ten ee ce THOUGHT FOR TODAY Machines soon will. answer vocal commands; who says husbands can't be replaced? She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy Sunday clearing in after- noon. Winds northwest 15. SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 92--NO. 182 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mai Ottawa and for payment ) Post Office Department, ot sarees in Cosh. Ex-Baseball Star Irked § By Job Bias" By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|Negro and white demonstrators -- : $ into custody. sec seabie sea -- At Newark, N.J., pickets pa- | segregation took place in &|-,4eq for the fifth straight day half-dozen United States|at the gate of the Barringer jag. cities Friday, including|High School construction site, Same t Py |They were protesting alleged 7 New York, where former | biased job hiring by construc- baseball star Jackie Robin-|tion unions. son marched briefly on a| A sit-in staged in the aisles of _ icket line ja department store in downtown © a oe |Lexington, Ky., brought the ar--- Robinson, who broke the color' rest of nine Negroes on' charges barrier in major-league baseball/of violating a city fire ordin- when he was called up bY\ance, A spokesman said this Brooklyn Dodgers from Mont-|was just a start and that the real ge ene! for , | sit-ins would increase, minutes on the picket line at a : Brooklyn construction site|/NO MARCHING PERMIT : where demonstrators are de-; At Somerville, Tenn., 38 sing- manding more jobs for Negroes|ing Negro youths carrying signs and Puerto Ricans on publicly calling for "freedom now" were financed building projects arrested for marching without 3 Robinson, now a restaurant ® aueeerk : chain executive, carried a pla-| Five Negro girls were taken card reading: "Jobs for every- into custody in Athens, Ga., dur one. If not jobs, then jail." ing a sit-in at an eating place ie No! Hee PANMUNJOM (AP) -- Amid reports of new fighting on the uneasy Korean truce line, the United Nations command warned today -that Communist North Korea must curb its "bloodthirsty marauders" im- mediately or it will invite its own destruction, Maj.-Gen. George H. Cloud, senior delegate from the UN command on the armistice com- mission, accused the North Ko- ) Teans of deliberate assaults in a s UN - controlled territory which Brooklyn, N.Y. Robinson re-|have killed'three Americans and mained briefly in the picket | wounded a fourth since July 29. line thrown around si site to North Korea brushed aside the protest allege d ote dears charges as "'fabrications" in one tory hiring practices. C of the hottest exchanges in 10 Wirephoto) (See AP wire |veis of armistice commission for- Site iT and) ian treaty banning nuclear 4, Shots Exchanged. ew M"' Korea Truce Line running through the centre of; the demilitarized zone. He did) not elaborate and mentioned no) casualties, An American officer told re- porters outside the armistice! |meeting that he threw eight/ hand grenades in the latest! |clash, He said a U.S. patrol was) jflanked in the fighting and had! \to withdraw. From this officer's account, it jappeared there were no casual- ties on either side. | Cloud said 50 Soviet - made} |cartridge cases were found at |the scene along with an 'unex- |ploded Soviet-type grenade, Two hand grenades exploded, he said. The marine general! said search parties found three North |Korean raincoats and wrappers from Soviet-made candy bars. The UN side called the ar- mistice commission meeting to jaccuse the Communists of a se- jries of provocations that began \July 29 when a UN jeep was jambushed in UN territory. Two Americans were killed and a third wounded. | The next day an American |soldier and a South Korean po- |liceman were killed in a clash} | directly south of the first am-| {bush, Four North Korean sol- diers were slain in this encoun- ter. | WARD NEVER KNE OF 2 CONVICTION | Drug Overdose : ¥ '| Kills Osteopath | | LONDON (CP)--Dr. Stephen) ister because of the scandal. \Ward died today still unaware'Ward introduced the two. he had been convicted on two) Ward, divorced son of an jvice charges in Britain's biggest|Anglican cathedral canon, |sex and political scandal of the) soared from relative obscurity . ADB CHAIRMAN Halifax lawyer Ian Mal- colm MacKeigan (above) was named in Ottawa Friday as new chairman of the Atlantic Development Board. He suc- ceeds Michael Wardell who remains as a board member. (CP Wirephoto) 20th century. His life ebbed away at 3:50 p.m. (10:50 a.m. EDT) in a} flower-filled but guarded room at St. Stephen's Hospital where} he was taken Wednesday suf-| fering from a massive overdose of drugs. Only death enabled the 50- year-old society osteopath and) artist. to prevent the law from running its full course. Ward. was convicted of living off 'the earnings of two call girls propelled into notoriety -by self. They are Mandy Rice- Davies, 18, and Christine Keeler 121 | Miss Keeler, long a friend of |Ward, testified against him jabout her liaison with John Pro- |fumo, who resigned as war min- | NO TIMES ON CIVIC HOLIDAY The Oshawa Times will not be published on Monday, Civie Holiday, Publication will resume on Tuesday. Name Members To Atlantic 'Dev. Board Blame Blast On Spilled Gasoline | HANMER, Ont. (CP)--Spilled gasoline and sparks from an electric pump were blamed hursday for the bomb - like blast which flattened a service station and restaurant Wednes-| day, taking eight lives. Nearly 24 hours after the ex- plosion and the raging fire that |followed it, the search through the rubble ended with the dis- covery of the battered body of 15-year-old Jo-Ann Marois. A few hours later the eighth vic- tim, Lynda Duguay, 14, died in Thorpe and John Ross, 17, of Hanmer, went into the basement of the garage to sweep the gaso- line hat had flowed there into a sump drain, As gasoline filled the sump, an automatic pump |Switched on to clear it away. Witnesses said the force of the explosion lifted the building fr its foundation and crum- pledN¢ in-the air. Thorpe and Ross escaped. Thorpe managed to get the still partially filled truck clear of the building in the few minutes be- ja hospital in Sudbury, 14 miles south of here. Two infants, three adults and! a third teen-ager were the other) dead belonged to one family. | Four of six other injured per-| sons were still in hospital this) morning in fair condition. | Const. Romayne Crosskill, of the Sudbury provincial police detachment, said gasoline over- flowed from underground tanks joutside the building while they iwere being filled from a tank fore fire broke out and made it victims, The dead are Mrs, Alma Estelle Cloutier, 27, and Delia Matte, 28; Mrs. Cloutier's son Vincent, 17 months; Mrs. Matte's daughter Norma, months, and a service station employee, Raymond Generaux, TEEN-AGE HAUNT Earl Matte operated the gas OTTAWA (CP)--The Atlantic Development Board, armed with a $100,000,000 capital fund, was given a new chairman and five other new members Friday. yer and former federal govern- ment official, as the new chair- man. He succeeds Michael War- dell, publisher of the Frederic- ton Gleaner and Atlantic Advo- cate, who remains on the board. Four businessmen and a labor union official were named to amending legislation passed by Parliament last month. The five original board mem- bers were named Jan. 24 by the former Progressive conserva- jtive government. The new members are: Carl F. Burke, 50, Charlotte. jtown, managing director of Mar |possible to reach the trappediitime Central Airways Limited and vice-president of Nordair Limited; victims of the blast. Five of the|D'Amour, 44; her two daughters. Albert M. Martin, 63, Corner j | Brook, Nfld., president and gen- eral manager of Bowaters New- foundiand Pulp and Paper Mills. four) Stephen A. Dolhanty, 55, Flor-| about Ward's condition, © ence, N.S., vice-president of Dis- jtrict 26 of the United Mine) |Workers of America; Robert C. Eddy, 43, Bathurst, iN.B., engineer - businessman the scandal, as was Ward him-! The government. announced the appointment of Ian M. Mac-/caning elderly men, juana Keigan, 48-year-old Halifax law-/ smoking, prostitution, blackmail the other posts created by| to internationa' headlines after Profumo resigned, It was at a country cottage party given by Ward that Pro fumo met Christine. ; He resigned after admitting he lied to the House of Com- mons about having an affair with her at the same time she had a liaison with Yevgeny Ivanov, former Soviet embassy naval attache in London. Shortly after Profumo's resig- nation, Ward was arrested and accused on seven charges. three of living on. the immoral earnings of prostitution, two of procuring girls under the age of 21 for intercourse and twe of counselling and procuring abortion, ; He was sent to trial at the Old Bailey court, where he was arraigned on an indictment cove ering the first five charges. A second indictment on the twe abortion charges would have been heard at a separate trial, The trial in the 700-yearold central criminal court--ip which cases ranging from witcheraft to nuclear-age spying have been heard--aroused ute precedented international intere est. SUCCESSION OF TALES A succession of girl bases recounted. tales. of ¢ ee perjury, and two - way mirror peep-shows. VISITED BY CHAPLAIN During the day the hospital chaplain, Rev. Geoffrey Pin. nock, went four times to Ward's | bedside. Bouquets of roses, gladioll and carnations were delivered to replace some of those in the flower-banked room, Most of the flowers were sent by anony- |mous donors. The hospital reported it had received 500 telephone inquiries --mainly from women who had never met Ward. After being scorned, ridiculed and reviled as a ringmaster of ja sensational sex-circus Ward has become to many a fright ened, lonely man. Miss Keeler telephoned the hospital several times to inquire | "Barlier, she was visited by her own doctor and treated for asthma. | Her friend, Paula Hamilton. |Marshall, with whom she is Station and Mrs. Matte ran the|with interests in building sup-| staying, said: 'Christine is very truck. DRIVER LEFT TRUCK Edward Thorpe, 27, of Sud- bury, operator of the truck, had left it while the tanks filled by gravity flow, the constable said. When he discovered he over- flow he stopped the filling oper- ation. 'Mystery Man | With $100,000 Guelph Lawyer, TORONTO (CP) -- A visitor) § Friday to the jail where the al- leged head of a narcotics syndi- jcate is housed turned out to be a Guelph lawyer, Brian Gross restaurant, a popular meetingjad: |worried and concerned." place for both adults and teen-| Capt. Maxwell Murry, 57, Clo-| Three more portraits by Ward agers in this mining town of|vertown, Nfld., master of a fish-|were sold by the gallery which 5,000. The Matte family livedjing schooner and operator of a/put them on public exhibition above the restaurant. Mr, Matte/shipyard and building supplies|during the trial. They brought and the three other children hadjand general contracting busi-|the total number sold to 530 and left shortly before the blast. 'ness. the cash raised to $24,500. nds assembled| throughout the day, a Commons,and a maximum of 186,700,000 man, and not a mystery man|: AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 li if across the street from the Uni ass Robingon told reporters versity of Georgia. The univer- J ss ROBINSON sar Poon digg Regt ge igen st 'was desegregated in 1961. esaiest ak Es hae p, Oa a y vy| Negroes ceased mass demon-| mer Brookly odger basebe eeawee caren er Strations in Charleston, S.C.,| star, carries a sign on the pos dM saiiitis were ak after 87 white merchants agreed) picket line Friday outside the rested at the site Friday for sit-|\° : pie ke ig desegregation) construction for the down blockades aimed at stop-|fide stores, that Phang Waa Downstate Medical Center in story) meetings ping work on the project. Police! the proposal. ge aoe: ere : Earlier, Cloud said Commu- have -- ar = The city of Danville, Va.. was e e jnist troops intruded into the UN persons for sit-downs during the a tntiinwblcn |command portion of the demili- last three weeks pelea Cull fehl' Sechorearae Physicist Bombs |tarized zone at 4:30 a.m. sag 4 ; 'ean atl and fresh firing broke ou 'be- TO AIR CHARGES ag by Judge A. M -Aiken at) tween American and Communist In Washington, Labor Secre-|the end of a five-day hearing. | troops tary W. Willard Whirtz called) Negro leaders announced they! - e e ts ig a meeting there for next Wed-|would appeal. They said they ar a S) GIVES NO DETAILS nesday to discuss charges of dis-/have no plans now for further! 4 Cloud said the clash took crimination in. New York City's| demonstrations WASHINGTON (AP) -- More] "One of the problems in de-\njace about 500 yards south of building trades apprenticeship; Meanwhile, 63 adults arrested|nuclear explosions in the atmos-jtending --. an renee ie the military demarcation line programs. jin @ demonstration last Sunday/phere would not significantly) Se ee ae inal In Chicago, demonstrators sat/were convicted in municipal! i (eae 70s ee ee and lay in a middy alley to try|court on charges of parading|"" in the effort to build an|<Kewing'--a last-minute swerv- d U to halt trucks entering the con-| without a permit, anti-missile missile, a U.S, nu-jing of the missile from its in- r on rges struction site of temporary) In Hollywood, Film Editors ©!ea™ Physicist said today. 'tial trajectory with the aid of school classrooms in a Negro|Local 776 said it could not "The problem is not one eqicntoent oo eo cae US To Give area. jaccept an NAACP demand that|developing nuclear warheads, |puted the original trajectory. abJe The pickets also plumped/Negroes be assigned to film -|Dr. Ralph Lapp said in an in- nuit 4c hk would he ik : Gere is trent of come, police making crows ona quatn bade|etwen. Toe vevslem 1 willy a duiabiel in bese| Up New Tax care trying. te. run interference! It was the third Hollywood craft wwe ". ballistics and electronics.) "Ot ee ea be aure for the tracks. Police took 49/union to take such action. {And cee gern gg = bel the seh wont cuts ee te WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cana- |purs' ' ' é Nees oe Neenpeieel ces ortataine last second, we wouldn't have dian Finance tage cig 9 bed so many strikeouts." |Gordon urged U.S. officials Fri- J : Lapp, who worked on the de- A : lday to exempt all Canadian se- co e velopment of the first atom| Im addition missile developers) day to e: 7 . oci{Would have to learn how to|curities from the proposed in- a Fad ogee Sss0C!"l cope with: terest equalization tax. . nuclear or missile projects, said) 1. Decoys or phoney missiles) After meetings with Treasury 1 nh eat act these ballistics and electronic --materials released from an Secretary Douglas Dillon problems would be difficult toncoming missile, possibly in State Undersecretary George solve {the form of self-erecting plas- Ball, Gordon told reporters the OTTAWA (CP) -- A secondjing in Hong Kong since early| : i " whi | officials 'have a pretty good un- | Y| President Kennedy went even ti¢ umbrellas," which would re-| . i long-term wheat sales agree-|July, is dated Aug. 1. It runs further at his préss conference/flect radar waves and might! derstanding of the Canadian po- ment with Communist China)" three years and maintains ae Senne : initially divert the defence from) Sition. : the down payment of 25-per-cent Thursday. Kennedy. said: tha fesl fuliaiie Under the tax, proposed by worth $300,000,000 or more was! cach, "The problem of developing a' sea the Kennedy. administration and announced in the Commons Fri-| Interest rates remain un.|Cefence against a missile is be- BEE gocss-ond aoe ha. | scheduled ol gs ge ks i ie . "|yond us, and beyond the Seviets, 'ere os mayne 8 : Ss rtly, foreign stocks day by Trade Minister Sharp./known. The various hard con- Seousecine, ana Pot iets |dozen missiles, each armed or ber igen by aedsens China will take a minimum|tracts will continue to be nego- whe work in it feel fat cert warhead packing the explo-| sould be subject to a tax--l 112,000,000 bushels over the next|'!ated at the prevailing price at aps it can never be succees.(SV2 punch of 5,000,000 tons of| ner cent on stocks and from 2.75 three years and perhaps a max-|the time. The first, for 18,670,- fully accomplished." __ ~~ |TNT equivalent, instead of hav-|to 15 per cent on bonds, depend- imum. 186,700,000 bushels 000 bushels of wheat, has been . jing a one-shot missile packing ing on their duration. The figure & duplicate the = ---- from Pa-| ALARMS ARMY ; up to say 50,000,000 tons of ex-| 'The administration has al- amounts contained in the first/aue | to. mg 8 hs from/ The U.S. president's remarks|piosive force. jready announced that new Ca- agreement signed in April, 1961,|° m4 ie aes Mo - : eee yeni nag some | inadian issues would ag exempt with one exception. he government will continue tagon circles. he army has) . from the tax, Gordon is trying to No barley is covered this time|t® "nance the credit terms from|been pushing its Nike Zeus anti-| Clear Skies Seen |expand the exemption to include --and there were 28,000,000 bu-|* SPecial fund, which amounted missile project for eight years. | . 8 . jall Canadian issues. at ee der|'® $100,000,000 under the former! 'The debate over development On Civic Holida | Gordon said one difficulty in shels of that cereal sold under goverament i pe : that the first agreement. Wheat sale'® . of an anti-missile system has|/ jdiscussing his talks was tha totalled 145,000,000 bushels. That| Mr. Sharp said the Red Chinajquickened again with the pnos-/ TORONTO (CP)--Clear wea-|the legislation has not yet been package was worth about $400,- ow teat nee ee -- of a U.S., British and ther is predicted for the latter Se oF ge egy 000.000. 3 , Se Maintain an uss Z -- |W = a 5 | ages icant dilfere develop their market in Canada| éests in the atmosphere, as well aoa of the three-day Civic Hol- financial circles eve r ywhere| _ Another significant difference| ro, various items." os a Gale : a di iday weekend. |when hey see the legislation in is that the repayment period : " - ler space and under A Se okie @ i has been extended to 18 months|, "It is in our mutual interest| water. Scattered showers over most|black and borg he said. compared with periods of nine|'® Provide them with an oppor-| Some critics of the agree-/Of the province will last Ol ectees, Se vite vers months and a full year for the 'Unity to do so, subject to ap-jment, military and congres-jearly Sunday, the weather of- substantial measure of support previous sales Sr ee to avoid|sional, have expressed fears! fice said today, with skies clear-|which Canada has been provid. Further, there is an implied tg Canadian producers. "lof the United States i aeveio iM Sunday. Monday will be|ing for the U.S. balance of pay- acceptance by the federal gov-| ,, ms _ {ot tae . sag gegen TOO sonny aad: wares jments in recent years." ernment of greater Red Chinese In this connection, the Chi- ment of a defenc e€ against inter-} Tet ' . nb | The great volume of U.S. exports to this country includ-\"¢Se state trading corporations | continental ballistic missiles, | sein ures wi e about goods going to Canada make it! ing textiles, a sensitive point far "@Ve undertaken to limit their} Lapp outlined some of the) Normal, ranging in the mid-60s'one of the few countries where! Canadian textile manufacturers, /¢XPOrts of sensitive items, in-|difficulties of perfecting a suc-| at night and high 70s during the the United States has a favora- RUNS FOR THREE YEARS ---- textiles, to Canada." [cessful defence against missiles.' day ble payments balance. The new agreement signed by! Chief Commissioner w. C. wtc-| PARLIAMENT ADJOURNS TO SEPT. 30 Namara of the Canadian wheat board, who had been negotiat-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Members ofjial troop of MPs Parliament began a two-month) among sedate senators .in the private member's bill was fi-|busks!s. The three-year agree- with $100,000 in bail money in -- holiday late Friday oe Upper Chamber pally passed to usher in a new/ment is retroactive to Aug. 1. /his pockets. night. jfor the royal assent ceremony/system of granting parliamen-} " ; j.| Charles Cipolla, 50, of Guelph, After one of the most hectic | presided over by Mr. Justice|tary divorces. The new Geehielwical* ook ha nl ad termed by reo "chief ges mn meg Ae opm, Hod ae watered Judson of the Supreme /ery will take routine processing/ member Atlantic Development| Pect" following the smashing of ne . = --s* bs ay , Court of Canada, joff the Commons' hands. |Board. They include the new/2. huge drug ring in Toronto -- 7 lan ---- gg tage ROYAL ASSENT _| It also means the end of alchairman, lan M MacKeigan,| Wednesday, was still in jail Fri- ie adjournmen' to Sept.) Acting as deputy to Governor-ifour-year blockade of divorce GS yearaid Halles law '\day. Bail was set at $100,000. unless sooner convened." (General Vanier, he gave royallpjiiis in the Commons led by sev-| sed ciel Eleven other people arrested $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 iL s | | t yi jserved earlier by the minority|troversial legislation introduced ately should there be an out-| break of marine labor violence |prior to the fall sitting. ship on maritime transportation sales tax on building materials|spate of major announcements: umions, as recommended in the and production machinery. Norris report,on waterfront la-| bor strife. overtime in a rare Friday night/ which the Liberals see as a key/estimated $180,000,000, sitting to clear the decks of leg-/to putting the national economy/5,000 jobs and take five passed be fore jbreak. His words echoed the notice|assent to some of the most con-! raj members of the New Demo-|. 4- Integration of customs and cratic Party. The floodgates|immigration examinations at opened Friday as royal assent/°Tder points except those at |was given to 355 divorce peti-;27ports and ocean ports. This It included acts setting up altions. the first substantial num-| Wil! save time for travellers and |$400,000,000 municipal develop- ber passed in two years. jan estimated $500,000 annually ment and lean fund. providing : for taxpayers. i] jberal government that it will/during the first 56 days of the ummon Parliament immedi-|new. Parliament | 1. A start this year on twin- Also on the list was the mea-jring the Welland Canal locks to sure establishing a 284member double the canal's tonnage ca- Parliament sat four hours|Economic Council of Canada,|pacity: The project will cost an to complete 4 The government intends to in- pay increases for MPs and sen- LIST MAJOR PROJECTS 5 A new formula for federal roduce legislation then impos-ators and formally approving With the adjournment in sight,|assistance to the provinces for ng temporary federal trustee-the hotly-contested 11-per-cent/the government brought down a censtruction of vocational and technical schools. The federal jcontribution will amount to 75 |per cent of costs up to a ceiling jbased on grants of $480 for each youth between 15 and 19 years. create) 6. Postponement until the fall years'session of final passage of legis- siation the government wantedjinto high gear lation giving retroactive parlia- the summer; After see-sawing back and| 2. A second wheat sale agree-/mentary approval to temporary ' {forth between the Commons/ment with Red China covering a import surcharges imposed jast Shortly before 11 p.m., @ jov-iand the Senate for amendments|minimum of 112,000,000 bushels|year. t in a series of police raids Wed- Inesday in Toronto, Brampton jand Guelph were also still in jail. | Bail for Douglas (Rocky) Thi- jbeault, 32, of Toronto was also jset at $100,000. Bail of $20,000 was set each for Orval Charles Hardy, 48, and James McGrath, 50, both of Toronto, Bail of $10,000 each was set jfor James Orville Ross, 40, Mar- jion Burns, 32, Frank Edgar |Piro, 46, Mrs. Gloria West, 38, Mrs. Joan Dickson, 30, Michele |(Micky) Christine Poole, 20, an Geraldine Hughes, 46, all of To- |Tonto. | The 12th suspect, Jack Dal-| ton Meldrum, alias Sundown,| was refused bail. RERIALIST FALLS 22 FEET Miss Donna Welsh, 20-year- performance in Los Angeles, nurse at the hospital said old aerialist with the Ringling Smiles from her hospital bed. there appeared to be some. ron. and Bartan oad Waller Witnesses said the blonde per- back injury and a possible nll : former fell 22 feet and landed fracture of the right Circus who was injured in a on her shoulder after slipping "but she's not badly hurt." = fall during Friday afternoon's while doing a heel-hang. A --(AP Wirephoto).