It It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It who Comptroller WEA West Winds i “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Authorised on Second Class in!) 03 Department. Ottawa. and 'u plymsn' the Post Offlo- of put-go in out Ford Continues Worker Layoff DETROIT (AP) — The Ford Motor Company paid off 1.500 more workers Monday nigill. bringing its total layoff to more than 70.000 because I a car- parts shortage it blames on es. At Ford's Oakville. Ont. plant. some 8.000 workers have been laid off because of parts short- ages, and layoffs were expected to begin at Windsor. Ont. today. VOL. LXXVII. N0. 283 Get Underway; GENEVA (Reuters) — Til negotiations got under way] onday with 17 major tradingi countries submitting lists of re-l quested exemptions from the proposed 50-per-cent tariff cuts. Canada and Czechoslovakia were alone among the 17 in not. CBS said Monday in Moscow. submitting exemption lists. ln-i' Shelepinisafast-rising young Fte‘f'd- can“? “3"? a 115‘ °f Cami-ape”..me secretary itariff concessmns it was pre-. Shelest was previously only a lPal'ed ‘0 make and CZEChOSlO'l candidate member of the Dr... lvakia submitted a “special ad sidium. Soviets Elevate 3 To Presidium equal linear tariff reductions‘ might not provide an equa bal- ance of advantages to countriesl such as Canada which have spe- economic or trade struc- MOSCOW IAPl — A month party secretary specializmg In - ' after ousting Nikita s. Khrush llighi and chemical industries. hg‘terlvgg‘gn fiflfihgfififig‘l 325.2. ‘2:...:iv*::m.‘;in':"2r l became a member M if dele-l vated three of its leaders to its Ithe presmmm' gale John Evans sald' highest council Monday and de- l creed important personnel and policy changes. The actions. taken at a one- day secret meeting of the com- mittee. appeared to observers to be an effort by Leonid 1. Brezh l ALEXANDER SHELEPINw left. and Pyotr Shelest, right. have been elected to the all- powerful presidium of the So- viet Communist Party Cen~ tral Committee. official sour- cial tur . I This exemption will also ap-l ply to less-developed countries. The United States, whose late president John F. Kennedy gave Six-Inch Snowfall * nev. Khrushchev‘s successor any first secretary of the party. to Frganlze the party along the ‘ "1:: he wants” . _ Islanders received a sample .Were “Peel-“l '0 "lse ‘0 5°“'l"l exander N. Shelepin. 40. last night of the treat in storeieast 20 miles per hour after! former head of the state secu- rity committee. the secret po- lice organization. was promoted to the committee's ruling presi- dium. He already was a mem- ber of the party's secretariat. for the area in the next fewlmidnight. l months. as a blanket of snow Northwest winds of 25. gust-l descended on the province. ing to 40. are forecast for to-l first measurable snow- day. radio range said' fall of the season began at snow was expected to changel 8:15 last evening. and was ex- to light freezing rain by this? Tariff Talks i. e. - Kennedy Round of tariff-cutting.- ‘Expected In P.E.I.. British MPs CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1964. N0! 1103: THAN SEVEN CENTS Snowflurries clearing by 25 sts to THER evening north- 40. Low-high 27 and 33. Wednesday: snow and milder. l4 PAGES Growing Pension Cost Described To Co n, Slated For Salary Boost Only three other men, including pected to continue until 6 am. morning. _However. Halifaxi LONDON tCPl - Britain's Brezhnev. 0w are members at today. bringing up to about airy/ember office did not meatloaf legislators. often a; both badies. inches of snow. ll‘lln here ‘ the lowest-paid'in the western m... h RCMP and city police 1 reported slippery road an street conditions. although no accidents were reported late ' the night. Traffic tieups oc— ranl'le curred from time to time at Pyotr Y. Shelest. 56. head of the party from the influential Ukraine Republic, was elevated to the presidium from candi- date membership. Pyotr N. Demichei'. 4G. a (Last year's! total In Ch lottetown was measured at 13 inches. The annual average is 107 inches.) Charlottetown radio alliance. may soon find their pay almost doubled. But they still would have a long way to o to mac the Canadian equivalent. rime Minister Harold WiI~ “Mn” “gm “""ds' WhICh intersections. son announced Monday ap- ‘ MP said traffic on the proval of a committee report to $8 highways was extremely light boost the annual salary of a I because of hazardous driving member of Parliament to ay's weather forecast rent £1,750 ($5.250). This in- calls for snowfiurrles with a few sunny periods in the after- noon; maximum temperature, 33. Fire Destroys Summer Home ise Another disturbance x- district k? pected to move into the by tomorrow. The olltloo Snow. of about 87 per cent would be the first in seven A Canadian MP The committee on salaries. established under former Con- servative Prime Minister Sir ec Douglas-Home. aso rec- ommended a sharp boost in the The summer cottage at Kep “as hell advanced and littlel salaries or 'he whine. and ' ‘i ' l ' 1 prime minister. but Labor porch. owned by .Iohn navidicoytld be dopedexcepfl Wm}: 3h; Chief Wilson would accept . _ 00 336 flex 00" Ol‘ .Vlll TY only one-half the proposed in- walker 0' 17 weSt Street Char isl’al‘ks crease for his government. lottetown. burned to the ntroundil . he.- said hm high;1 __.___.___ In about an hour lasl night. jthat the cottage. with four beu\ Desirous of having all its friends share in the birthday celebration today. The Par triot has extended a sincere welcome to the public to at- I.oss included the contents. Mr. Walker estimated the‘ value of the building at $8,000 and said it was covered by in- rooms. was completely furnish, ed and that a refrigerator and g washer. were new about a year: ago. Horsburgr Given Year .Six Persons Injured .EWhen .lrucks Collide l ALBERTON I pital . yesterday aftern ' Campbellton. PEI. In O‘Leary Community Hos-i . and Mrs. Donald of ' injuries. an pital are Mr IHarper and three children. 250139.750) from the cur-'san. Shirley and Timmy Campbellton. Mr. and Mrs. Harper were re- i Mr. I ported in good conditio I an Mrs. both feet. jYank Plan i Inn Mond naissance aircraft su'I‘I‘inceCh I it t n F're De The mama had no. aduallyl is"; iliiisbilii'iig'fingpartlllh: NW. 15. e “'0 e “w l ‘ closed for winter as Mr. Walk- - nartment received the alarm er has been doing I Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet Russell D_ Horsburgh‘ formerdemns. about 9.05 p.m. last night but by the time they reached the scene over slippery roads. the fire Tourist Vehicles Show Increase ‘OT'I‘AWA iCPl—Tourists' ve~l liii-les entering Canada in the some meas-J uring for doors at the place. The, cause of the fire was not known. i Mr. Walker said the cottage had been rebuilt extensively during the past few years since he had purchased it. Light snow was falling when the fire broke out. I l i will make the first cut in the huge cake celebrating the newspaper's 100 years of publication. The Mayor will wield the cake knife in the first floor display window of The Patriot building. 77TH [BIRTHDAY TODAY first 10 months of this year to- talled 7.285.912. up seven per cent from 6,009,373 in the same period of 1963. Ficum for Eastern provinces: Newfoundland and Nova Sco- lia 11.677 (4.4); New Brunswicki 35.93!) llsl; Qu e be c 617,614 .7). Rushed Io LONDON (Reuters) — Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery. the SecondWorld War victor of El Alsmein. was rushed to pital Monday for Investigations by Queen 1 la. and atte beth's own surgeon. by car to the King Ed VII Hospital for officers here for a further check. He was examined by Sir Ar- thur Porritt. surgeon to the Queen. At Montgomery's home, it was said he was expected to be in hospital about two weeks. A member of his household sold the field marshal would be "terribly disappointed" it had to miss Sir Winston Church- ill's 90th birthday party It the end’ of this month. WANTS TO BE 100 “Ned Montgomery's own we. on his 75th birthday. wa to live to 100. The man who led the British an; Army to victory in Africa. of Europe. a chief of Britain's imperial gen- eral staff in the post-war years and then for seven years dep- uty supreme allied commander d ishforce Viscount Montgomery Hospital commanded British forces the invasion in Europe. from active service in 1950. His 50 years as an ectivo commissioned officer was a record not equalled in the Brit- s in the last century. During the First World War. he was so badly wounded in tho- retreat from Mons that a grave was prepared for him. INSIDE TODAY Women's . . Edmortnll Somme l minister of Park Street United Church here. was sentenced Monday to one year in jail on uting to juvenile delinquency. The sentences will run concur- rcntly. ‘ Mr. Horsburgh's 12 - month 'sentence will start as of last‘ Tuesday when he was convicted by Juvenile Court Judge W. H. Fox. The clergyman has said the convictions will be appealed. TRIED ON 8 CHARGES each of five charges of contrib-I BUREAU ‘ OF THE GUARDIAN conscious following the ach- ;snow I l Six persons were sent to ho;- ideal. but two had regained con- lpounds and with a wingspread l “mm “3'95 “tan the four “er it sciousness later in the evening. inf more than 24 inches—.struck : cent Profich "'1 the above esti- l 0011 n e“ : Harper suffered a leg injury' d a cut over one eye. while IMiscouche' was treated M 0- Harper had fractures of e iShot Down TOKYO 'APl—Radio rekingil‘mm Ebbsllt‘el ay an unmanned; American high - altitude recon-‘Plele “’1‘” was ‘ down over soilthcentral i noon, CHATHAM. Ont. lCPl—Rev. The broadcast gave no furlhcrl Alberton Detachment. RCMP. fol- llowillg a two-vehicle collision at i'l‘heir condition was described ormwn '(CP) —- Within 20 years after its inception. the Canada Pension Plan will be costing Canadians more in bene- fits than it collects in contribu- tions. Health Minister Judy La- Marsh said Monday. and reading of the mammoth and complex piece of legislation in the Commons. said the most favorable actuarial forecasts in- dicate contributions combined with investment returns cannot keep the pension fund growing beyond 1995. She said however. the range of estimates furnished by the chief actuary were based on ba sic economic assumptions that sought “to guard against the danger of underestimating the possible cost of the plan." it to all actuarial estimates from contributions. at the 36- per-cent . will longer equal the full cost of the pen- sions being paid. “On some of the projections. for a time more than fill the hue to increase for part Goose Caused ; HIGHER THAN 1985 Fatal Crash l HOUSTON Tex. (APl A ” “‘“d ‘" 199° 1" space agency board confirmed Monday that a goose caused the fatal crash of astronaut Theo- dore C. Freeman. 34. on Oct. 31. All three children were u-n-l The board report said ‘ goose — weighing eight: . on the other hand, the astronaut's plane as it camel gas serious. yin for a ‘ , 11 e Susan, 7. had a fractured logi The board said the goosel ~ and head injuries; Shirley. 6. t l. 1 ft t f [h ‘_ ' thud I had both legs fractured and head 3130:": epribabrlgn 5:.“ :fcfhle i the fund W°“ld Sta“ dwindling. ' Ti .. had . - . ~ ‘ She said “all . . debris went into the air intake. . . fairly severe head andchest in- of the engines_ causing the twoi estimates in d 1 c a t e. Juries. Shirley "has still uncon-gengines to flame out isometime after the plan is 20 The minister. introducing sec- i Miss LaMarsh said it is com- ‘ mo “that by 1985 income to the plan the interest on investments will igap. so that the fund will con- i ti ' at least of the plan's third decade. mate f fund would decline to $5,000,000,- 1990.” Miss LaMalrsh said higher ln- . mate could make the size of the ‘ fund greater but would not alter teaching of a point in the decade of operation where mmons Committee Set To Study Bill lyears old. there Will be a need I to re-assess its finances. | “By that time. experience of *the plan will have made pom {sible considerably more precise lestimates of its costs. "The range of population and economic projections is too ‘ for it to be realistic to try to anticipate now what should be decided more than a generation . hence." I l SOME UNCERTAINTIES : Possible variations in popula- l tion “are the greatest of the un- I certainties which affect the long- . term cost of the plan." she said. One of the sets of projections placed Canada's population in 1990 at 30.000.000 while the other put it at 37,200,000. In 2025 the icorresponding projections would Ibe 40.000.000 and 156.000.000 Projections also figured an un. employment average of five per cent in the first 10 years of the plan and four per cent there.- ’after. Here. the minister. cau- .tioned that what the chief ae- ltuary used as assumptions ‘ should not be interpreted "in any way" to reflect what the government actually expects. Before Miss LaMarsh began her statement. the Commons passed a resolution to set up a l JOlnI Commons — Senate comml ltee to study the bill in detai‘. l "The highest of the chief ac~ l allersecond reading—approval tuary's range of estimates for ill DrinCiplé. h ' 1 at .500, Conservative Health Critic J. slightly higher than for it impossible to'study the bill properly in the few days since the resolution was approved Ind I he bill distributed. Time was ‘needed before committee hear- .ings started. I John Lloyd lL-Halifaxl said it is the special committee's function to study the bill in de- ltail. But Mr. Monteith said that the actuary‘s . the government had again bung- howeiier led the handling of Commons . business. sclous late last night. ‘ l The driv r o the second ve-.‘ hlcle. Albert Joseph Gallant of‘ lLeary Hospital for minor injur- ilcs and later released. e accident occurred about it pm. when the Harper vehicle. [a half-ton 1951 model tnick. col- lided with a three-ton Amalgam . lated Dairies truck driven byf Gallant. The Dairy truck w a s] .tr e ‘ towards Campbellton. . . UNITED NATIONS lCPl—— lwhich even this unhappy border The smaller truck was a corn- Syria and Israel put before thel has Seen." he said. .United Nations security councl Comay said the Israeli mam... The accident. victims were Monday Sharply ClmlliCllllg V9" went into action only after the Syria, Israel Sharply Conflict ln Views 0n Border Clashes utes and a UN cease-fire appeal had been accepted by Israel but ignored by the Syrians. Ashe said Syria accepted the cease- l fire and Israel turned it down. of. . . China taken to hospital by Jelley's . 810"! Ol IGSl We€k 5 mm” ClaSh shelling had gone on for 45 mln- Yanks Withhold ’ left 10 cy's Ambulance. Albertori .wmlnded. ‘ Syria's Ratlk Asha charged the outbreak Friday and Satur- Ambulance of O'Leary a nd dead a nd 87; l are investigating. 18-Inch Error In Altitude i Spelled Disaster For 29 LAS VEGAS. Nev. liner and the bodies of : sons (AP) — Searchers found a missing air- deputies to the ace 29 per- scattered over a snow- swept mountain top Monday. 1 A sheriff's deputy estimated if ‘ ‘0‘" {99‘- Mr. Horsburg-h was tried on‘the Bonanza Air Lines Phoenix- 2. on =- _. to juvenile delinquency. charges of contributing to-Las Vegas flight had been a the foot, and a half higher it would charges involving 24 separate not have crashed Sunday night “is which he was alleged in in ablinding snow storm. killing have committed. He pleaded not guilty to all guilty on three after a 14-day trial. The five charges on which he was convicted involved nine to THESE ARE members it the crew of the Mt Bonanza airliner which crashed into a .' all aboard. 1 The official list of passengers eight charges and was found not I included an H. Will of Calgary The twin-engine propeller-jet HINDI-ll“ near Les Nev. Sunday night lrtll poms. Left to right: V plane lay in three pieces on the “10-foot rocky butte—tall. fuse- w s of the 24 separate sets and‘lage and cockpit—in a 150-ya dealt with juveniles having sex-.line pointing toward its goal: usl intercourse or being advised Las Vegas Meant," “91¢ him I miles northeast. CI”. in. 3 CM- jday was touched off by the in- icursion of an Israeli armored] r unit over the Syrian border. He: said the attack was deliberately ! ,planned as an excuse for ' l Israeli air attack that followed” A . UN Aid 1 l l scribed the air attackl I . _ 1 as brutal. cowardly and al UNITED NATloNs iCPI_. Hellmplel‘s lllled .5“?an 1 “crime against humanity." JThe United 5m“ Monday {on . "9* “3"‘35' Israel's Michael S. Comay‘many carried out a plan to isible on foot. Five bodies werelrephed the Syrian version ofl. . . , .. i . 'WIthhoId its led e for United VlSlble: the others had to be dug l the outbreak was “too absurd :N a t i n “s teghmial assistance “m or snow drifted as deep as for serious allenl.l°“~" Ipending settlement of the crisis said the fighting started lover peace _ keeping “saw "sudden and unprovoked {menu attack" by Syrian guns on s‘ , . Ipatrol travelling in a single ve-' 8mm" also “ “kh h ' l d . her body was.hic]e 31mg 3 mad completelwpledge. but a spo esman sal _ . . - - - - . ‘ ‘ . based on purely that, "l 3 “"0 year Old Within Israeli territory. ,{hehaFl'T‘ was“ t. ‘ m; g illiiarsinti‘legiilesvuhef (Egaligll’lgatf Shortly afterward C o m a y I :ecct2iicawithcogls'itaeilhasmzhantic oi a Bonanza employee who with tdded- Syria“ artillery openemgovernment The Americans in his wife died in the crash . '1.” {mm high ground 0'" their .effect are'rersing to put up This was the fourth .fatal .niaofintlfiebovrgfizvokmgfl V“. ‘voluntary aid money until Rus- plane crash in a decadei1 in the: “This action ran-ks among the sin and France pay overdue mountains that rim to as; M h H I _ g peacekeeping ten”. Vegas valle It raised Nevada's m ‘l m a and an" scale on y' ‘ ‘. Islaughts on the population. Canada went ahead with plane-crash death toll this year to 143. worst in the state's hisg tory. IMoss Plant Operation ’Reporied Broadened CAPITAL RUREAU Because of lhc broadening of OF Till". GUARDIAN the concept. the control and OTTAWA —— The scale and operation of the type of experi- nature of the proposed opera- mental plant now panned is go; of the irish moss plant in regarded as properly the con- F-irst reports were that 28 per- ‘ wilt-if 3 sons died—t rec members of: the plane crew and 25 passen-l ers, h not “I its mmon paper Mr. Robichaud said that the by Mr. Mlcquln'ie. Fisheries government has not received Minilter H. J. Robichlud uld any representations against that plans for the development locating the plant at Mimine- were already well advanced. unit. Honk Fltmtrlck; Co-Pilot Re- hontess M a r y Lee Vegas. Shultz: “win. all of Funds pied ge. Ambassador Paul Tremblay said his delegation was acting "because of our con- fidence that the financial diffi- culties in other sectors of United Nations activities will be equit- ably resolved." on use it be liev ed the aid program! should be maintain The Canadian pledge totalled $7,323.000—the same amount it put up for this year's program and 52.500000 more than it con- tributed for last year's opera- tions Of the total, 35.000000 Will I). allocated for the UN special fund and 52.325000 for the Ex- panded Program on Technical Assistance. The two agencies both deal with technical aid to undcrdevelopcd countries a nd may be merged this year. Canada. along with Japan and ltaly. had asked for postpone- ment of Monday's pledging con- [foran in case it might result in clashes over the peace-keep: in: ISSUP that would endangef chances of a settlement. w I But there were only mild and lindirect references in the larger issue during the session. j Smiet Delegate Nikolai Fed. rcnko announced a pledge iden- !tical with this year‘s contrith- Ilion 2.700.000 rubles. equivalent I Fedorenko's only ’ 1' :the peace-keeping issue was ’ i- 0 been broadened cern of the department of. . - from ll! nI'itlinal concept. fisheries. Mr, Macquarrie had lib: 1:; ":21" “W. Heath Macqusrrte. MP or asked why thr project had been . ’u 9“ m. G .e rem” ens. was informed here transferred from the Atlantic I‘m“ “ ‘5 ye.” “M”. "MAM velopmenl Board to the mum": mm ",could be m Raving to questions placed department only to pay Soviet teatime“ on Co ‘ 0 his country supported lions "carried out in accorda- ‘wnb the charter." . ‘5 t. aldo Monteith asked the min- ister how much time would be