peggy eee She Oshawa Sines Weather Report * WVariable cloudiness and con- tinuing cold Saturday. Clearing tonight. Thought For Today Vacation note: There are two kinds of travel, first class and with children. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1964 rea es Seer a ee Oe 'eran' WILL GO ON WI PENSION PLAN: EIGHTEEN PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 79 Gancmaiaitintiaciteaiiades ROYAL BEATLE? This British teenager might be mistaken for one of the rock 'n roll group, the Beatles. Actually, he is Prince Charles, 15-year-old heir to the British scored triumph in Juiz de | Fora in Minas Geras state. GENERALE Olimpio Mourao Filho, whose infantry troops led the anti-communist revolt against Brazilian President Joau Goulart, speaks to a vic- tory rally in Rio de Janeiro yesterday. At right is state deputy Maodowel Leite de provincial conference decided|diately that its need for more {relation to rising pressures for|in mid-April, hinted that he will) | One "'important purpose" of| home. : a | | resources to finance rising costs|Quebec it was important "that ter Pearson said today the fed-jnizes Mr. Diefenbaker as am fcourt action by Queebc if the ul-| | Replying in the Commons to|to go ahead with the pension -----|timate statutory ques jfederal government's proposals| federal-provincial conference at) Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- Quebec's 'constitutional rights in this fashion as he returned ment would take no action i [James Ackworth; a 44-year-old) \ovincial views. M.. Pearson via cable from London x | Dr. B. D, Ragula, Mr. Bain-|qiate negotiations on the form- ney, which was transplanted to|wanting to take over full re- Castro. General Filho's troops I lai ] I its Part Boss eating well and sat up andjsaid only that the negotiations | jshaved himself for the second|would apply to programs Thursday to launch a minister-|money is urgent--that it can't more spending. jconsider a tax increase at) |the study--though Prime Minis-| Quebec's requests were emin-| of education and other serv-|we prove without further delay eral government remains deter-|authority on conference fiascos strides in its so - called '"de-| form of 'the| |opposition questions about the plan without delay, Kidn Donor for university-sthdent Joans, and) | lQueber. he said that.as far as nipes Sorth, -Centeey. 6a Tae the field of education from his Scottish school, Gor- either field before considering} |grandmother, visited Donald/yent no further himself in re- bridge's physician, said the kid-)yJa to be applied to provinces the body of the 21-year-old man| sponsibility for programs now| j a time since the operation. \"'which are of a permament na-| Brazil Revo t ould s QUEBEC (CP) -- Taking an|mand" for one-quarter of the unprecedented step, the federal-|income tax fields, said imme- lial-level "review in depth'? of|wait any longer. Je : the nature and extent ut taxes) Premier Lesage, due to de- ' lat both levels of government injliver his Quebec budget speech} re) ar S 1 n it Pl PM a lter Pearson stressed that it is/ently justifiable, he _ The} Qui an: | I --is to give the| provinces were paying the price : ee é $ odin wie tate of tax|of unbalanced tax sharing. To| OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-| Mr. Pearson said he recog: ices stitutional|that we have firmly decided to : Fie 3 E ; mined to proceed with the Can-)but nothing happened at the ame fo ig sononeatie." correct this situation " | 7 ; jada Pension Plan as early as|Quebec conference that. will in- cr piitie, ageitc nein 'no| Meanwhile, he threatened | 4 possible. terfere with federal intentions family allowances for 16- and _ |the federal government is con-\that Mr. Pearson had heard 17-year-olds still in school, show) jeerned only Quebec has indi-|nothing at the Quebec. confer- Vi its With i--to him--that they infringe o ae The communique issued at| 3 4 ae ; : ; | R ient |the end of the three-day confer-| : | ecip lence said the federal govern 3 ; | LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Mrs. donstoun, for a weekend visit at windsor. Bainbridge Thursday, five days/niving to reporters later. throne. A gusty wind at Lon- --AP Wirephoto after she gave him one of her The communique also an- don airport blew his hair in |kidneys to save his life. nounced agreement - on imme-| Pri Cell Lett rison e e er last Saturday, is functioning|jointly financed with Ottawa. | |*close to normal." Specific programs were not Mr. Bainbridge was reported|cited in the communique. | It! i i i hich involve fairly} NEW DELHI (AP) -- India's; Dange was in Moscow when| Doctors continue to stress|ture and w \ ) capital is agog over "The case|the ea broke. He flew home| that it will be at least two weeks|regular annual expenditures." H of the mysterious letter." and declared he was a jtvine|before it can be determised; Hospital insurance is the big-) : e The thriller involves British|the whole affair because it gave|Whether the transplant is suc-|gest. The federal 50-per-cent) intelligence, unknown hands|him a good chance to challenge cessful. . [share ae ee ar uer:rr©ri (@ | ar secretly searching the dusty|party dissidents. |. Mrs. Ackworth is expected 4 ei eaeea | national archives, a revolution-| His mood changed the next|£0 home at the end of this week) farlier, Mr. Pearson told the) ary flying home from Moscow|day when he received tele-|0r early next week. conference that it would take) RIO DE JANEIRO--Brazil An. army spokesman. 'said! Goulart, abandoning his vow cated an intention to proceed with its own provincial plan. He promised to make a full statement Monday on the con- ference and its results. Opposition Leader Dicfen-| baker and T. C., Douglas, New Democratic leader, attempted to get information about federal intentions should Ontario as well as Quebec decide to remain out- side the federal plan Mr. Pearson said the question was hypothetical. The federal government was working on the {assumption that only one prov-| ince--Quebec -- has decided to plan. He said he did not interpret the statements of Premier Robarts of Ontario as indicat- ing any intention to stay out. Mr. Robarts had «not actually indicated his government's in- tentions either after the Quebec plan was first proposed. CALLS IT FIASCO to- in the night. : ms from party cells through-| She met Mr. Bainbridge for|«in the order of 12 or 13 perjday was face@-with.a-period ofjearly today Goulart had left his|to fight to the death, vanished = voor he ; out Indi his own. Trades/ thé first time last Saturday only/cent" of the personal income! interig government in the wake/ranchat Sao Borja,-on the Ar-!Thursday after--ffying out of on your "politics," Was snripad|Union Congress, All demanded| minutes before they entered Sep-/fiejq°to compensate provinces of Amrit Dange, the pro-Russian|that he resign. arate operating theatres. "contracting out" of hospital in-|army revolt that deposed presi-jfor Buenos Aires 'and "already|. Brazil' Communist party boss in India,| The party secretariat talked) Mrs. "Ackworth volunteered|gurance. dent Joao Goulart. is in Argentine territory." Gou-|" Brazil's deep south. Inform- vice-chairman of the Moscow-|with Dange for 'two hours be-jher kidney when s! 2 heard that} Their share of this field now) But incidents of continuing/lart was reported accompanied|@nts said he gave up to prevent controlled World Federation of/hind closed doors and told him|Mr. Bainbridge would die with-|js 18 per cent. The figure rises resistance to the new regime of by his family and Gen. Assis|the bloodshed of a futile resist- Trade Unions, and general se¢-|he should lie low until April 9|out it, possibly within a month,|in two equal steps to 20 per! Paschoal Ranieri Mazzilli sworn Brazil, chief of his personal/ance. retary of the All-India Trades an apparently 'successful/gentine border, bound by car|Porto Alegre, jended 'Thursday '@s a "fiasco, his last redoubt! as s ec the} asked Mr. Pearson wheth by at The oldest boy, Louis Jr., 16, |prime minister sticks ence to interfere with or delay the plan to extend family allow- ances to students aged 17 and 18. Blazing Wall 'Falls On Crippled Girl WALPOLE ISLAND, Ont |(CP)--A partially crippled fout- --AP Wirephoto |proceed with its own plan rather|yeat-old girl was burned te via radio from Rio |than participate in the federal/death early today when a blaz- jing wall collapsed on her as fires jmen pleaded with her to jump from the second-storey bedroom jof her parents' blazing home. | The body of Peggy Ann Wil- liams was recovered from the jruins of the two-storey frame conference or since the federaljhome on this Indian reservation 20 miles northwest of Chatham. Her parents, hunting guide Mr. Diefenbaker, describing |Louis Williams and his wife, the Quebec conference which\and six other children escaped jfrom the building. |March. 15, statement which, Mr.|Was in fair condition in hospi- |Diefenbaker said, laid down the|{al at Wallaceburg with broken provinces would destroy federal plan. Or, asked Mr. Diefenbaker, would the federal government go ahead regardless? destine crossing. Airport contol LULL IN RACE FEUD world Communist : when the party's national coun-|of glomerulonephritis, in which|cent in 1966, final calendar yeat|in Thursday by Congress in/|military staff. | Some observers feared the| Union Congress. : cil and national executive will|waste products are not filtered/of the basic federal-provincial|prasilia, were reported. Authorities -in Argentine bor-jarmy 'revolt. might touch off| He was in the spotlight be-|meet to investigate the charge.|from the body by the kidneys.|agreement negotiated under the) 'The 53-year-old Mazzilli, 'alder provinces said, however,|cuerrilia warfare in Brazil in cause someone searched |former Diefenbaker administra-|jiperal conservative politician,|Goulart had mot entered the|the weeks and months to come. through hundreds of thousands . . tion, was legally. successor to Gou-|country and that border patrols} ------ ast of letters and documents in the The provinces also get about/lart as president of the Cham-|were on the alert for any clan- national archives and found a ovl1e S a or 22 per cent of the corporation|ber of Deputies. letter supposedly written 40 : income taxes and 75 per cent)' Under Brazilian law, Mazzillijtowers in Paraguay and Uru- years ago. " lof death duties. ' will serve for 30 days until the/\guay also were. watching for! tt was said to have been C hi Mr. Pearson told the press|jegislature elects a new presi-|him. penned in a prison cell by a} na Showdown after the conference that nuth-|dent to serve out Goulart's) The military leaders of -the young Communist revolution-| ing had ae done hg geri term, due to expire in January,|swift, almost bloodless revolu- ary. | Pi meetings that would alter the '1966, |tion, who charged that Gou- The young man, frantic at TB rs So ake eee" federal government's budget for) It was reported that Goulart/lart's leftist policies were lead- thought of four more years be- la ist ti hich! " 1964-65, __ |flew into. exile Thursday fromjing Brazil into. communism, hind bars, pleaded with then mine noge sence gl he ba CALL ON PEOPLE -This was taken as a clear helrorto Alegre, capital of his|sent six army. officers to Sao British rulers to release him. In|jieyed would almost portant scanree prep 'ithe be dication gi 4? sia oe home state of Rio Grande do/Borja to arrest him if he re- rteurn he said he would work!he designed for a showdown in| nese ead snl veil 206 cilling oan in the fisc §/Sul. mained at his ranch. _ ie Sino-Soviet ideological dis-/upon the Soviet people to op------H-W---- pute, for British inteiiigence as a se- Racial tensions here appeared} cret agent inside the Indian rev- A 2 The Pravda editorial said the} Shripad Amrit Dange. called for a meeitng to discuss central committee decided t o| . Clearly, the pro Chinese wing|"the basic problems of our|publish Suslov's speech because Praises Press | e of Dange's own party was cil ome of Chinese attempts to "black-| TORONTO (CP) -- The Tor- ing to do him in, trying to oust! The bitter attack, running to|mail" Communist parties with onto and District Labor Council e€s1gns OS his pro-Moscow faction and take| about 30,000 words, was spread 'the threat of a split. Thursday night asked the pro- the party into Peking's fold. [over seven pages of the Com-| Suslov accused Peking -of|vincial governme to enact 'a participating in a sit-in demon- stration. of Judge Balks At Police Dog Ban ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP))using trained police dogs for the/on the ground floor. control and breaking up of in- to ease today as lack of arrests|tegration demonstrations. ' ss ; pose the CPS (Russian Com-| . | e & apparently marked a_tempor-| olutionary movement. _,|_ in a hard-hitting attack on the munist party) and the Soviet| Labor Council | lary halt to demonstrations.' |Jawyer That young man, it was said/Peking government, Russian government." | 1d Poli ted 285 pers iri hts ¢ id youl this week, was none other than|Party Secretary Mikhail Suslov |= 1c Hic ib ee persons|rights cases, said he would ap- | |between last Saturday and Wed-| peal William Kuntler, New York specializing in Simpson's ruling to the nesday, mostly for violations of|Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- the state's trespass laws while|peals in New Orleans. Kuntler said he would seek civil] asleep, |principle that absence of two|ribs and a kidney injury suf- the/fered when he and the other children jumped from second+ |storey bedrooms where they had been sleeping. |. Anothr son, Ted, 12, suffered jburns to the hands and face |when he apparently tried to | save his crippled sister. His cen- dition was described as satise factory. Mr. Williams was treated in hospital. for minor burns and re- leased. Mrs. Williams and the jother children were not injured, |The parents had been sleeping Firemen said the blaze prob- jably started when an oil stove jexploded while the family was Poor communications delayed the arrival of firemen and ambulances. Firemen said they could see Peggy Ann silhouetted in the widow and urged her to jump. a federal court order stopping|The girl, whose legs were par- Mrs. Malcolm Peabody, 72-\trials of the 285 demonstrators |tially crippled, disappeared PARIS--Dirk U Stikker, sec-) Stikker, 67 next Sunday, told|year-old mother of Massachu-/until the Appeals Court rules on North/the council his health would not|setts Governor Endicott Pea-|his petition. |from view and seconds later the {wall on that side collapsed. * |munist party newspa,er Praydaj"openly combatting' the line/bill of rights to prevent in- MacArthur Reacts tion, lov made to a party central! He said all indications were| Delegates: gave credit to news announced today he is retiring derwent a series of abdominal|back to Boston today. She spent committee meeting Feb. 14. that China's leaders "would like| media for drawing attention to during 'the summer. operations in 1962. |two days in jail on trespass jand was contained in a prev- agreed to by Communist coun-|fringement on individual liber-|"etary-general the North) ay ' lace, : liously unpublished speech Sus-|tries in world affairs. ties in the province. Atlantic Treaty Organization, permit him to continue. He un-|body, was scheduled to fly s To Emergency " 0 € gen Aid Pravda also printed an edi-|to be able to give orders to the/the dangers in recent proposed Stikker, foreign minister of - 5 ube: ote 7 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Gen.|torial saying a recent increase socialist commonwealth as in|amendments to the Police Act.|The Netherlands before becom-|general April 21, 1961, succeed-|for her release. Stikker be came secretary-|charges and put up a $450 bond) © : i Douglas MacArthur's condition|in Chinese propaganda attacks their own estate, to. impose|The government: withdrew the ing NATO's chief civilian offi-|ing Paul-Henri Spaak of Bel-| The lull started Thursday remains critical but emergency|on Russia was "'a terrible insult|their will on other countries and most controversial section. cial, made the announcement to/s!um, who had held the joblwhen lawyers, Mrs. Peabody treatment started Thursday to|to our party and the entire So-\to dictate the terms on which) Treasurer Murray Tate said the permanent NATO Council. |Since 1957, NATO's first secre-|and other witnesses went to| try to meet the problem of dim-/yiet leadership." they would either admit part- Premier John Robarts and his He did not set a definite date, '@"Y-general was Lord Ismay of| Jacksonville in an effort to| inished kidney action is "func-| The editorial indicted the Chi-jies and peoples into the social-jentire cabinet should have re-\presumably to allow NATO) Britain. jhave the federal court take ju-| tioning quite satisfacorily," his/nese leadership for 'passing all/ist system or "excommunicate" signed when Frederick Cass|members time to agree on a PRAISES ALLIANCE |risdiction in the state's cases doctors reported today. limits in their politie 1 struggle'them at will. quit as attorney-general successor In a speech to the NATO| against 'the jailed demonstrat- : |Council today Stikker said: | Fee alliance has | H , U.S. District Jud, QUESTION BARRAGE BLOCKS PASSAGE boviel ggeaision in Batons: SiBizin Rindedhe retuned by tae has brought into being the clos-|jurisdiction, saying regular est knit defensive alliance that|/county courts could handle the NDP Members Stall Estimates OTTAWA. (CP) With al-| And any thoughts members most military precision, Arnold/had of a long weekend--im licu Peters (NDP -- Timiskaming) |of a washed-out Easter recess-- and Frank Howard (NDP --jappeared to disappear under Skeena) continued to take turns|the welter of estimates still to jumping to their feet Thursday|be passed. Less than a third. of night to ward off the passage| them have gone through since of supplementary estimates|Monday, with some of the more with a barrage of questions. |major departments -- such as They also had help from/defence--still to come. Murdo Martin (NDP Tim-| Thursday night with the im- mins) as the NDP members|migration department and the stuck to their promise that they|civil service commission on the were going to let no estimatesifiring line, comments through the 'Commons without!from bilingualism - to adequate examination. copyrights on Indian crafts ranged possible} handi- NDP members jthe government platefuls of problems which, they said, needed some looking into How, asked Mr. Peters, do Indians protect themselves against the importation of fac similes of their products? Mr. Howard commented that 'there has been a tendency' to handed CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 run the Indian affairs branchjreau as saying the French- like a military detachment and'speaking section of Ottawa's ci- there was "overly strict rigi- vil service felt thwarted and dity which prevents that depart- frustrated. ment from doing anything; The only estimates that drew worthwhile.' extensive comments from party As the searching examination leaders were for the 'external of the estimates continued, one affairs. department, when both of the most spirited contribu-'Opposition Leader Diefenbaker tions of the night came from,and NDP Leader Douglas asked Quebec Conservative Louis-Jos-\for clarification of the terms of eph Pigeon, who said that un-|reference for Canadian troops less he got an answer to ain Cyprus question he would block a gov-. Mr. Diefenbaker said it was ernment spending item for!wrong that he should have to "three weeks or a month." read in the press about the re- What he wanted to know was ported restrictions placed on whether English-French bilin-ithe UN military operation gual ability in the civil service|"Surely Canadians have a right is going to be rewarded with a\to know how the force is going bonus to operate Parliament Mr. Pigeon, should not be denied that know- iette L'Assomption Mont- ledge, calm, said such a bonus, Mr. Douglas said it was had been promised by. State|portant that the troops be given Secretary Lamontagne, and he the complete. right to self-de- quoted Justice, Minister Fav-ifence, the right to go anywhere member for Jol- that -|fisea they want, and the power to begin disarming civilians, Unless the disarming process was begun immediately, there would be. more trouble ahead Mr. Douglas said that unless efforts are started promptly to disarm ~ civilians - in Cyprus,} "there is certain to be trouble," Only the United Nations force in which' Canadians form the main contingent, was in a posi-) tion to carry out the disarma-| ment. If Greek-Cypriots tried to} take weapons away from Turk- ish-Cypriots, or vice versa, "we can visualize what will pen." Mr. Douglas spoke as ternal affairs department items] in the $240,000,000 package of supplementary estimates for the vear that ended at mid night Tuesday Fewer than 100 MPs were inom a street here last Wednes-jsystem for distant interplane- 'built. to handle a load of? 10 the 265-seat chamber. | has ever existed in time of peace... . "As our alliance enters its 16th year it is faced with prub- lems. But as I look back over the years I take courage from! the example of the past and I draw from it new inspiration and new hope for an institution which I believe now, as I be- lieved in 1949, is necessary for| the survival of all that we hold dear." | Citizens Hunt | For Choirmaster KINGSTON (CP) -- Police local. Dutch community here tha/have joined in the search Tor a| United States. in all its Ranger House completed its study of ex-|Brockville, Ont.,-choir master/shots and deep space probes, | missing from 'his home since} last Monday. | 4 car owned by Hans Schouls, 35, Dutch-born father of four children, was found abandoned day. : | cases, Simpsons also refused to issue an injunction barring the St. Au- gustine police department from Soviets Launch Space Platform MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union Thursday launched a pla- net probe from a platform or- bited in space. Authorities avoided tellin g) what the target. was. | Although few details of the! new shot were given, the tech-! hap-/Said today that'm»mbers of the|nique appeared similar to--if not identical with--that of the The Russians called it Zond-I; | Zond is' Russian for probe, The official announcement| said the purpose of Zond-I was "further development of a space tary flights." | IGNORES SIGN This is what happened when miles south of Pueblo col- lapsed, Neither the 'driver; Ronnie Ore, 25, of Englewood, Colo., nor his son, Ronnie, 3, was injured. a tractor and -- semi-trailer truck loaded with 40 tons of clay was driven onto a bridge tons. The two-span bridge 20 --AP Wirephoto -- ee ETRE =a a = TS