San ee I YI Wem aes To np RR a SES SS" < POR an rr alg Rea aR year nym 7 Rp She Oshawa Gime Authorized as Second Ottawa and for IDENTIFICATIO GRIM PRO Plan Services WEATHER REPORT Mainly clear. and cold tonight, variable cloudiness with light snowflurries Tuesday. THOUGHT FOR TODAY If you say you're up to your ears in work, maybe you're lying down on the job. " rs Class Mail Post Office Department Pace et payment of Postage in Cash. 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 Vancouvers Police Dogs Win Twice Friday and Saturday night's en- counters with young rowdies who surged onto the street, blocking traffic and pelting po- lice wih eggs and tomatoes. A phalanx of dogs on six-foot leashes and wearing spiked riot collars, backed by a solid line of motorcycies and arm-linked patrolmen, moved slowly down the street, sweeping the crowd out of the area. Saff Inspector Dan Brown, VOL. 92 -- NO. 282 TWENTY-TWO PAGES a VNCOUVER (CP) -= .Cana- dian Football League record books and Vancouver's police blotter will be companion docu- - |ments in the histony of the 1963 » |Grey Cup. ' Statistically, Hamilton Tiger- . |Cats gained the cup by defeat- ing British Columbia Lions 21-10 'jon ouchdown passes by quar- -. |terback Bernie Faloney to Wil- > |lie Bethea and Hal Patterson and a touchdown run by Art Keak ts James Andrew Fischer, huskiest of the quintuplets born Sept. 14, sleeps in his mother's arms, during a pic- ture taking session just before "SLEEPS THROUGH IT ALL leaving St. Luke's Hospital in Aberdeen, S.D. The other four youngsters will remain in the hospital for a while. James Death Threats Defied -- By Venezuelan Voters CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)--|ain's Labor party, Portly bespectacled Raul|votes from the interior and oil-|in a gun fight between a ter- Leoni, candidate of President|rich Zulia state, where his party |norist : Romulo Betancourt's Democra-|is strong, to pile up his margin|troops in Caracas. tic Action party, held an early lead in unofficial presidential election returns today after an overwhelming turnout of Vene- zuelans yoted in defiance of death threats from pro - Com- munist terrorists. Unofficial returns from about lar Pietri lay Iadopnd: r .e - ent, 36,542; Rafael a, So- cial Christian party, 27,803; Wolfgang Jarrazabel, Popular Democratic Action, 6,828, and German Borregales of. the rightist Authentic National Movement, 442. Counting of yotes was delayed by the number of presidential and congressional candidates. Leoni aws apparently heading looked to jof victory. | Uslar Pietri was running far jahead in Caracas where the Democratic Action party ran last in the 1958 election. But Leoni wasa pparently heading for a better showing this time in the capital. BOMB AND SNIPE The pré-Castro Armed Forces for National Liberation threat- ened death. to-those-who voted and kept up the bontbing, sniper/ fire and sabotagp with which it sought during the campaign to provoke a militaky overthrow of Betancourt. _ The voters were not intimi- dated. Officials estimated that a record 3,400,000 persons, about 96 per cent of the eligible vot- ers, cast ballots. worker-peasant party to Brit- During the day a police agent Positive Taxing Policy Proposed MONTREAL (CP) --- Arnoldipansion, "sparked by an en- Hart, president of the Bank of|couraging increase in Canada's} Montreal, said today Canadians/exports and, more recently, by Baker Peter Kempf put the Lions on \officer in command of the po- lice operation across from the the scoreboard with a second-|hotels, said: "The dogs were a quarter field goal and quarter-|most effective weapon." back Joe Kapp rallied the bat-| \tered team to a touchdown injin sunshine with a crowd esti- *\\the dying minutes with a pass-|mated at 100,000 lining streets 2 Grey Cup day began bathed and-run play to Mack Burton to view a varade representing The non - Statistics, game every prviessional football city charges laid by police between and including floats, marching 3 p.m. Friday and noon Sun-|bands and pretty girls. five now now weighs 10 pounds, ounces. The Fischers have 10 children. --AP Wirephoto | day: 249 15 28 3 Intoxication Fighting Unlawful assembly Obstructing police Assault Damaging property Impaired driving Reckless driving Drunken driving Total 6 13 1 1 319 BLAME HOODLUMS Police blamed most of Fri- day's pre-game and Saturday's on Py * [fringe looking for off-the-field|Comtaminated with glass to Rus- post-game mob behavior in the! : city's theatre and hotel district|Sian authorities do not believe an irresponsible hoodlum "'kicks,"" |was killed and his wife wounded gang and police and Five bombs exploded in Car- jacas, including one in an apart- jment building hallway that in- jjured a child. A special patrol |disarmed 30 other bombs. | Gun battles broke out after jnightfall and. after the polls jclosed. Avenue Urdaneta, in downtown Caracas, was a no man's Jand of machine-gun and, small arms fire, During 'a prolonged sniper at- tack on a police station a, votley' of fire poured into' the windows! of the United Press Isterna-) tinal agency on the ninth floor of an office building. 'One bul- let nicked the chest of camera- man Carl: Warner of jami, Fla., and other bullets kn@cked out the lights and power #sup- ply. f Another gun battle raged out-! side the building housing The} Associated Press until National) Guard troops blocked the' streets | with barbed wire and drove the; snipers from the roof tops. About 10,000 police and! guardsmen were posted in Car-! acas and another 40,000 through-| out the country to protect vot- ers. Resume Search pr of thé Dupont Building in town Miami landed on a fifth-floor ledge. suicide,"' on the 13th floor of the Dupont. Ruling Parties Get Clear Edge ~ | were Snarling police dogs won both Kennedy Frien Dies In Plunge MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Grant |Stockdale, former U.S. ambas- Sador to Ireland and a close personal friend of the late Pres- dropped to | today fromthe 13th: Miami. The body of the 48-year-o! real estate executive 4 Police called it an "appare Stockdale's office | There was little rowdyism at \Empire Stadium as the 36,465 \fans filed--for the most part-- |somberly out after the game. | The Grey Cup hangover will be Vancouver's last for a while. Toronto gets next year's game. | Glass In Grain | "Not Sabotage' MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Rus- |that shipment of Canadian grain | Sia was an act of sabotage, it dai A senior Russian expert, who| jdid not-want to be named, told \a. questioner: "We do not think |that this action was deliberate." He said that some holds in about eight ships carrying Ca- nadian grain were affected. Glass found there consisted of "broken and unbroken' bottles apparently used by- stevedores total fig- jwas reliably learned here to-| |day. { } Tiger-Cat punter and de- fensive back Joe Zuger sports a Western stetson and a big smile as he wends his way through a t of -welcom- VICTORY SMILE More than 4,000 fans braved sub-freezing temperatures and a four-hour delay to take part jis directing investigating teams STE. THERESE de BLAIN- VILLE, Que. (CP) -- Trans- Canada Air Lines officials said that by mid-morning today the remains of about 12 of the 118 victims of Friday's DC-8F crash had been identified. Temperatures well below the freezing mark hindered workrs in this Laurentian foothills com- munity as they carried out their grim . 'The victims were dentified largely through jew- elry or other personal belong- ings. A spokesman for TCA said it is hoped some kind of memorial services can be arranged to be held in both the Montreal and Toronto districts since most of the victims were from these areas. The department of transport sifting through wreckage stuck in frozen mud to determine why' the jetliner crashed four min-| utes after takeoff Friday night from Montreal's Dorval Airport. The plane was heading for Tor- onto. For Air Victims aboard the the ground. plane. until: it struck Provincial medico - legal .ox perts said there were indicar.. tions that the luge jet struck at an angle of about 55 degrees at a speed of 300 to 400 miles an hour. They said this was suggested by the way in which the jet ground and by the positions of pieces f wreckage and remains of vic- tims. The aircraft carried no flight recorder, an electronic device which records on aluminum foil such and speed. A TCA spokesman said such an instrument and its observations would have been destroyed in the crash in any event. information as altitutde A TCA spokesman said it is the The Quebec attorney-general's department, along with Quebec in relation to the work of the coroner, who still has jurisdic- tion over the remains of the victims down- NO BLAST IN AIR 'nelleve 'here was no ex in Canada , Wits not ie amount should be estabii within a few days. that about 3,000,000 bushels out tal order, were affected. By THE CANADIAN PRESS | The ruling parties of both Australia and New Zealand in power today} after winning general elections | doubtful Saturday against matnly Labor| opposition. firmly Menzies' hopes of a majority jot 19 increased today as mail and absentee votes favored the government candidate in a still- seat in New Soutn Wales. Until the seat is decided, he coalition has a majority of} Canadian, officials have said) of 239,000,000 bushels in the to-| Torkey/s PM | Inonu Resigns ANKARA, Tutkey (AP) Prime Minister Ismet Inonu, 80, resigned today. He had returned only Satur- day from Washington, where he attended the funeral of Presi- dent Kennedy. In his absence, two members os his governing coalition--the New Turkey Party and the Pea- sants Nation Party--decided to pull out. This left the. 80-year- old political veteran in the posi- tion either of forming a new government or. calling 'parlia- mentary elections. Reports that Inonu was to be union leaders help. Jo! |Miich tore' popular in the in- time/dustrial states than Johnson, need any successful fext year. The new president already hag enlisted organized labor in his cause by numerous calls to king for their|p who in turn was more popular in the South. But. no one close to him be-|° lieves that Johnson is going to soften the vigorous stand he has taken fr civil rights legislation and he may be considerably less Negro leaders as Roy Wil- kins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People, into consul- itis Pp in the South next No- vember than he is today. While he was vice-president, Johnson said the administration was convinced 'that it is pos- sible to lower world tensions without lowering our guard." * ¥ on a government post Sun- Ygand @ young woman burned to death Saturday in pro. test).against the war. Red stronghold. The' 42. civil guards and 20 wives and chil- dren were killed in the heavy Communist attack. But 15 sur- viving guardsmen, although wounded, held off the Commu- must use positive rather than/special large wheat contracts." assassinated circulated in Tur-|"@ve pn Being no r after a nists until reinforcements ar- --* restrictive measures to decrease} "There is a noticeable upward ownership of Canadian business. | trend and, despite some discon- The royal commission on tax-|certing developments during the ation could provide "a powerful| year, there seems now to be a incentive for Canadians to in-| significant improvement in busi- crease their investment in their ness confidence." [rest own country," said Mr, Hart,) R. D. Mulholland, vice-presi-| addressing the bank's 146th an-\dent and general manager, fe- nual shareholders' meeting. jviewed the bank's financial | downed in Bob's Lake: 35 miles "Corporate profits are now|achievements. during the previ-| taxed at full rates as they arejous fiscal year. -- gcc see ET A yediied, and then taxed again te) The bank declared a net pro-|. i A the extent that they become fit of $16,747,028 for the year| dividends in the hands of in-jended Oct. 31 For 3 Hunters compared with 2 |. In Australia, Prime Minister|18 since it must appoint the Sir Robert Menzies' 14-year-old| Speaker, who does not have a Liberal-Country . party coalition standard vote. KINGSTON (CP) -- A heli-| Was returned to power for aN-| AD MARGIN OF ONE copter and ground parties today|°ther three years with a greatly ed a search for. three|imcreased majority, winning 71 young duck hunters missing/Of the 122 seats at stake in the) since Saturday and presumed/House of Representatives. The opposition Labor party led by Arthur Calwell won 50) \drich|seats. Two other seats, with lim-/prass conference Sunday night and Richard Deschamps, both) ited t 1" and from Kingston, and Da-|contested, I voting powers, sabor holds both of dividuals.\ Could not double tax-|$16,013,512 for the previous/Vid Barrett, 20, of Montreal--'them. | i In New Zealand, P re mii e r/thought I would settle for a ma-|112 passengers aboard for Cal- ation be further reduced, or, year. Assets increased to $4,275,-/Set out early Saturday. Their what would be preferable, elim-|900,000 from $4,015,000,000 at the| boat was found Sunday, inated altogether?" end of the last fiscal year. De-| Police dragged the lake Sun Mr. Hart said Canada has ex-|posits totalled $3,962,000,000| day, but found no trace of | perienced renewed economic ex-! against $3,713,000,000, |them GRIM TASK OF RECOVERY Ice Grips Crash Site STE. THERESE DE BLAIN-!impact four minutes after pk pag haba VILLE, Que. (CP) -- Zero tem-|ing off Friday from Montreal's| peratures gripped this Lauren-/Dorval Airport for Toronto. the Federal manufacturers of|Toronto residents, 17 from Mont- the plane, and U.S, experts from! real, five from Western Canada, tial foothills community today as) The grim remains of Canada's'and the Civil Aeronautics from the U.S. and one from In- workers resumed the near-hope-|worst air disaster, arms, legs/Board. less task of recovering the mu-jand other pieces of human be-| The county coroner, Dr. Jean-| . tilated bodies of 118 persons who] ings, were gathered and brought|Louis Taillon, said that contrary died in the fiery crash of their|to the temporary morgue at ajto earlier reports his inquest jetliner, jnearby army camp. About 25jhad not begun but will be Freezing weather hampered|pieces were retrieved but notjopened Tuesday and adjourned| recovery. operations and turned) one complete body was found almost immediately until the) the marshy fields into a frozen|during the weekend in the ma-|conclusion of the transport de- greveyard for a Trams-Canada\cabre maze of mud and metal/partment's investigation. Airy Lnes DC-8F and its 111 pas-'that once was a' proud airplane.| QOfficialshave been consider- ers and seven crew. . At was believed most of theling a.mass burial for the vic- nstigatng teams, under| victims still] lay buried in the; 'rection of the department/30-yard square crater that. holds!ment in the wreckage "'for at Ci Cgc combed the scat-|the bulk of the plarie. least four days" and the near-| tcrea Wreckage during the|..., os ub of weekend for clues to determine SEEK oar yee a i | why the sleek jetliner tumbled Phi Race ok artes Dm ode from the sky and exploded 0n)+snsvort department, Richard|CIRIOUS ABSENT |Bolduc, 48, said he would be on| The hundreds jthe and|flocked here when 'flight 831 impossibility identification. B nounced. scene 'indefinitely' CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS PULICE. 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 possible cause at this stage of|Friday were our ifivesigation when the "We ate taking everything across the sit' of the crash, 800 into consid'ration," he said, feet west of highway 11 Mr. Boldue's inquiry is a co-\20 miles north of Montreal operative effort of the depart-| | tims, because of their entomb-,2"! , manager, vision, of the Bank of Nova Sco- tia, Toronto; ut no decision hag been an-|quctign planning man | Steel of curious who! Montreal; cold wind whipped'© | Of the 111 passengers, 92 were | chines ment, TCA, Douglas Aircraftjfrom Ontario, 70°of them Metro|Toronto. , idia. The victims: included many {Prominent businessmen. Among them were: John MacPherson Page, 48, secretary and vice-president, fi- nance, of the H. J. Heinz Com- pany of Canada Limited, Leam- ington, Ont.; Seorge A. Griffiths, 55, assist- international di- Thomas S. Butcher, 56, pro- ager at the Lasalle plant of Dominion and Coal Corporation, Charles Stone, Montreal stock- that he wasn't "discounting any|went down at 6:32 p.m. EstT|broker and former part-owner missing Sundayj0f Montreal Alouettes Football lub; Joseph C. King, 46, vice-pres- Company of 4 RSA INGRTAT REE PAOD ROR eBay | In the old House, the coali- tion had a margin of only one vote, holding 62 seats to 60 for jthe opposition, but losing the key Saturday and a heavy se- curity guard was thrown around him as*he arrived from the United States. DC-8 Jet Delayed |vote of the Speaker. Menzies, 69, in a teleiysed victory."' | "In my best moments I Keith Holyoake led his National|Jority of 10 and if there was a party to win 44 seats in the 80-/majority of 12 it would be seat single - chamber Parlia-|SPlendid. Now it looks a much ment. |bigger majority, That is not an easy thing when you are con- ducting your seventh successive election." Holyoake's victory was not as decisive but government offici- als appeared content. In the old Parliament, the government had 46 seats and Labor 34. Arnold Nordmeyer's Labor Party won 35 seats in the voting and the Social Credit party won its first pariiamentary place. |The Liberals and Communists Aviation' Agencyjone from New Brunswick, twolfailed in all the 23 seats they! \contested. Senegal Vote Results Given DAKAR, Senegal (Reuters) -- Senegal radio confirmed today the re-election of President Leo- ;pold Senghor in Sunday's bloody | general election in which 11 per- sons died and some 60 others wounded. The radio said Senghor's rul- ing Senegalese Progressive Un- jon party won an absolute ma- jority-in the legislature. Seng- hor ran without opposition. Armed clashes between police and demonstrators Sunday marred the elections--the first since Senegal became: independ. fent in August, 1960. The gov- jernment imposed a dusk to and 'dent and general. sales mana-|dawn curfew over the city ger, International Business Ma-} Canada, | ceived 900,505 votes out of 1,320,-/ would be nearly unthinkable," Senegal radio said Senghor re- 000 eligible voters, By Wing Repairs TORONTO (C.)--A DC-8 jet were noticalled it "a very remarkable|was delayed three hours Sunday for wing repairs and a test flight before leaving here with gary. "Passengers were dis- appointed but there was no grumbling over our exacting precautionary. routine," a Trans-Canada Air Lines super- visor said. White House visit was that he had '"'very great faith" in John- son's stand on civil rights. Whit- ney Young, executive director of the National Urban League, is a White House caller today. Democratic liberals such as Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota have rallied to John- son's side. The president has asked 'Kennedy's 'liberal advis- ers, notably Arthur M. Schles- inger Jr., to stay on. Most observers believe John- son will adopt the Kennedy ad- ministration's strategy for the 1964 campaign of concentrating on the populous industrial states while trying to hold on to at least part of the South. There will be differences, of course, because Kennedy was | | LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime |Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home jsaid today he is "fairly con- vinced" Britain is approaching a period of '"'more constructive relations" with Russia. He also told a luncheon given in his honor by the Parliament- ary Press Gallery that Com- munist China would have its own nuclear weapon "in a fairly short time." Douglas-Home said he did not Vase his forecast about more constructive relations with the \Soviet Union on the economic difficulties it faced or its needs. | 'Rather, I risk it on the So- viet leaders' appreciation of the devastation brought by the nu- clear bomb and the effect of China on the Soviet Union bor- der which in a fairly short time }will have nuclear weapons. it- iself. | "An ideologi¢al war on two |fronts would be bad enough, but to face the prospect of physical jconfrontation on two fronts lie added, F Two-Side Threat To Russia Noted "I am fairly convinced that we are approaching a period when we can have more con- structive relations with the So- viet Union . . ." -he declared. The premier said that "al-' though it is necessary to keep our on the one hand and negotiate flexibly on the other, nevertheless I think we ought to be able to come to areas of agreement with the Soviet Un- 108. ee These areas could: be the pre- possibly the first stage of phys- ica! disarmament, the disarmament. of some nu- clear weapons. "The way' to increase Brit- ain's influence is not to discard her power at the present time," he said. Douglas-Homne said that in the 17-power disarmament ' discus- sions resuming at Geneva Jan, 21 he would advocate attempts to find a basis of agreement which would start the physical process .of disarmament. it was announced today. including| § Second Baby For Princess LONDON (Reuters) rived, The Communists were be- lieved to have suffered about 50 fatalities, but the guerrillas car- tied the bodies away. On a lonely road. near Tinh --Prin-|Dien, 115 miles southwest of Sai- cess Margaret is expecting her|gon, an American special forces second child at the end of April,)man was killed and another sol- dier wounded in an ambush. vention of surprise attack and] 7 RETURN IN Hamilton Tiger-Cat captains Bernie Faloney- (left) and John Barrow carry the covet- ed Grey Cup from their TCA plane at Toronto Internatwn- al Airport last night, Follow- ae TRIUMPH * ing thém? 'is head " doach Ralph Sazio, pilot of a cham- pionship team in his first year as head coach. (CP. Wirephoto) r &