omen W There are many young writers today worth watching--- not aive Hearing In Abortion Case--Page WEATHER REPORT ~ Clear tonight. Wednesday sunny with a few cloudy intervals, reading, just watching. VOL. 91 -- NO, 224 Quebec Vote Contested By UN Man By. THE CANADIAN PRESS Mayor Armand Nadeau of by Alex Muir. Sherbrooke has entered the Que- bec election campaign as a Un- ion Nationale candidate. He said in a telephone inter- view from his home Monday, in night he was urged to run in| the Nov. 14 election by a delega- tion of friends, led by former le finance minis: 'Mr .Nadea';, Samat sikve 1955, Roccsol candidatey ee was an un: for, the pariy leadership at a Union Nationale convention in September, 1961. He had no immediate plans to resign as mayor. His three- year term still has two years to Tun. SUPPORTS PLATFORM Mr. Nadeau affirmed "100 per) cent" support for the party plat-| form, outlined by Opposition) Leader Daniel Johnson in Am- qui, Que., Saturday. | In the Liberal camp, a spokes-| man for Premier Lesage said| the party will not hold nominat- ing conventions in ridings where the incumbent Liberal plans to contest his seat again. TA PULL BURNING DEBRIS FROM BARN Fire In Courtice --Oshawa Times Photo | Boy, 6, Struck 'On City Street, 'Oshawa Resident Foils 'Con Man' | A- smooth-talking con-man, who works by telephone, failed Monday to bilk an Oshaw2 bank depositor out of an undisclosed amount of money. The pattern followed was iden- tical to that used last Tuesday when a man telephoned an un- identified woman depositor of the same bank and cheated her out of $1,245 in cash. The caller, in both instances, posed as a bank official and jasked pertinent questions re- garding the depositor's banking business. This week, the depositor re- fused to permit the mysterious caller to "'send someorie around Destroys Harvest COURTICE (Staff) -- A year's|fire was first spotted by a! harvest went up in smoke here! motorist on Highway 2. this morning as flames ripped) "He drove into. the yard through a storage barn owned honking his horn and when I saw the flames shooting out of About 8,000 bales of hay and the roof, I called the fire de- straw, 500 bushels of grain and partment,' he said. ja seed drill were destroyed.| The Muirs just recently com- There were no animals housed|pleted building a new barn and the building. were planning to move their Bowmanville Fire Chief|cattle fvom the range today. | Thomas Lyle attributed the). cause of the blaze to spon-/ WINTER FEED GONE taneous combustion, He said), pond nee oe wie: Seed there was:no wiring in the bara rdo® Sie Mr' Mutr, trealed for nOeAble fiead "and The'bain was 2 tin building, sbdominal imjuries."" He 'was It marks the third fire at the| held up by wooden frames. The|later taken to the Toronto |Muir farm in as many years.|builder was at the scene andj hospital. : |Last spring, fire razed their| estimated the value of the build-) Mrs. 0. H. Dell, with whom barn, destroying a large num-/ing at about $5,000. | the boy lived, said today there | ber of livestock. "But the contents would be| seemed nothing seriously wrong | Mr, Muir's brother, Harold, worth more than the actual| with him and that he will come who lives next door, said the! building," he said. home Saturday. Hospitalized | in better condition this morn- noon. was taken to the Oshawa Gen- eral. Hospital_where he Keith Carr, 6, of 404 Ritson| count." road north, was reported to be ing at the Toronto Hospital for |Sick Children, The child was |struck by an automobile on |Masson street Monday after- | The car was driven by Hazel | Drodge, 58 Greta street. Keith was Guido In Argentina New Crisis Confronts e to the house to pick up a large |deposit to be delivered to a \Dominion Bank savings ac- Three Officers 'Shot, Wounded Durin Riot |.ST. LOUIS AP) <2 prow po- licemen were shi. and wounded a ae persons banking business have been using 'all kinds of gimmicks" to get it. He said people are warned not |to discuss their banking busi- |ness with anyone representing themself as a banking officer. pertinert questions Oshawa Clearing House Asso. ciation officials warned today that banks do not pick up de- posits for anyone. An OCHA spokesman said that refusing to pick up deposits has been bank policy for many years, Bank employees are not permitted to deliver deposits to accounts for anyone, he said. A Toronto - Dominion Bank official said today that "flim- flam artists" kinds of means and methods to obtain banking information from depositors with the intention of fradulently obtaining money. The spokesman added that depositors' information are trying all - seeking "Bank officers," he said, '"'will not call customers on the tele- phone unless they can positively identify themselves." The bank official sai; Aan of 'many ideas today in the pred fantly Ne- gro suburb of Kinloch as they moved against a mob shouting for the scalp 4/ an officer who killed a youth Suygay, A civilian alsé was. wounded. jgain CARRY RED Vessels Sailing Under U.K. Flag OTTAWA (CP) -- Eight Cana. Mulberry Hill, Sycamore Hill, asking fégarding titers' ban'ies business "is - that | flimflam artists" are using to to information that will result in attempts at fraud. The Toronto Better Business Bureau has recently. been send ing out warnings about this type national charter he announced] of operation. all owned by Halifax-Overseas Freight Limited; Maiden Hill and Streatham Hill, both owned by Acadia Overseas Freighter Limited of Halifax, and the Sudbury Hill, owned by Vancou- ver Oriental Line Limited of Vancouver. The two Halifax shipping lines are linked with I. H. Mathers and Son Limited, a major east dian-owned ships 'have been run- ning. cargo between Russia and Cuba in the last 12 months, a reliable informant says. Some of the deep-sea ships have been operating a regular shuttle service between ports in the Soviet Union and Cuba, the source says. The ships' are owned by Cana- ee registered under the ritish flag. coast shipping Officials 'here believe the ships petit h _-- been i carried Cuban sugar to Russia, ing tabs ah tek ni but they have no knowledge of|CSnadian owned, meee taint, the cargoes hauled from the So- ers in the Cuba-Russia cargo business, viet Union to the Caribbean is- The Streatham Hill, for ex. a ght er Fidel Castro. e° American government, angie, en. tke of od rt of Leningrad last Novem- warning' in recent weeks of a ber and December, then turned Coneaaivn ag Ny in Cube, as been 0 jade its Pre fed rice my up at Havana and other Cuban ports in mid-January until early ---- allies -. ns ot sg ies ships from pa ng March. By May, it was back at Odessa in the Black Sea, return- Russia-Cuba trade. ing to Havana in June and then Santiago in August. GAMAL ABDEL NASSER Broader Arab Rule Started CAIRO (AP)--President Nas- ser has tapped his long-time po- litical aide, Aly Sabry, to head a new collective leadership. as premier, But. Nasser will rejain over-all power as chief of state in the United Arab Republic. In a radio-television address! ty } the mation Monday night.) os. esi: sock said he wanied' to jay 4 aA d fees 20g The Vessels were identified as [aside his administrative duties|s-ocn Fr Cedar Hl: Pie Mit to devote more time to building U.K. Asks Owners what he calls an Arab brand of socialism. Cut-Arms Cargoes LONDON (AP)--The British The National Maritime Union sailing from 5 et ne ae = has ca r a world-wide boycott The other ships have carried cargo between Cuba and such af pies pry - part in the trade en wo countries, 4 ' Soviet ports as Stalingrad, Riga, nsk and Archangel, Three Canadian-owned lines operate the eight ships, the|Murma a 3-Year Teri For Orono Hast May. The mob gathered | outside the Kinloch police station about 10 o'clock Monday night. As the crowd began milling a series of small fires broke out in scattered houses in Kin-| loch, including the new home of The speech was billed in ad- -| vance as filling in details of the government today advised ship- owners to avoid carrying arms to Cuba. Breakin Doukhobors Vow The plea was made by Trans- port Minister Ernest Marples in a letter to the 800 members of the' British Chamber of Ship- Police Chief Roosevelt Hoskins. Firemen from Kinloch -- and neighboring communities were fighting these fires when a fire To Keep Children PRINCETON, B.C. (CP)--The Sons of Freedom Doukhobors, ping. U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk has appealed to NATO members to. shut off the use of schools taught militarism and their ships to transport Com- nationalism. tiary, charges: here Magistrate R. S. Baxter. COBOURG ((Staff)-- Raymond Gallagher, 24, of Ajax,.was sen- tenced to three-year concurrent terms in Portsmouth Peniten- Kingston, on three Monday by Gallagher pleaded guilty two BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Mass)of discontent in all the services resignations Monday night. The resignations from the powerful over the new military leader- Conventions would be held/council of admirals confronted|ship that kicked out the army , Only in ridings held by the op- President Jose Maria Guido command in last week's upris- position or where the sitting Lib-| with a' new crisis today. The airjing, other rebels accused the eral had decided to retire. Forty-three of Quebec's 95 constituencies would thus hold Liberal nominating conventions --40 of them held by Union Na- tionale members, one held by an Independent and two repre- sented by retiring Liberals. The spokesman said the only two Liberals who have given official notice of their intention to resign are Provincial Secre- tary Lionel Bertrand, member for Terfebonne, and Lucien Bel- anger, member for Saguenay. NOT RUNNING? In Montreal, Le Devoir. says there is every indication the So- cial Credit party wil the running. : The newspaper says delegates to a caucus in Ottawa Monday will rally behind Quebec Leader| Real Caouette and stay out of Quebec politics "for the time being." In St. Johns, 20 miles south- east of Montreal, the first sep- aratist candidate has thrown his hat into the ring. Gerard Brosseau, president of the St. Johns section of Le Ra S- d- 1 not enter} force, pledged to his support, jordered an alert of all units for jnew trouble in Argentina. | There were reports of pockets} China, Indian -- Troops Said Still Fighting -- PEKING (Reuters) Chi-} nese and Indian troops were| still fighting today in a battle} |in which three Chinese sentries |were killed- and two officers wounded on the Indo - Tibetan border, the New China news ag- jeney reported today. | | The agency said "Indian| |troops illegally intruding north! | of the so-called McMahon line"| had attacked a Chinese frontier} |guard post west of Che - Jao) | bridge in the Chedong area be-| |tween 1 p.m. and 1:50 p.m.| Monday. | |. The. Chinese claim the area} is on the Tibetan side of the) border. army command of 'holding Guido a virtual prisoner while plotting. a military dictatorship. Gen. Cayo Antonio Alsina, air 'orce commander, announced the alert at midnight. He said: "There are other armed forces which at this time have not defined their allegiance." Gen. Juan Carlos Ongania, now Guido's army commander in chief who led the revolt, agreed with Aisina. Apparently this meant chiefly the navy, although the former war secretary, Gen. Jose Cor- nejo Saravia, remained a bitter holdout against the new direc- tion of the Guido government, ASKS STATEMENT Ongania declared, It is hoped that all armed forces, within | few hours, will ar nounce to all the people that they truly support the national government.' While Guido demanded and got a pledge of support from the navy, Ongania and Alsina showed concern over the action of 25 members of the navy coun- cil of admirals in offering their admirals said they wanted to give Guido's new navy secre- tary, Rear Admiral Carlos Ko- lungia, freedom of action. Guido named Kolungia to replace Rear Admiral Gaston G, Cle- ment. The navy took no part in the fighting last week. But during the revolt the navy blamed Guido for the bloodshed -- a statement for which Clement as- sumed responsibility Monday. The navy tried to force him out in favor of a three-man military |junta. | A navy source acknowledged |"there. is disagreement on lead- \ership."' "But we are not alone. The air force and army are having troubles too." Sources in the other services agreed. Arturo Frondizi was deposed by the armed forces as presi- dent and Guido installed last March because of the military's alarm at election successes by followers of former dictator |Juan Peron. Guido dissolved Parliament and ruled by de- cree, and although he promised new. elections in October, 1963, factions within the army talked openly about overthrowing him in favor of military rule. was reported at the Dunbar ele- mentary school, The frame structure was destroyed. Hoskins, who checked his house on a hunch, found and extinguished the fire. He said he found a two-gallon can of kerosene in the basement. TWO ARE SERIOUS Two of the wounded police- men, Kenneth Armstead, 29, and Hugh Hodges, 26, were in serious condition in hospital. William Rushing, 33, was treated for superficial shotgun wounds and released. So was the civilian, Anthony Williams, 32, who was sitting in a parked car near the mob, estimated by police at 200 to 300 persons. All three officers are white. Wil- liams is a Negro. Armstead and his police dog were at the head of about 50 policemen seeking to control the mob. The shots were fired when a policeman tried to arrest a Negro' woman who was shout- ing insults at the officers, Three Kinloch men were ar- rested and booked on suspicion of felonious assault. The rioters formed outside the police station chanting: "We want Mason, we want Mason," They were referring to patrol- man Isrel Mason, 74, who shot and killed Donnell Dortch, 19, of Kinloch' Sunday, camped 1,000 strong near here, issued a hands-off-our-children warning to the provincial gov- ernment Monday night as spec- ulation grew that the govern- ment might reactivate the New Denver dormitory. school. The Freedomites, reaffirming their determination to join 'our brothers in Agassiz," warned that if their children are taken to New Denver "we are pre- pared to sacrifice everything in their defence." The government placed a number of Freedomite children in the New Denver dormitory in the 1950s when their parents refused to send. them to public schools because they said ihe YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Free basic English classes requested .. Page 9 GM Announces Extended Car Warranty ...... Page 9 Library circulation up during summer .. Page 9 Masons Hold Testimonial _ Dinner Crime Probe Hears Page 9 Denials By Feeley .. Page 2 The Freedomites profess to be a pacifist' sect. New -Denver was closed in 1959 when the Doukhobors agreed to send their children to school. The children who left with their parents on the Krestova- to-Agassiz trek Sept. 2 have not yet enrolled in school. This brought a warning from Educa- tion Minister Les Peterson that the children must go to classes. In a public statement, the Freedomies also said they would not be intimidated "by pl munist goods to Cuba. Marples acted after consulta- tion with Britain's foreign of- fice. His action was advisory only, government sources ex- ained. A foreign office spokesman told reporters that British arms and military equipment had not been sent to Cuba:for the last two years. As far as the Brit- ish government, knows, British ships chartered to carry com- merce from Communist coun- tries to Cuba have also avoided transporting arms. weeks ago at Bowmanville to charges of possessing nitro glycerine, possession of house breaking tools, and breaking and entering the Durham Coun- ty. Farmers' Co-op at Orono. Frank Povinski, of Whitby, was remanded to Oct. 16 when he. will face trial on a break- ing and entering charge arising out of the same incident. Gallagher was discovered on the Co-op premises and was held at gun point. by the man- ager; Gordon Simpson, of Orono. either the police. threats, by im- prisonment, by manhandling or by death." "We are ready for you to make of us soap, baggage, lampshades"--an' apparent ref- erence to earlier comments by the Freedomites that Mountain Prison at Agassiz is 'Canada's Buchenwald."' Scores of their fellows are held there as con- © victed terrorists responsible for arson and bombings in the Koo- tenays. ; The Freedomites agreed Mon- oe day at their Bromley Parrk campsite near here to send their children back to school provided the children are re- turned to the camp each day and are not forced to salute the flag or sing God Save the Queen, os semblement pour 1'Indey ance Nationale, said Monday his "first act, if elected, will be to) refuse to take the oath of al-| y CALL OFF SEARCH TODAY legiance to the Queen," "I will swear allegiance only] to the State of Quebec," he said. "That is, the people of Quebec." Heath Begins Talk On Euromart Entry, BONN, West Germany (Reu- ters)--Edward Heath,. Britain's| chief Common Market negotia- tor, began a one-day round of talks here today on Britain's en.| try into the six-nation commun- ity. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | LONDON--Hope faded today|aboard the plane, including|as strong and rough as they for 16 persons still missing in|eight crew members, are known|were Sunday night when Super- the North Atlantic after the|to have died when the Flying|constellation 932 'crashed into crash of a U.S. airliner carry-|Tiger Line Super Constllation|the Atlantic with 76 persons ing 76 persons. iditchd. Their bodies were re-| aboard. The search was to be called covered, | "On hitting the water, the off later today. All the passengers were U.S.| port wing broke off, taking with A Royal Canadian Navy ship|servicemen and their familjes|it two of the life rafts. that played an important ee the way to West Germany. | "Because the wing re in it radioed an account of the} 'i off, the aircraft stopped dead. plane ditching and the rescue| SENDS THEM AWAY | All the seats on the port side of 48 persons. from the stormy| The British admiralty said the|of the cabin broke loose and seas. | Canadian aircraft carrier Bona-|hurtled forward, Three ships and several air-|venture, which le¢ the search,| 'Those on the starboard side craft continued the search to-|sent the merchantmen on their|remained seeure and in conse- day. Merchant ships that had| way. | quence the injuries to:these pas- sped to the area 500 miles west; The Bonaventure also relayed|sengers was relatively minor. of Ireland after engine trouble|this report of the crash and res-|For those on the port Side it forced the plane down Suaday'cue today: was different. They are cut,| night were told to resume their "There are a total of 48 peo-|bruised, missing teeth and two| voyages. Twelve of the 76 persons)Out here the wind and seas are} what happened after the im- pact. The captain of the air- craft said that he walked through the cabin and that it was clear before he finally abandoned the wreck through the forward escape hatch. "The one life raft, that con- tained most of the survivors, was full of water. But it floated and they survived. "A U.S. Air Force major held his wife's head above the wa- ter in the raft, her shoulder dislocated, and both have bruises' and 'cuts. A young Ger- man girl, married about a year to an American Army sergeant, held his hand as they jumped from the aircraft into the black spray." ple who are miraculously alive.|have broken bones. | Sp | "No one seemed clear on|. The Bonaventure said thejof its four engines quit. Hope Fades For 16 Lost At Sea girl's husband was among the missing. The Bonaventure, the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Owasco and the ocean weather ship of Sta- tion Juliette will continue comb- ing the area for survivors through the day, the Bonaven- ture reported. The Canadian carrier planned to start a 20-hour voyage to Shannon late today with four in- jured and the bodies of the dead. RAF. and USAF aircraft, sta- tioned) in Britain 'assisted heli- copters from the aircraft car- rier in the search. The drama on the sea started Sunday night when the plane was forced to ditch after three|personnel and three women de- ipendents. Capt., Jon .D, Murray, 44, of Oyster Bay, N.Y., the plane's skipper, praised the bravery of those aboard. He said: "We were able to get four dinghies launched: from the plane'"' after it ditched in the Atlantic. "We could not have managed it the way we did," said Mur- ray, "if the crew and the pas- sengers had not behaved so magnificently--without panic." The survivors, suffering shock from the landing, rode out heavy seas until the, Swiss freighter Celerina, answering distress calls, reached them. U.S. military officials said the} AN OCCASIONAL ii survivors included 42- military; wash is essential in any good camp, inelu 'ne of Freedom Doukhobors near 4 that of Soi» good , Princeton. B.C, Here Florence Makortoff, 6, gets her hair scrubbed. --CP Wirephoto 8