THOUGHT FOR TODAY The man who says he'll meet you halfway is generally a poo: judge of distance. Oshawa Cime a LO SE Te IERIE ITC ADIGA PICT ID: SiO IS te ae cine ama aaa rE er ae ee WEATHER REPORT © Sunday sunny and warmer. Winds becoming south at 15 mph. VOL. 92---NO. 216 _ She OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 @s Second Class Mail Post Office Department Authorized for payment of Postage in Cash." Ottawe and EIGHTEEN PAGES Business Firms © Cautione By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP)--A new warn- will be served on the top icials of some 25,000 corpora- tions across Canada that they may face fines and jail sen- tences soon unless they file spe- cial information returns to Ot- tawa on the financial structure and foreign control of their businesses. Advertisements will be taken next week in 27 daily newspa- pers across Canada to remind the delinquent corporations that they will be breaking the law if they fail to file a return by Oct. 1 under the Corporations and Labor Unions Returns Act. The act came into effect Jan. 1 and the original deadline for returns was July 1. This was extended to Oct. 1 to give cor- porations and trade unions a chance to complete their re- turns. 23,000 DELINQUENT Officials of the special agency set up to process the corpora- tion and labor union returns said about 54,000 corporations have claimed exemption under the act--which means they don't have to file returns. Another 23,- 000 corporations have sent in their formal return. But an estimated 25,000 cor- porations have done nothing-- and they are the ones to whom financial structure of corpora- tions and trade unions in Can- ada. The extent of foreign con- trol is also expected to be un- covered, The returns are divided into two categories -- part to be available to the public for a small fee and part to be treated confidentially and disclosed only in general terms. A reporter who paid $1 to look at the return filed by the +0 Cents Per Copy ae CUDNEY RESIGNS; SAID "BOMBSHELL eau oti -¢_|Key Crime Probe Witness Shipping Clerk's Wife Irked By Job Conditions TORONTO (CP)--Robert J.)said Friday night he has re- Seafarers' International. Union of Canada--in the news right now--was told that he was the first person to make use of the public findings. The SIU file showed the names of the top of- ficers, how they were elected, gave the addresses of the SIU's branch offices and the officials who man them, plus a list of collective bargaining agree- ments held by the SIU. The confidential portion of the |returns from corporations and trade unions are kept in special file racks inside a cage in the Ottawa headquarters of the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics. Lake Labor Feud | 'Settlement Near Jacques Angelvin, right, French television personality, is handcuffed to correction of- ficer Lee Zeferetti on leaving Supreme Court Friday in Brooklyn, N.Y., after being JAILED ON NARCOTICS COUNT sentenced from three to six years in prison. Angelvin was convicted for snuggling $3.5 billion in heroin into the Unit- ed States as a money mak- ing sideline, (AP Wirephoto) Students Riots Sweep Three the warning is directed. A special warning notice was| mailed directly to some 50,000 corporations to remind them of the Oct. 1 deadline. WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pros- pects of a private Great Lakes labor battle settlement -- per- haps involving removal of Har- Under the federal law, corpor- ations failing to file a return or establish their exemption may face court action and a possible fine of up to $50 a day for each day of default. The of- ficers, directors and agents of offending corporations may also be fined $50 a day as well as sentenced to jail for up to three old C. Banks as Canadian SIU head--gained momentum Fri- day. There were indications that labor leaders in Canada and the U.S. are focussing atten- tion on a trade-union trustee- ship over the Seafarers Interna- tional Union of Canada to avoid the enactment of Canadian gov- months. ernment controls over Canadian maritime unions. | _ Viet Nam Areas trusteeship, if this meets wit ts ier a three. South Vietnamese cities volved, | In Ottawa, Claude Jodoin,|Tioted today against President president of the Canadian Labor|Ngo Dinh Diem's regime, re- Congress, said he is willing to| liable sources said. | consider a private trade union| Word that the schoolboy re- settlement and would like to|bellion had spread from Saigon discuss this further with Georges ee comer yet one Meany, AFL-CIO president, He} hounc: at martia had not been informed of ad een er --_ bg proposition. | day, In Halifax Labor Minister Al-|after a 27-day state of siege. lan J, MacEachen said Friday|The announcement said all ad- the federal government still in- SAIGON (AP) -- Students in ministrative functions would re- "-- civilian agencies, Mf, reported prepared to agree to such an approach, re- moving his support of Banks as the Canadian SIU boss, pro- in like 'with AFL-CIO. ethical in line ethica' Runway Breaks Up conduct rules and providing the BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- The/SIU retains its power on the Greater Buffalo International|Great Lakes. Airport was closed Friday night| Informants here said Hall after a section of runway broke|met secretly with Labor Secre- up under the pounding of heavy|tary Willard Wirtz about 10 p.m. planes. | Thursday on the issue and that The runway was being used|Wirtz now is seeking further temporarily while the main run-| discussions with Canadian Labor way was being extended to jet|/Minister Allan J. MacEachen to length. jseek a Canada - U.S. compro- The break in the 5,000-foot}mise on how such a private runway was discovered during|trusteeship might function. a maintenance check. These 'informants said Wirtz Incoming traffic was diverted|is convinced the Canadian gov- to Rochester and passengers|ernment would accept the trade were brought to Buffalo by bus.| union approach, rather than The runway was expected tojseek parliamentary approval directed tends to go ah for public fore hearing a Washington re-|in four or five high schools in a port that Hall might accept a/5 ead with its plan Grea® Lakes. statement be-| Saigon, e made this d themselves houting, brick-throwing dem- private settlement of the Labor|°Stration that was quelled by dispute. armed Vietnamese soldiers. MacEachen said he had no Smaller demonstrations were new word from Wirtz on a pos-|TePorted in high schools in Bien| sible private settlement. Mean-|0a, 30 miles north of Saigon, while, he declined comment on|@"d Vinh Long in the Meking the U.S. report. jdelta 65 miles south of Saigon. : lcormd gene te decees soul Quebec Said To Blame For ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP) -- Quintuplets--four girls and a boy--were born early today at St. Luke's Hospital here to the 30-year-old wife of a wholesale grocery shipping clerk. Physicians reported the five babies and their mother, Mrs. Andrew Fischer, in good con- dition. Said Fischer: "I don't make the most money in: the world. It does present some problems --how I'm going to take care of them, along with the five we have." Doctors described Mrs. Fischer as "pretty tired" fol- lowing the 'irths, which took about 1% hours but involved no surgery. The births were about two months short of the usual nine- at the hospital said it is not unusual for multiple births to occur before nine months. The babies were not weighed immediately. Mrs. Fischer's month gestation period. Doctors| Gives Birth To Quints mother was carrying quintup- lets. She had entered the hos- pital that day, he said, because she had been having some dif- ficulty in getting around. Fischer said that after the doctor told Mrs. Fischer she was to bear five children '"'she started crying and she cried all night." As for himself, the 38-year- old father said: "I don't know how I took the news. In. fact, I don't think I came to for a couple of days." The first of the five babies was born. about 1:30 a.m. Fis- News Photographer Rided By U.S. Army WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Army has ordered im- mediate action by its com- mands around the world to make sute military policemen, cher was called and reached the hospital half an hour later. He said he spent the rest of the night smoking two packs of cig- arettes and drinking coffee. Of the five children the Fis- chers had before today, the eld- est is Danny, 7, the youngest Denise, 3%, In between are Charlotte, 6, Julie, 5, and Eve- lyn, 4%, The family recently moved to a farm at the edge of Aberdeen and bought two cows 'so we'd have plenty of milk for the kids," Fischer said. 3 The five children are the sec- ond set of quintuplets born in the western hemisphere in a week, Last Saturday in Maracaibo, Venezuela, five boys were born almost two months premature to Mrs, Cuervo de Prieto, 34- year-old grandmother who has five children by a previous marriage. filled." Cudney, Ontario's deputy pro- vneial secretary, sad today he has resigned because certain assurances given hm about his authority. and res po nsibility have not been fulfilled. Mr. Cudney, who has been with the Ontario government for 32 years--18 of them as deputy minster in the provin- cial secretary's department -- said he handed n his resigna- tion last March but had been asked by Premier Robarts to reconsider. He tendered his res- ignation again Friday. "I was given certain assur- ances: that certain reforms would be carred out in the de- partment and that I would be restored the authority and re- sponsibility that statutes afford a deputy minister," he said, "On these assurances, I agreed to carry on. These as- surances have not been ful- In Sarnia, Premier Robarts Wintermeyer, ceived Mr. Cudney's letter of resignation but "I have not had time to deal with it." He de- clined further comment, TERMED. BOMBSHELL Donald C. MacDonald, leader - of Ontario's New Democratic Party, described the resigna- tion as a "bombshell that may well blow the lid off things" in the remaining days of the elec- tion campaign for the Sept. 25 Ontario election. Both Mr. MacDonald and John Ontario Liberal leader, attributed Mr. Cudney's resignation to falure of the gqv- ernment to reform the secre- tary's department and the con- duct of the royal commisson 'on crime last. year. Mr. Cudney, 53, said he could neither confirm aor deny this. "T've thought deeply about this. It hasn't come quickly. I woul! have much preferred to have stayed with the depart- ment for another seven years untl-I got full penson benefits, but in view of the conditions t dicn't think I could stay." army airmen and others do not hinder civilian news photo- graphers unless classified in- formation is involved. The order was issued Friday following adverse publicity growing out of an incident in- volving a free - lance photo- grapher, Peter Holt of Menio He said his resignaton has nothing to do with the provin- cial election. Monkey Brain physician, Dr. James Berbos, said the births presented some difficulties because four of the children were breech deliveries, although one arrived in the usual head-first position. ALL, FINE In the hospital nursery this morning, however, all five Cuba Visit Probe Ends In Violence WASHINGTON (AP) -- One are not elected because Negroes allowed to vote... ." oie Beale gain , that the pictures were allowed. Park, Calif. Holt said he de- film after the - of babies were described as get- | an x-ray examination. end at fold Huge Grain Sale To Russia Near? OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's biggest grain sale ever to. a Communist country is expected to be concluded this weekend or early next week with a mam- moth sale to Soviet Russia, in- formants say. | students again attended classes! under armed guard. jin all three cities informants Economic Ills | said QUEBEC (CP) -- Dr. J. A } | be repaired today. \for a government Seaman Swims I Atlantic NEW YORK (AP)--A Ger-jarriving at the scene, the Ab-jestablished themselves man seaman rescued after 14 hours in bleak Atlantic waters is back on his ship today be- moaning his poker playing but day the 13th. engineer aboard the motor ves- sel Freiburg, went topside for After picking up Franz, the|that '"'we are not free in the _m,|Absecon arranged a rendezvous/province of Quebec." Thursday night after a poker|With the Freibufy:"About 12:30/'During the session. He was not wearing a|@-™. today he was transferred|ment of Laurentian (a French- |efforts by varipus agencies to Canadian company) neither|alter the fe bec Act to] a breath of air about 10 p. life preserver. The 327-foot ship rolled heav- ily and Franz went into the briny some 800 miles east- northeast of Bermuda: Franz knew he wouldn't be missed until he failed to relieve the watch 2% midnight. There was nothing to do but swim. The Freiburg, en route from Tampico, Mexico, to Rotterdam, did miss Franz at midnight, sent out a radio call for help, and turne' back. Franz said he saw his ship return several hours later, fail to spot him, and then leave. In his meagre English, Franz told his rescuers: "IT shout and shout but she go a@way." SHIP ASKS HELP The Freiburg had asked help of U.S. Coast Guard ocean sta- tion Echo, 800 miles northeast of Bermuda. From station Echo the 311-foot cutter Absecon im- Mediately got under way. After 14 Hours jsecon radioed triumphantly: jpicked up at 12:04 p.m." } it} Franz was sighted in the wa-|have been ourselves the craits- praising 'my lucky day"'--Fri-|ter waving his undershorts. He}men of our inferiority in the climbed naked into the Abse-jeconomic field,' Dr. Franz Strycharczyk, 26, third|con's cargo net unassisted and|said. ithen collapsed on deck. {to his ship after telling his res- "uers : ic |b jcause you picked me up." nh "Man found swimming andit? 'I think Ith my unlucky day! ecause lose all money playing|Japanese, Communists, Fascists jpoker, and fall overboard. Butjor anybody else gave us the|agency offici Friday 13th my lucky day be-|least worry or opposed us with|day they we | Saigon, which had been the| ;scene of dozens of similar dem- Tardif, president of the Laur- Ad " entian Life Assurance Company} option said Friday the people of Que-| ti jbec province themselves P responsible for their inferiority} Tac ICES | onstrations in the last week, are in the economic sector of so- Irk Pocock ;was reported quiet today as ciety. The deal is said to be worth tional support Friday in Mont- real shipping circles. Ship brokers say they have detected in the last few days a splurge of activity by Russia in the international ship-charter market. Already some vessels have been fixed for the St. Law- rence River and Black and Bal- of the most vi olent episodes. in a ek th all ties has ended. A beatnik-tinged tide of stu- dents and their followers has decamped from Congress after two days of hearings on a trip 59 of their number made to Cuba this summer in violation of a state department ban. Many ong the young peo- ple wore rds, denim work shirts, blue jjegqms and sandals | over bare fe The most serious outbreak among the many that plagued the hearings came near the end Friday. A witness, Kathy Prensky, was asked whether she was a member of a Progressive Labor the building. hearings was to determine whether new laws are needed are not A) 4 Police began grabbing the loudest clappers and hustling them toward the door. "Leave them alone," cried others. "Ty- Tranny," someone shouted over and over, Several girls squirmed out of the grasp of the police and slumped to the floor; they started screaming outside as they were propelled down the stairs. At least 13 persons were rushed out of the building and tossed down the front steps of The avowed purpose of the Sill live CLEVELAND (AP)--A group of Cleveland doctors report that after several years of work they have succeeded in keeping a monkey's brain alive for several hours outside the animal's body. Dr. Robert J. White, chief of neurosurgery at Metropolitan General Hospital, said Friday that the monkey's brain, when hooked up by plastic tubes to an oxygenating machine in hig experiments, has the appeaf> ance of a living, functioning or- ganism. Brain waves recorded on elec- tronic equip t and m ments of the use of oxygen and | wheat expecied to be shipped sugar by the brain are indica- tions that the organ continues to function, he said. Dr. White, whose major inter- est is brain surgery, said the de- velopment. demonstrated it might be possible to keep the brain of an injured human alive while surgeons. worked on other parts of the body. to prevent unauthorized Ameri- cans from travelling to Cuba. But much of the questioning of counsel Alfred Nittle was aimed at linking the Cuban student trip with the Progressive Labor Or- ganization, which he said was founded by two Communists ex- pelled from the party for devi- ationism, more. than $500,000,000 with more than 200,000,000 bushels of|tic Sea ports, while others are being chartered to ply between Vancouver and the Siberian port of Vladivostok. Russia, one of the world's big grain growers, has not officially said why it may be in the mar- ket for Canadian grain. How- éver, there have been reports of serious drought in some of its grain areas. student club, which the com- mittee called a Communist splinter group. Her voice trem- bling with emotion, she said: "Yes, because I believe social- ism is the way to end racism and under socialism we can have congressmen who- are truly representative and who in what would be the largest single order ever received here for wheat in one year. Recent grain sales to Commu- nist China would be dwarfed. Informants also indicated that a new trade agreement, under- tood to be in the final stages | He was speaking at the in- jauguration of the company's new $4,000,000 head office. s TORONTO (CP)--An alleged|of negotiation with Russia, may | tendency in Ontario toward per-|provide for additional ~ grain mitting children of one faith to| <a] "If we have preferred to play) pe adopted by couples of ane es. : politics while outside investors! other has been strongl at-|_,With an immense wheat crop firmly|tacked by a Roman Coho of 694,331,000 bushels, on | Cl slightly less than 1952's recor whose fault is i ere Philip F. Pocock jharvest, forecast for this year, | "It seems clear enough we) coadjutor archbishop of Tor./2 sale of this magnitude may jonto, restates his church's oppo- help lessen the prospects of a /sition to this notion in the cur-|™MaJor increase in surplus wheat Tardif| rent issue of the Canadian Reg.| StOCkS- i ; | Terms of the grain sale to He said-it is false to ctettaliie weekly Roman Catho-| russia are believed to involve The front-page article is sup- Supinen walun i es ar : ported by an. editorial which CRORE =e Das. rapid develop-| says the archbishop is protesting| BRITAIN HOLDS RECORD Biggest wheat order of any kind Canada has ever received was the 1946-49 long-term wheat deal of 600,000,000 bushels with : | Britain. als said here Fri-| Reports that Russia is on the re unaware of such) verge of major wheat purchases from Canada was given addi- jin the province, Jews, English - speaking per- Americans, Germans, permit adoptio ithout consid- eration for religfous affiliation. Government and welfare sons, the least. resistance. 'efforts. PENSION ISSUE 'PHONY' ROBARTS SAYS By THE CANADIAN PRESS While Premier Robarts «was defending the Progressive Con- servative stand on the federal pension plan in Sarnia Friday inight, opposition leaders con- tinued their assaults on two other topics. Liberal Leader John Winter- meyer, addressing a rally in Fort William, re - opened his charges against the Progressive Conservatives over affairs - in CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS the community of White River. } | He claimed his questions jabout the town "will not be answered because the Tory re- | jgime cannot affard the White POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 |River story exposed to the light\NDP leader was to visit Strat- o* day. In Oshawa, New Democratic | | Opposition Continues Attack partment, saying it has failed|/Lambton East and West ridings,|single objective of developing to grow with the province. jSaid he would not be pushed |the best possible national plan. We have a labor department|into the pension issué by any-| He mentioned a report from Ottawa stating frust and insur- proclaiming its new look andjone, including' the 'federal gov-} bit politi-|ance companies were forming a Officails here also report that many European countries have had a poor harvest, which may spur other Canadian sales. IMPACT SHOWS 'The prospect of a major sale to Russia had its impact in sev- eral ways Friday: 1, There was heightened ac- tivity in the Winnipeg grain markets. 2.-The Canadian wheat board took further steps to reappraise the entire grain marketing situ- ation. : 3. A record 1,800,000 bushels of Ontario soft winter wheat was sold to an undisclosed buyer, giving rise to speculation it may be headed also for Rus- sia, or perhaps Cuba. The wheat board's main move was to impose a temporary ban on private export sales of wheat for shipment after Oct. 20, A spokesman said "we are holding off in order to reassess our position."' Further new sales tq regular Ss were b d by th board last week. hans Officials, however, said the appraisal is prompted not only by good demand but also by the necessity of being able to move sufficient feed and other grain into Eastern Canada before freeze-up. stubb rnly - refusing to intro-jernment and' "'two - jlobby to present their position duce a single new plan into its'cias."' Safety program," he<said. He was replying to Mr, Win-|in the issue, but said: "This is ' termeyer's charges that he wa3itheir ri j i CUTS TOUR SHORT ; ; Wasitheir right, just as it is your Mr. Wintermeyer cut short pare to ing pia the Can-'right and my right," his northern tour in his Viti tihon aa of geribia thesteiien onic Mr: Winter , Tepeating paign for the Sept, 25 general| nanies : jin effect charges made: about election,.c ance lling, tonight's|) «ppcr, ic ; two weeks ago, attacked the speech in Fort Frances to pre- ar a Nig tigen May gh oS of Naldo Bracci, chair- pare for taping of a joint tele-| satisfactory plan when I am| man of the White River town vision appearance with the ia' ; jcouncil, as being too much in jsatisfied .that Ontario's rights} ' " other leaders, |have been protected," he said, (Sympathy with the Progressive Mr. Robarts planned to cam-| |Conservative party, of which he paign in Ottawa today, and the|CALLS IT PHONY jis an official. Mr. Robarts, describing the) Mr. MacDonald told his-Osh- ford and London. pension issue as a phony one,'awa audience there are twice The premier, speaking to al-|said he had hoped it could be|as many game wardens protect- Party Chief Donald MacDonald|most 500 persons on behalf of|kept out of partisan politics sojing wild life in Ontario as in- YOU'LL FIND "INSIDE... MacDonald Flays Industry fafety Policy ........ Page 9 Rotarians Plan Friendship Day Page 9 Ancient Auto Presented to Museum ......... Page 9 Cee sense erees Four Injured in King St. E. Accident ..... Shrine Club Aids' Page 9 eriticized Ontario's iabor de-'Conservative candidates inlit could be examined with theispectors protecting human life. Arena Drive ......+. Page 9 | sae Donald MacDonald, New Democratic Party leader for Ontario and T, D."'Tommy" Thomas, Jeft, NDP candidate | in the Oshawa Riding for the, upcoming provincial election are seen prior to ag party $a an Rtn Ra etn rally at Central Collegiate Friday night. Mr. Thomas, the incumbent candidate, has held his office at Queen's Park since 1948. Also present at Friday night's meeting were area NDP candidates NDP LEADER VISITS OSHAWA Harry Ashton representing Durham Riding and Tommy Edwards, candidate for On- tario Riding. (See story Page 9). bee os --Oshawa Times Photo,