- shore of the St. Lawrence to| “Whatever we in government |_ During ae acian — pea ig of eat| Means est | completely unforeseen, revola- bec Tuesday, meeting privately [Lauzon and a tour of two busy \can do to keep these yards going | sboak 7:16 caattaand te te ta — -| Rej ed | WOULD AFFECT BRITISH _— tionary or dramatic happens. with Premier Lesage for 45 min- |sbipyarde that lasted almost twu tne. should do and we will do,” . ae ed the victim slipped and fell oa eject | But such a boycott would af-|. Smith confirmed he had beer utes and touring shipyards at /hours. ip ae : told-200'men gathered around Ww us-— oe ecg a-boat which | a i ae __ {feet the Britioh economically approached by the U.S. in an nearby Lauzon. | He had ‘to field a battery of /him jn the cafeteria of the Davie ; he was attempting te board. cin Med care: “too: and:-Smith-c-0-m-m-e-n-t-e d:-|Genbinued on. page.7, col. 4) _ wai sch, hn em omnes meer ae beige LiPo, Se | ei aan aeee ssl veNoints Canada Ready To Join ‘ shipbuldig °subeidy program. "Easier “Mr. Pe arson w Sitah) and fete saw die devoan-|LeNancsh, heath aad, wwskfore anada Ready To Join + Confederation of National Trade learly this year to sit in the he is sympathetic with the ship- a “v ~Quebec premiers” and avoid di- ~ Quebec Voters Are Urged iv -60 “er leaders said their goodbyes in a |shipbuilding subsidy program, | suspended last February ‘pend. ing a review of the policy, in- troduced during the former Con- servative administration- | Sidestepping definite prom: | rect participation in the federal jises, Mr. Pearson said a deci-| After the first .short run, Mr. campaign. a sion on a new shipbuilding sub- Pearson took over the controls The prime minister left the ‘sidy program will be announced ; Easlier Mr. Pearson was taken on a tour of the shipyard aboard an electric golf cart driven by Takis Veliotis, vice- president and general manager of Davie Shipbuilding. corridor outside Mr. Pearson's motel suite but he later told a press conference he will follow what he called ‘the tradition of Picks Up Steam ’ Cuban refugee centre ia Miami repo that since Cae tro’s Oct. 3 offer to ‘‘let them go,” 47 Cubans have registered at the centre, including two boatloads who came with the the: Communist is dictator's blessings, another ar- To Elect Liberal Gov't. QUEBEC (CP)--Prime Minis- jof Quebec, to help the rest of | Former justice minister Fav ter Pearson called on Quebee Canada share in the aspirations |reau drove a second cart-with voters Tuesday night to help jof French-Canadians as they re- |Postmaster - General Tremblay elect a majority Liberal govern- | model their social, political and ‘and Senator John Connolly ment Nov. 8 and said he firmly (economic institutions,” aboard, following the prime believes that French-Canadians | A crowd of about 1.000 per- minister. The carts, operated by “have an important part to | sons overflowed the 750 seats in (batteries, have a top speed of play in shaping the policies a mid-town auditorium and stood about 10 miles an hour and are which govern our country.” |five and six deep along the back |used to take company officials soe, oe I _— rey iof the hall. ne —_ sdtiaeat tamed i. re; to ask you to have t tandees ; ning in Canada,” he told a Liberal naka Mocett ae sate le | Davie Shipyard, a smaller op- rally in support of Jean Mar roe Diefenbaker government leration owned by. Canadian chand, former president of the |.4, quit the Conservatives Vickers Ltd., Mr. Pearson said Fe2* 2s é [ E a! fi guard said it had-icastro militiamen, and other lrefugees coming via Mexico Unions and Liberal candidate in [Go Quebec West. riding. ste a ee Mr. Pearson, who delivered most of his 1,400-word spee independent. |Duilding industry's desire to get. \Mr. Baleer is not oe re |@ decision ‘soon on the aabte. election in his home riding of |_ After his shipyard tour, Mr. | Trois-Rivieres. sr shoes to — “ pra ie i river ferry ‘from is a milies. . wat at the, mecting “oe nae ‘or (Paid brief visits to Rev. Georzes | A federal official said a reply | the uncommitted vot r this \Grandbois, vicar-general of the was expected ‘‘momentarily” | paca to iRoman Catholic archdiocese, |from Castro to a where they could find a small boat to get their friends. and fiddians desire a “full a tive part’’ in shaping the le delivered | report | Splash, and later saw the deceas-|LaMarsh, health and welfare ‘ed floating in the water. | minister, Tuesday told the Lib- | Dr..G. ‘Enman, of Montague,/eral Business Men's coroner for King's County, pro-|Toronto that medical jnounced the victim dead on ar-| means test wouldn’t work. |rival at the scene. He said a post | She | mortem will be performed today.| way of determining who needed 185 Tes ane Short Walk. WASHINGTON (AP) dent Johnson, following | orders, ventured outside his hos- pas cor | |pital room Tuesday for the first | plans. | | | be covered | time since his operation Friday corridor. | Johnson was troubled by .gas | pains, but a spokesman said that in a service medical plans, |is normal and ; f assume that | iand a_ kidney. stone removed | in four of the popula- | been Ra ifive days before. br has no aneeey for pee : jon in Ss crucial area?” fed. inteavennersiy til Montap:| She said it was this factor and late solid food for breakfast. He|?0t 4 desire for socialism that | lhad chipped beef ‘ |prompted the Liberal . govern- | a ones tea “ ae aad to demand universal cov- | : ‘erage for provincial plans if the) | aie Boe socretar¥> | plans are to receive federal fis- | Bit D. Moyers, said Johnson | cal assistance equal to one-half } |gpent a quiet morning, with fio|the national per capita cost. | * of). no } | OTTAWA (CP) — Canada is economie (Commomwesith nations f ‘Re by private | vor, | Readiness now to apply Alberta, which uses the ‘measures illustrates the govern- | lriving after a shoot-out with | and strolled unaided down the voluntary approach, % per cent | ment's ‘ erneen tee. Week saat aes the population was not cov- ‘desian the provincial, private! which has had the In Economic Sanctions in-|- Sonrees- said. that-.failure—by \Camada to do what tt could te lback this declaration would be idesia declares itself independent looked upon by non-whites eve cee |as hetrayal. a * DANGER SIGNS AHEAD Canada has not looked on eco) In the view of many officials nomic sanctions against Any inere relations between whites jcountry with any particular fa-\ang non-whites generally will become more dangerous in the such |years ahead than the cold war \prepared to apply {sanctions -against Rhodesia serious view of the Rho |has been and could lead te situation, a problem ‘breakup of the Commonwealth. h almost con-| Mr. Pearson said more than stant attention of the external |~ year ago Canada* would not affairs: department for nearly |recognize Rhodesia as an inde- three years. — pendent country on the. latter's The problem is looked on here ‘own say-so unless majority rule almost entirely as a racial one. was instituted. He repeated this The ‘white government of Rho Monday. o desia, representing about 230,-| Arnold Smith of Canada, the 000 whites, has so far strangled |\Commonwealth’s new secretary- the voice of 4,000,000 blacks. general, has said: ‘‘The divi- Prime Minister Pearson has siop of humanity between the declared that majority rule— white and other races. which one man, one vote, regardless | coincides not completely, but ‘of color—must prevail in Rho too closely for comfort. with the desia before it can become conr division between the affluent in- ‘visitors except his wife and| of Canada. jcountry.” He left halfway o44 Rt. Rev. Russell F. Brown, (Friday through the Swiss em | close aides. “In my travels acroge the ‘trough Mr. Pearson's speech. /aysiican bishop of Quebec. = g + country, I have become intreas- | ton the platform. “He also called at city hall for ingly aware of the considBrable |S¢ a few feet from Mr. la chat with Mayor Wilfrid | interest ‘shown by\ the wpst of |Peanson, was Louis St. Laurent, jh, 16], | % Canada towards Qyebecy’ he |83 -/ year - old former Liberal |———~— i said. \ prime minister who retired jfrom politics shortly after his ASKS UNDERSTANDING igovernment.was defeated in the | if “The interest is sincere -and |1957 election. | there is much sentiment . for | Mr. Pearson drew ~ — | See Pope $ Vis t Qhebec’s. legitimate aspirations. |applause of his speech when he We have efien asked the teat legaetred to the Lberal gover: | ANS Propaganda of the country .to understand |ment’s achievement in estab TORONTO (CP)—The Asso whet is: going_on.in Quebec.) lishing “le nouveau drapeau na- ciation of Regular Baptist _"T am asking you, the jtional”—the new Canadian flag (Churches (Canada), speaking Dougla B. bers, Tuesday passed a resolu- Medicare Plan Baptist Group tion describing Pope Paul's trip _|to New York last week as "a propaganda visit.” : The résolution, passed at the iclose of a twoday convention here by the association which counts 2 Canadian member churches, said: — “This convention regards with alarm the invitation and recep- tion given at the United Nations’ He said that even if a national | | medical care plan ‘‘costs more, CALGARY (CP) — T. ©. Douglas. national leader of as a propaganda visit designed to break down resistance to the Vatican council’s ecument- cal program for world. domina- f Ne’ Democratic Party, sa lit is a small price to pay t©\to the Pope of the Church of Tuesday that Social |have healthy” people.” Rome who claims to be world Leader Robert Thompson shoull; 4. productivity increase of |arbiter. take another look at the Hail |«‘one per cent alone would pay, “We consider the recént visit commission report on hea | sor medicare.” jof Pope Paul VI to New York services. he Mr. Douglas was asked ~ press conference about mark by Mr. Thompson t to & per cent Canad Measure a govert tion. not need pel 2 ment can undertake ‘‘as the So-| “Because we believe that the care insurance jal Democrats saw it years ultimate goal of the World Coun- ‘cil of Churches and the Church “Tf Mr. Thompson w the Hall report he wil! cent of Can partially covered,”’ * said. ‘The percent. comletely covere’ = 2. National parks have to be jof Rome is to effect a one-world intained for the Canadian |church, under the papacy, we and not turned gma a aman Chris- onky- glorified . mid- tians our dominion to ear ae — ie nestly contend for the faith * 3,500,000 ‘iadioke are (Which was one delivered unto | QUEBEC (CP)—Prime Minis- ter Pearson said Tuesday night that only “one word from Que- bec’’ is needed to bring about f | a re-examination of the Fulton- Favreau constitution - amending formula. The formula was. developed. | ministers—one Conservative and jone Liberal—and would bring the right to amend the Cana- dian’ constitution to Canada from the United Kingdom. All provinces except Quebec have approved the formula. In Quebec, the plan has .been at- tacked violently by the Union Nationale, provincial opposition party ; Mr. Pearson was asked in an” interview whether, because of | this opposition, he feared the formula would be brought up by federal opposition parties in Quebec as an issue in the cam- paign for the Nov. 8 general election. = : | The Liberal party leader re- “It hasn't been thought : He was then asked whether he would bring up the formula +himself, mentioning it as an} | achievement of hi¢ government. | “IT have spoken of the Fulton- SS : 'the saints’ and to have no ‘There are othe ed up’’ with the old line Pat- fellowship with the ecumenical Favreau formula as being the. of" ‘disabilities °s, & poll shows, program.” object of a unanimous agree tm pay” for r . The NDP platform adve| Association President Lindsay ment to repatriate the Canadian not covered es a business and indus-|Howan said his group is affil- constitution in @ manner satis- Under p development corporation to ted with the Iniérnational \factory to all,” he replied. acherres, th L. inte ae lor dees Council of Christian Churches Farmers bound for the in- ern outskirts of Metropolitan steam enue, car _, | if hg ef hee tere ate covere . ailable and with the. Canadian Coun- match .. tor.. Match opens urday |tmuta’s method of “repatriating” | not be cr. ent: and a manpower train-icil ot- Evangelical Protestant | *etational plowing at Toronto, arrived at Toronto's nq continues for three days. the. conetitution did not satisty quid _ program, ~ \Churches. | Markham, om the northeast: mew city hall Tuesday by “(CP Wirephote) |everyone, would he change it? | ens =... + eat es ati its - cao eee = 2 - vs - a sh i i \ : 5 = \ a , eas id ' tor = an : ee ‘~ *% - b, ~ —<S os i in . remy le lined tote LTT Ey, pnt is o- a0 a =i we ye He Ba: $6 x et Se eee ale 6 a2 ere om ee — Ea Pearson Says Formula Can Be Re-Examined S.i-7:.< |by two former federal justice ————— 'dustralized peoples and the poor underdeveloped peoples, is, I ithink, the most difficult and po- (hes wor dangerous problem in the world.” The heads of the Common wealth governments said in a statement after their meeting last June that they were ‘‘ir ence by the government of Rho- idesia, and further reaffirmed “Up to now it has not been their insistence on the principle shown that this method is not of majority rule.” satisfactory. We are awaiting a ~~ [DARE word from Quebec.” aa that oP stings ye New Comet Visible Here Today changed, ‘‘we will take M into HAMILTON, N.Y. (AP) — A consideration and. discuss it." . Yank Units ® Hit Hard newly-discovered comet, bright as the stars of ithe Bic” Dinser; AN KHE. South Viet Nam should be visible today to most . (Revters) — American units, residents of the eastern United which Monday night were re- States and Canada. a scientist portéd to have two North Viet- se'd Tuesday. pamese battalions trapped,| The Ikeya-Seki comet. first came under a fierce counter-'Sizhted Sept. 28 by two Japan attack by Viet Cong guerrillas ese amateur astronomers, Tuesday and suffered an unde- Promises what Colgate Univer- termined number of casualties. Sity astronomer Anthony F. ate asian as —_—- Aveni foresee as. “the most colossal celestial spectacle of LeadersOn 2", S n Pari of that spectacle, Aweni ; said. may he the death dance of the spiralling comet as it Hustinos passes within 20,000 miles of the sun Oct. 21. TODAY | “It could be broken up inte _ Pegrson—Gu- >) and Oril- |amaller units.” Aveni said. “In lia, Oat any event, -fter one pass at the Diefenbaker — Whistle sun, it will) be gone forever, stopp:-~ ‘rom Medicine Hat. (never to return.” to Lethbridge. | Aveni, who directs the Colgate Douglas — Dauphin, Man- Observatory, said the comet, and Yorkton, Sask. bmg a tail millions of miles -. Thompson — Whistie-. |long, would rise ‘today in the stopping through Alberta’s (eastern U.S. and Camada ‘at Bow. River and Acadia rid- about 7 am. ADT. At oie ia he said. it will be 10 degrees aou — Sherb: e, south of the sun's position os Que. ithe horizon, ; penden Rhodesia. Even Bet By . Christmas «f°