THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some salesmen electrify their prospects; others just gas them. Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cooler today. Sunny with cloudy periods and little change in tem- perature Saturday. ' VOL. 92---NO, 134 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1963 See & Sane Cae er Ottawa for payment MISSING BOYS &|to accomplish in 2,000, a Pres- POLICE ARE COMBING the woods at Pont-Rouge, near| "ial trouble. Quebec City as detectives question a mam about the dis- appearance of four boys. One of the boys was missing April 20, two others May 5 and the | fourth May 26. Police have been unable to unearth clues despite intensive investiga- tion. The boys are: Alain Carrier, 12 (top); Pierre Mar- quis, 13 (second from top); Michel Morel, 9, second from bottom), and Guy. Luck- eniuck, 12 (bottom). --CP Wirephotos '|To Communism) Hike Seen In Buying From US. WASHINGTON (CP) -- Can- ada intends to step up its de- fence spending in the United States as part of a new under. standing between the two coun- tries to achieve a better bal- ance in the cross-border flow of military production-sharing con- tracts. {| Defence Production Minister C. M. (Bud) Drury declined to spell out just what new equip- ment Canada will buy but he) told a press conference Thurs-| Church Claimed Losing Fight a day: "Canadian purchases in the U.S, are likely to increase." He anticipated there also may be a general upswing in U.S. defence spending in Canada as part of an understanding with Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara that the cross-border! flow of defence orders should proceed "to higher levels," FLOW SLOWER But after a day-long meeting with McNamara, Drury sug- |gested the American flow to |Canada is not likely to be sus- tained at the unusual 1962 peak. |In that year U.S. defence orders |placed in Canada totalled about $254,000,000 while Canadian or- |ders in the U.S, totalled about | $110,000,000. Drury observed there is a de- cided difference between orders placed and actual spending in Aig aga od (CP) - ae ag one year. Orders, such as nism has done more in 0" years) the ¥F-104G starfighter jet pro- -|than Christianity has been able gram at Canadair Limited, 6 te. Montreal, may take a number India auld Toorsine tiga lot pests to etaplete. ae ac- s }tual spendi . Rev. Russell T. Self startled) ilites ae is - sharin, rm 235 delegates to the 89th gen-Canada was less than $200 900, eral assembly of the Presbyte-|999 jn 1962. In many ways the _ oer Beg hep ate toaan|vouume of American orders last the battle for men's minds and|> 3" ses eawurginary. , that "today's success story is) In reaching an understanding that of communism." jon the objective of a reciprocal , |balance in production-sharing, Mr. Self, who has worked in)wjoNamara agreed to eliminate India since 1949, said Christian-|4 restriction on placing of re- ity now claims a smaller pro-jsearch and development con-| portion of the world's population| tracts in Canada, This and a) H ;|mumber of other curbs affect-| than at any time since its earli jing other countries had been im-| est days while communism, | nosed as part of a U.S. drive REDHEADED, 22 - year - old Christine Keeler is escort- ed from her London resi- dence today by Robin Drury, who has been her bodyguard the last few days, as she left was convicted by a jury today and sentenced to three years in prison for beating her. An affair between her and British | LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP)-- Tension gripped this North Car- olina textile centre today in the wake of a race riot that left one white man dead and a white mewspaper photographer wounded by gunfire. All available officers were called to duty, including about 20 state troopers. Municipal of- ficials said they will ask for na- tional guardsmen unless the sit- uation eases during the day. Violence erupted Thursday night on the heels of feeble at- tempts by Negroes to gain ser- vice at segregated cafes, a theatre and a bowling alley in the downtown area. A mob of about 2,000 white men 'gathered on one side of a street bordering the Negro sec- ition, About 100 Negroes assem- |bled on the other side of the Street. Police said the two groups |threw rocks, bottles and sticks jat each other. Some of the bot- |tles were filled with gasoline. In Race Riot | Secretary of State for War |PELT POLICE CARS which had a mere 17 adherents|to conserve American dollars in 1903, now controls the minds and gold by reducing defence of a third of the world's popula-|Spending abroad. tion. | "If the Presbyterian Church in Canada needs to be clobbered} to move into the gospel, then we are dead,"' he said. | "Every time the world turns/ on its axis, every 24 hours, the world becomes more and ° Pagan, And you just sit there~ jhow do you like that?" | USE, PROPAGANDA In a later interview, he said|War Minister John Profumo Christians must launch an all-jsometimes visited his mistress out propaganda campaign in the|Christine Keeler on the same emerging nations, 1 The propaganda should take|'day heightened the security the form of the printed word|@spects of Britain's dolce vita rather than radio or television|Scamdal. appeals, he said, since few peo-| The 22-year-old model made ple in such countries as India| the revelation herself in a front- -- television or radio TecelV-| nave interview with The Daily In business sessions, the as- PT oetins cua ce, .|sembly decided to investigate Russian naval attache Capt. Ye- '\the possibility of establishing a|vgeny (Eugene) Ivanov on the consolidated fund to assist the/same day. church's lay workers in finan-| As: the Conservative govern- ment's crisis over the case i ss mounted, the security angle a gg will decided)igomed much larger than any fakin. conic oie, and a| .onsiderations of sexual moral- |decision is expected before $€S-lity or even Profumo's admis- sions end next week. }sion when he resigned Wednes- A report to the assembly|qay that he had lied to Parlia- jshowed that the church endedjment about his relations with |1962 with an excess of incomé|Christine. 2| lover expenditure of $242,132. A| And the scandal bubbled mer-| rily, Profumo was excused--at | : |his own request--from a resign- last year, an increase of 3.8 per) in, gisieter's traditional anit cent over 1961, ence with the Queen to hand Target figure for the church's|over his seals of office, Pro- national budget in 1964 was set|fumo had been scheduled to see lat $2,225,000, lthe Queen Tuesday, but there jtotal of $1,803,426 was raised Tobacco Firms Face Fresh Cancer Scare day as a suspected Russian spy| for the Old Bailey and court appearance. Aloysius Gordon, a Jamaican Negro jazz singer and boy friend of Miss Keeler, jaudience, | |SINGER GOES TO JAIL John Profumo, prompted his resignation and posed a new security headache in Britain. -- AP Wirephoto Security Angle Looms In U.K. Scandal Crisis \ { 4 > n | LONDON (CP) -- News that;had been angry criticism of the/any breach of security was in- volved. Labor leaders claim wat though there is no suggestion Still another aspect of the case o¢ S nbcintty breach, the mat- A Negro girl was struck on the head by a rock. Police cars were pelted with rocks and bot- tles. Windows were broken in ja nearby Negro church. Then a barrage of shots came from the direction of a Negro apartment building. Art Richardson, 25, photogra- pher for the High Point Enter- |prise, was struck in the back. |He collapsed into the arms of a \deputy sheriff. In hospital, his | condition was described as "sat- lisfactory."' | Another shot struck Fred Link, 24, in the head. Link died en route to hospital. The crowd began dispersing lafter the shootings, but police |reached its climax in a London ter still is extremely grave be-|brought in fire hoses and scat- jcourt when a Jamaican jazz\cayse Profumo, the husband of|tered those remaining. jsinger, Aloysius (Lucky) Gor-/actress Valerie Hobson, could| iden, for assaulting Christine. Gordon was another of the. red-haired }model's onetime lovers. | There has been. no jtion that either Profumo or \Christine was involved in any |breach of national security--and |Profumo himself explicitly de- |nied this in his resignation let- ter to Prime Minister Macmil- But the inference that he so naively compromised himself with a man who may have been| a trained Russian agent is bound to be the spearhead of a Labor opposition attack when Parliament returns from its va- cation June 17, In a copyrighted interview in| The Daily Express. Miss Keeler| said she saw Profumo once or| |twice a week for several months jin 1961--when she was 19 and jhe Was 46, | She said Ivanov, former as- sistant naval attache in London, "was also a friend of mine at the time I was going with Jack."' Ivanov now is believed to have been an_ intelligence agent, "I did see each of them on the same day on two oc- casions,"" Miss Keeler said. Her roomate at that time said in | sugges- : blackmail. "We had to be careful all the|was charged with striking a Ne-| bed | ime in case he was recog-|gro girl in the face. There were self as composed of primarily m mized,"' Christine told The Daily Express. 'His wife did not know of our relationship." Several Negroes were treated was jailed for three years|have been subjected to Sovietifor cuts from flying glass. A |white man, James Comer, 23, ino other arrests. The violence in Lexington 'overshadowed a mass demon- Roman Catholic Church began nine days of official mourning today for Pope John, whose body now lies at rest beneath the floor of St. Peter's Basilica. Requiem mass is being said each day at the Vatican basil- ica's great bronze-canopied cen- tral altar, a few feet above the subterranean crypt where the humble pontiff was removed from the eyes of an admiring, mournng world. For two days and a night an uninterrupted stream of 2,000,- 000 people moved through the basilica to look in silence upon the face of Pope John as he lay in state on a candle-framed RCs Begin 9-Day | Mourning Period VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The day including Paul-Emile Car- dinal Leger, Montreal. Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty, the 71-year-old Hungarian pri- mate, was not expected, how- ever. A high Roman Catholic jSource in Budapest said the car- dinal apparently has decided to remain in that city's U.S. lega- ticn, where he has lived in ref- uge since the 1956 Hungarian |uprising. Archbishop of Vatican and the Hungarian gov- ernment by which the Commu- nist regime's restrictions on the church in Hungary would be | An agreement had been re-| ported previously between the) jeased in exchange for the re-|/ NEW YORK (AP)--The to-;today with the hope that it can; The Daily Sketch Thursday that catafalque. moval of Cardinal Mindszenty's| - bacco industry faced another battle today in the cancer vs cigarette smoking controversy! | bounce back as well as it usu- .|ally has before. Most of the tobacco stocks |"on more than one occasion as jlost around $1 a share or more|Jack left Christine at the flat, | Thursday. |Eugene Ivanov, the handsome Thursday night, the body was placed in a triple coffin and brought below into the basilica's Prices of tobacco issues on| Ameri p } erican Tobacco was : the the New York stock exchange! sixth most active issue on the AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 fell as much as $2.38 a shareiNew York stoc hang. Thursday after a Florida State inked oi gear sa Supreme Court ruling suggested | orijia cigarette makers can be held) joc¢ sab a -- Phila liable for deaths from lung ilies was down $2.38 a share cer if caused by cigarette smok-| : : ing. Trade sources said the stocks) American |have usually risen againjmakers of Lucky Strike quickly on previous cancer-\other brands, and Mrs. Mary} scare developments and there/Green of Miami. She had sued| has been little evidence that). $250,000, charging that! court rulings have any appre- ' ciable effect on sales. smoking the cigarettes caused| The Florida case is another|the death of her husband in 1958. in a series of medical reports|The U.S. district court ruled in and court actions that have, in|favor of the tobacco firm and| the last decade, rocked the $7,-/80 did the U.S. Fifth Circuit! 000,000,000 industry and the 17,-/Court of Appeals in New Or-| 000,000 people involved in the| leans. | United States alone. -- rae . oe The case is an advisory opin-|°ETS NEW HEARING : : ht But Mrs. Green obtained a} ion involving one state's sta- ; | itutes, and the final outcome|/"°¥ hearing and the Appeals still is in doubt, But it causes|COUTt asked the Florida State| alarm to the industry because it seems to run counter to an ear- ; A Nh lier decision that. smokers as-|°" implied warranty, This is the sume any risk voluntarily. advisory opinion that was handed down by the Florida} |RAISES TWO THREATS | jcourt Wednesday. To the industry, the Florida) The advisory opinion is not The Florida case involves the} Tobacco. Company,|March 22 that there was noth-|Corpus Christi next Thursday. |brief but violent regres my and|ing improper in-his relationship} On the final day of official|@tiven by 55-mile-an-hour winds | | jyoung Russian naval attache,|grottoes to a place near the |walked in." ltorsb of Pope. Pius XI. PROFUMO RESIGNS OBSERVE FEAST DAYS | Profumo resigned from Mac-| The nine-day mourning pe- millan's government and thejriod extends through June 17, House of Commons Wednesday|with two days out for major after admitting that he had lied) religious feast days of joy--Trin- to Parliament when he saidjity Sunday next Sunday and with Christine. mourning, Jume 17, the most) In his letter of resignation,|/solemn of the requiems- will] Profumo continued to deny that/bring presidents, princes and! Ne ----|prime ministers to St.. Peter's! | Basilica. Bishop Vladimir Kotliarov will be the first Russian Orthodox) Church representative at a pope's requiem since the East- PONT D'ARC,| West church split in 1054. Archbishop Pericle Felici, chosen to say the first mass, was secretary-general of Pope John's ecumenical council, which was suspended automat- Four Explorers Freed From Cave VALLON France (Reuters)--Four of the) five young French cave explor-| ers trapped in a cave by floods| since Sunday emerged safe and sound today. country. 2 Thunderstorms Hit South Ontario By THE CANADIAN PRESS A warm summer's day ended in a deluge Thursday as two swept across southwestern On- tario. onto in about an hour and dis- rupted hydro' services and up- rooted threes in the Chatham area, Weather forecasters said tem- peratures today will be 10 to 15 degrees lower than Thursday, with chances of light showers in the afternoon, Metropolitan Tor-| : onto's maximum temperature of 85 degrees Thursday was the highest of the year. | |embarrassing presence from the! - f The storms dropped 1.33 inches of rain and hail in Tor-| § The fifth was understood tojically when the pontiff died last torrent. Supreme Court for guidance in}have been carried away and) Monday night. The archbishop's} interpreting the Florida statutes|qrowned in the subterranean|role as the mass celebrant, like jhis giving of absolution at Pope The explorers ranged in age| John's burial, was because of from 18 to 27. his position as vicar of the can- Volunteers worked with sand-| ons of St. Peter's Basilica. bags from dawn Thursday to Cardinals continued to arrive In Chatham, police reported six uprooted trees, They said a small car was crushed when a limb crashed onto its roof, Two hydro boxes fused. jresidents said visibility was| down to 100 yards at the height decision raises two threats: (1) conclusive, but if its reasoning'dam a stream pouring into the in Rome. There had been 32 at/of the storm, Thamesville, Wal-| there could be a flood of ex-jis accepted by the federal|pothole after 60 hours of rain/the first daily meetings of the|laceburg and Windsor all re-| ecsille In Wardsville, on Highway 2,) stration at Greensboro, where 287 Negroes were arrested after they sat down in a mid-town street segregation policies. That demonstration followed the arrest earlier Thursday of Jesse Jackson, 21 - year - old student body president at North Carolina A. and T. College and one of the leaders of a month- long drive to break racial bar- riers. Jackson was charged with in- citing a riot after he led a sim- ilar sitdown in front of the city jhall Wednesday night. He re- \fused to post $1,000 bail. intersection to protest Q MONTREAL (CP) -- Police said today three more men have been detained in connec- tion with their action designed to break up the terrorist organ- ization, Le Front de Liberation uebecois. Now 15 persons--14 men and one woman--are being held pending resumption of an in- quest Monday into the death of Wilfred Vincent O'Neill, 65-year- old army night watchman killed April 20 by a bomb explosion. Inspector Russell Senecal, co- ordinating police investigations into the FLQ, said many other persons are wanted for ques- tioning but it appears no further detentions will be carried out. Coroner Marcel Trahan fixed for next Monday reopening of the inquest started earlier but Hunting Clubs Challenged On Use Of Lands _MONTREAL (CP)--A recrea-| tion club from Hull, Que., Thursday challenged the rights of private hunting and fishing clubs to. exclusive use of large jareas of Quebec's Crown.lands. | The hunting and fishing sec- tion of L'Association Recreative de Gatineau said in a brief to the provincial tourist council, conducting public hearings in Montreal, that ordinary people from Quebec can't even go fish- |ing in Quebec's own lakes. | The majority of accessible jhunting and fishing land has |been leased to expensive out- Ifitters or to private clubs many lot them having a majority of members from the United States) and Ontario, said the associa-| | tion brief. The association described it- | working class people. Its mem- |bers can't afford the high fees adjourned. Under Quebec law no charges are laid until the conclusion of an inquest. Lawyers Gilles Duguay, Guy Guerin and Claude - Armand Sheppard, who say they repre- sent nine of the persons who have been detained, announced they have sent a letter of pro- test to J.-Adrien Robert, Mont- real police director. SAY TREATED ROUGHLY Their letter claimed two of their clients received rough treatment at the hands of police and said a complaint will be Marcel Massicotte, '20, picked Wednesday. nesses. said that since the start of their been on their guard against conduct that might lead to. sus- picion of ill-treatment. Massicotte is a publicist for the newspaper published by Le Rassemblement Pour L'Inde- Thursday, June 13 |charged by outfitters and can't |get onto the leased private club| |lakes, it said. | "We need a system that is not! feudal," the brief urged. | The private clubs claim, said| the association, that opening lakes to the public would re- sult in the lakes being fished out within three years. They also claimed that they spread Quebec's good name abroad, that they discourage poaching, and support conservation meas- ures more than the public would. The association said mer- chants don't display their wares and if Quebec wanted public- ity abroad it wouldn't get it For Budget Speech OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min- ister. Gordon wil] deliver his budget speech in the Commons Thursday, June 13. He is scheduled to start his budget address shortly after 8 p.m. EDT. Canadians then will find out how he proposes to fit Liberal government economic programs into what--barfing major tax increases--seems bound to be another budgetary deficit. As already announced, gov- ernment spending estimates for the current fiscal year are up five per cent to $6,545,504,515. This is millions more than the expending economy will pro- duce in tax yields at present rates, lodged Monday on behalf of up last Monday and released The letter said persons de: tained were treated by police as accused rather than wit-| Stoney Creek 'nquiries the authorities have 15 People Being Held Until Inquest Resumed pendence Nationale, a. separa- tist movement. SOME SEPARATISTS The vice-president of Le Ras- semblement, Pierre Bourgault, told a press conference 80 per cent of those still detained are members of his movement. He said the movement would expel any members who resort to violence. An inquest into the bomb vic- tim's death is scheduled to re- sume Monday. Meanwhile, a statement pur- ported to be from the FLQ Thursday branded Quebec Pre- mier Jean Lesage a "national traitor." The statement was in a letter received by Le Devoir and Mof- treal - Matin, two French-lan- guage Montreal newspapers, Earlier letters had been ma- chine-copied. Those received b the two newspapers were eac! on original typwritten. sheets, The statement said FLQ "'sui- cide-commandos" were respons- ible for recent bombings in Mon- treal at the Black Watch armory and "the other military armor- ies" as well as the placing of bombs in suburban Westmount mail-boxes. Weather Forces Retreat From | STONEY. CREEK, Ont. (CP) Thursday, a police spokesman|Rain accomplished Thursday what 4,000 United States troops failed to do 150 years ago--force a retreat from the battlefield of Stoney Creek. | It washed out the tail-end of jopening ceremonies of a foure day pageant commemorating the War of 1812 battle, drench- ing 3,000 school children, teach- ers and parents as they scute |tled for cover in this Hamilton district town. | One hundred and fifty years ago British forces, outnumbered seven to one, defeated and scattered a U.S. invasion force in the war's most strategic and historic battle. The storm struck shortly after Premier Robarts, officially de- claring the pageant open, told the children and dignitaries: "We should remember not so much the events of 150 years ago, but the intervening 150 years of peace." Light rain started to fall as Education Minister William Da- vis started to outline the history of the battle. Looking askance at the threatening skies, he cut his address short, telling the children. he would mail them copies, through the private clubs. Parents of Negro children sin St. Louis join hands to jpensive suits; (2) sales might|courts, it would be an impor-|that did not stop until Wednes-|College of Cardinals two days|corded winds of more than 50) block school buses that are be burt, ltant precedent. |day aight. ago, The number was 35 Thurs-| miles an hour. | transporting their children to "BLO Bist CK SCHOOL BU what the parents called racially segregated schools in south St. Louis. Twelve buses were halted in the denion- y SSES. stration and school officials said about 500 students are prevented from going toe school, (AP Wirephoto) IN FLO INQUIRY 1 Dead, 1 Hurt |