SSHPeTSAygeemeses Thought For Today A miser is terrible to live with, but he makes a wonderful an- cestor. VOL. 93 -- NO. 150 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JU NE 26, 1964 Authorized os Ottawa and poyment a ap Class Mall Post Office Weather Report | Mainly clear skies overnight and - Saturday. Warmer. Light winds. it ef Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES: & ights Workers Still Missing, Search Goes On! PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP) terious disappearance was the Presidential fact - finder Allen finding Tuesday of a burned-out Dulles says he doesn't see "any hulk of the station wagon they likely explosion" in this Deep used in a lonely area 17 miles * South state over the baffling northeast of Philadelphia. disappearance of three civil TO BRIEF JOHNSON vights wag Dulles, former director of the to join the search late Thurs- day. One hundred sailors teamed with agents of the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation and Mississippi highway patrolmen to wallow knee-deep in mud through snake-infested swamps. Another 100 sailors were on stand-by duty at their base. Michael Schwerner, 24, and Andy Goodman, 21, both of New York City, and James Chaney, 22, a Meridian Negro, were last seen Sunday night. The only clue to their mys- ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP)-- Hundreds of white segregation- ists raced into a civil ' rights march Thursday night, scream- ing and flailing at Negroes in this city's worst outbreak of ra- cial violence. : Integration leader Dr. Martin Luther King said only the non- violence of Negroes 'saved the city from a bloody night of ter- ror." : At least 35 persons were in- Fla, today as group of Neg- roes waded in at the previous- ly all-white beach. A number A white segregationist chokes a Negro youth during riot in surf at St. Augustine Beach, of white and Negroes were arrested and several were injured. (AP Wirephoto) jured and 15 of them were treated at hospital. Dozens were arrested by police in the hit- and-run rampage. Protests were halted today as integrationists asked the federal court in Jacksonville to overturn an order by Governor Farris Bryant barring any group--inte- grationist or seg r agationist-- from demonstrating after 8:30 p.m. said that he appealed to the House for help at the height of Thursday night's me- U.S. sailors joined state and Central Intelligence Agency, federal officers today goons was expected to brief President comb this east-central Missis- Johnson today on his mission to ' BR kog s ohge ageretgeaey after two days in this state. ; ili i Dulles, who did not cone to Hm, Sovel air suxitary station Philadelphia, said the search for @ Schwerner, Goodman and Fl e 1 WI it Chaney "is in good competent met at Jackson for 90 minutes with state civil rights leaders Attack Negroes Bss.¢scie™ ernor Paul B. Johnson. Two of the civil rights leaders like others which have been| President Johnson to discuss the held. The proposed route went)racial situation in this state. around the side of the square; "Negroes now feel a kind of in which at least 200 whites were] frustration never experienced holding a segregation rally: before," Aaron Henry of Clarks- through police lines and into the| White House, marchers with fists. Some of the} ] Negroes were hit; some of the) Meaty El etmee eevee of the| oa gid clubbed by police | National Association for the Ad- , vancement of Colored People. sniper a year ago, is the orgun- never reformed. Remnants of|; i... %. | the march continued around the) eee : Held hihi square with whites attacking] The White House ngrtegtn again and again. Finally the| that 200 marines would join t | march turned into a rout. The|S¢atch but later Press Secretary . res ing whites who would hit once|that only sailors from the Merid-) or twice, and race on. opstiagectien ede anata | WASHINGTON (CP)--Canada, headed by External Affairs Min- The marchers straggled back| 5 J bg Reason ye 4 m_ _ and the United States agreed to ae Paul ,, Martie ant oe to their starting point .with.some Mrs. Nathan' Schwerger * so air.(8e0k specific ways of expanding /Secretary Dean Rusk, ended, near hysteria. : of nt the flow of defence contracts|Drury said: Canada is contem ready to get guns and return to sinpians "to co-operate in every ' jor| It imperative, theref the scene of the downtown riot. 'way possible in the search for day completed the first oF ' agg peed Wo = Segregationists. leaders told|these three boys and to' come|North American military review/that the Sail Gotiire la Conidae reporters that counter-demon-| forward with any information of|" four years. BP | i ong ar ta ea: strations would continue as long|any kind which will help in the| Defence Production Ministerjif the trade balance in this spe C.-M. Drury of-Canada told re-|cific field is to be maintained. existing production - sharing) Thursday's review but he indi- agreement but felt a. higher|cated that if Canada decides to volume of orders should bejobtain anew tactical aircraft achieved. Since 1959, the U.S./from U.S. sources,' it~ would B Pl t's G te placed an estimated $782,000,000| want production established in icer, raced tracts in the U.S. some of the needs of the U.S. Sat'of the crowd, narrowiy miss, BRADFORD, Ont, (CP)--An-|sters (Ind.). "He has never kept|'"4. Wi-dey * long meeting, Ate' Pores. : ing not only white demonstra-|2ty pickets refused to let alhis word to our people yet. If tors but also other officers. {dozen strikebreakers leave thej/he wants to agree with us on ae coeee sey ae {United Farms Limited packing|anything, we want it on paper." | He no also that de Havil- a hursday| REPORTS P BARE BREASTED land Aircraft of Canada is pro- ducing the prototype of the Cari- sippi area for any clues to the Mississippi. Dulles. returned trio. Thursday night to Washington Pe hands." Before leaving the state he The Negro parade moved into| Who met with Dulles later asked the downtown square exactly|for a personal meeting with When the Negro column ap-|dale and Charles Evers of Jack- § proached, the whites burst|son said in a telegram to the j ATTACK AND SCREAM Evers, brother of. the late Med- The parade disintegrated and gar Evers, who was slain by a i .|George Reedy said he was "'in- ge A gli nn eg vlone advertently inaccurate" and ents of two of the 5 I hi: of de- i se jacross the border as a joint}plating large purchases le. King said that some were/youths,.appealed to all Missis- ministerial committee Thurs-jfence needs in the U.S. i i ne san porters. that both sides ex-| Drury said no specific mil- " pressed satisfaction with the|tary items were discussed in Angered Pickets in Canada, while Canada placed|Canada not only to. fill Cana- about $763,000,000 worth of con-|dian air force needs but also jand processing plant Thursday;REPORTS PROMISE until the management! Insp. Clark then told the pick- * |gured the 'Americans Injury Brings night |agreed to close the plant untiljets Mr. Del otto would promise settlement is reached. to The firm manager, Leo Del|was over if they would let the Zotto, called the Bradford police! workers out unharmed. BARMAID BAILED SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-- Bare-breasted barmaid Joy Sheridan, 25, a waitress at close the plant until the strike ibou Il transport plane for the S. Army. No decision has yet |been made by the Pentagon| whether to place iuil production |for this plane in Canada. Defence: Minister Paul Hellyer ito control the crowds blocking) A short time later Union Pres- off traffic outside the plantjident Jack Robinson announced Fligh Mercy Flight és s To Antarctic gates, but the force found iself|the union had decided to accept unable to cope with the crowd|the plant manager's promise. the Rogue Room, was ar- rested Thursday on a charge of outraging the public de- cency by. wearing a topless tions by Defence Secretary Rob- \said he was asked several ques-| Canada, U.S. Agree On Arms Supply Sharing ert McNamara and other U.S. representatives about the im- pact of Canada's unified forces proposal on joint. Canada-U.s, defence He as- there woul?' niet. be a decline in Can- ada's co-operation with the al- lies and adequate arrangements would be made to continue the international flow of defence in- formation. OTTAWA (CP)--A CBC offi- cial said today that the publicly- lowned corporation would not ignore a clear directive from Parliament- that it broadcast the controversial film Mr. Pearson. He was commenting on the current situation respecting the announcement Thursday that it is sticking to its earlier deci- sion not to show the film on its television network. Meanwhile, the CBC rejected today an offer of $30,000 from 10 privately - owned Canadian television stations f orhte con- troversial film. Replying. by telegram to a wire sent a couple of hours earlier by the Indepen- dent Television Organization, CBC President J. Alphonse Oui- met said: "Your offer received. The film is not for sale." Another CBC official, R. C. Fraser, vice-president for cor- fporate affairs, was asked whether the CBC would show the film if directed to do so by Parliament. "It has always been an ac- cepted fact that the CBC must follow the wish of Parliament," Mr. Fraser said. However, he and the other of- ficial would not be drawn into a discussion of what form the parliamentary wish or directive would have to take. The corporation said in a let- ter tabled in the Commons Monday that it didn't appear Parliament had clearly indi- cated a wish that the film be broadcast. It agreed to determine at a meeting of its board of direc- tors Thursday whether other compelling factors existed for broadcasting the film. Thursday the corporation said that such compelling fac- tors did not exist and that. the film remained unacceptable on the basis of the CBC's broad- 'casting standards. The wired offer by the 10 pri- vate stations was signed by Stu- art Griffiths, vice-president and Jailed 4 |. SUDBURY (CP)--Henry Line- |kar, 18, of Foleyet, was sen- jtenced Thursday to four years jin penitentiary for his part in a $1,000,000 derailment on the |CNR main Toronto-Vancouver jline near Foleyet April 25. Linekar, who had elected trial |by judge, pleaded guilty to a |charge of mischief causing in- |jury by setting a diesel loco- |motive into motion which crashed head-on into a freight train. CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (Reut-|and appealed to the provincial) The workers were led out in ers)--An American navy air-/police at Barrie for help. |groups and taken away in po- eraft was reported to have) The men and women inside the|lice cars to boos and hisses from touched down safely in the Ant-|plant building locked themselves|the crowd. arctic today on a mercy mission|in as anger mounted in the jeer-| Earlier, the union offered a to the bottom of the world. jing crowd outside. jcompromise settlement aimed at The safe landing came after; Inspector John lark of .the|ending the four-day strike of 300 one of the most hazardous|OPP told the crowd that if they|vegetable packing-house work- flights in the history of antare-|would let the workers out thelers in this area, 30 miles north tic aviation. ee ~~ ne to some of Toronto. : ski ippe n ade|agreement with them. The offer, which was not re- Ge beseaiie cick hast trip "Del Zotto says he'll give uslyealed, was made during a from here to McMurdo Sound,|his word but we know him too/meeting between the union and a US, antarctic base, to bring|well," shouted one member of three strikebound companies bs } bathing suit. She was released on $276 bail until a court appear- ance July 1. District Attorney Louis Bergna said he also will file a complaint against Rogue Room owner Allan P. Bur- dick on the same eco and recommended Burdick's liquor licence be lifted. MONTREAL. (CP)--Leo Dan- Several women com- |durand, 75, a dynamic figure in | plained Miss Sheridan was |Canadian sports promotion who serving drinks while dressed /Struck it rich in the golden era in a' topless bikini. jof the 1920s, died early today. _ ' Dandurand, who shrewdly ean construction worker. foressiwe. that sport's golden ere - was in the making after the First World War, was associ- ated with some of Canada's greatest teams. In partnership he also built a |horse-racing empire that spread STILL MAPLE LEAF FOREVER |from Quebec to Louisiana. Old Anthem, New Lyrics" ithe direction of Montreal Cana- ldiens of the National Hockey | WOLFVILLE, N.S. (CP) --)poems. It was sung here by)luncheon here, part of the au-jinto New York tune circles but|League, Montreal Alouettes of New lyrics for The Maple Leaf|Prof. Leonard Mayoh, head of|thors' four-day annual conven-|'when I was an unknown they|the x) gg alge er te Forever were sung publicly for|Acadia University's voice de-|tion ending in Halifax today. |wouldn't listen to me, Maybe|@nce, n Known as the Big back a critically injured Ameri-|striking Local 419 of the Inter-| the offices of the Ontario depart- i 'national Brotherhood of Team-'ment of labor. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ada's cent in The contest -- 1,280 possible lyrics were submitted -- was |sponsored by the Canadian Au- thors' Association, and the win- lner was announced at an awards! the first time Thursday after the| partment. : Mr. Cowley is a portly man/this thing might help me. If any-|Four, amie ee of Canadian Authors Association} The lyrics were copyrighted|with thinning hair and a sense|one wants to use my talents, |D@seball's International League. announced it had chosen a ver-|by Mr. Thompson's firm. The|of humor. He was Ottawa's first|/I'm here." |RUNS RESTAURANT sion by Victor Cowley of Ottawa final refrain goes: |Armistice baby, born the day} john Morgan Gray of Toronto,| In his later years ran one of in a nation-wide competition. "Our home, our land, our Can-|the First World War ended. president of the publishing firm| z = Mr. Cowley, a printer who/ada, Mr. Cowley, besides writing!of Macmillan Company of Can-| has never had a song published) May we foresake thee never--| songs, sings. lada, received the University of| Tshombe Seen wasn't present to receive the $1,-| God save the Queen and hea-| "I used to go to some of the|pritich Columbia award for his| 000 award offered as a prize by|ven bless local. night clubs and sing aS nonular biography, Lord Selkirk! 2 4 Gordon V. bags a Toronto). 'The maple leaf forever!" an amateur. I used to do all/ot Req River, during the lunch-| Talkin Union music publisher intends to} Bach of the three verses has |Tight and people told me I was! eon. g publish the song. 10 lines. Only mention the song| wasting my time where I was.| 4,4. from the University of a Mr. Cowley, interviewed injmakes of Canada's connections) pRIED CBC Western Ontario went to Alfred With Con 0 Ottawa, Ag tog ag 2 ap caine is ~~ =" to| "I tried the CBC but they|Purdy of Ameliasburg, Ont., for g background, but feels he'has an|the Queen in the re! rain. NO|want someone who is tall and|poetry; Margaret Lawrence of x : aptitude for writing songs andjethnic groups are mentioned. |handsome. I 'should have tried| Vancouver Jas the best seat sete cae pc Mr. Thompson conceived the|10 years earlier." |story; Prof. R. B. Parker of the! mer president of Katanga ar- jidea to give the tune new lyr-| Mr. Thompson gave permis-|University of Toronto's English rived' here by air before dawn jies, It occurred to him while he|sion to quote the refrain and "'ald¢partment. for: the best scho- today' and was immediately |was attending a meeting in Ot-/few lines" of the new lyrics. The/Jarly article, and to Peter Gzow-| whisked off in a government |tawa to' help prepare for Can-|first verse starts: 's, managing editor of Mac-lcar {o the residece of Congo ial 1967. "Our fathers came lean's Magazine, for the best)Premier Cyrille Adoula. Across the sea general article. It was believed the two would Seeking peace and liberty The Writing for Young Canadajdiscuss the possibility of To settle on this virgin land,| Awards went to Samuel Roddan| Tshombe participating in a new Where all men can be free. jof New Westminster, B.C., and|"national reconciliation' gov- Mr, Cowley bas tried to break' Estelle Salata of Hamilton, Ont.'ernment, Sport Promoter, Dandurand Dies |the- city's most successful down- }town restaurants. Dandurand was a native of Bourbonnais, Ill.,.who came to Canada as 4 youth to attend Montreal' French language Ste, Marie College and stayed. He severed his active sports direction several years ago, sell- ing his race track interests and then his interest in the football Alouettes, Perhaps his greatest success was made with the Canadiens hockey organization, With partners Joe Cattaranich and Louis Letourneau, he bought the team after the First World War for $11,000, built it into the fabulous Flying French- men and sold it 16 years later for $165,000. The partnership triumvirate operated all the while without a written contract. Featuring such greats - as Howie Morenz, Aurel Joliat, Pit Lepine and Johnny Gagnon, the club won consecutive Stanley {Cups from 1928 to 1931. ISTART RACE-TRACKS While the hockey club devel- cped, the three men started dab- bling in horse racing, operating small tracks here and across the St. Lawrence River at La- prairie, Que. Dandurang died at his apart- ment. home in suburban West- mount. He had been bed-ridden for the past two years unable to receive friends or visitors. | The funeral will be held Mon- day from St. Leon de West- }mount Church on Westmount Avenue. Train Hijacker The collision dérailed 23 cars, four diesel units, the runaway engine, and ripped up 300 feet of track. About 100 cattle had to be destroyed. Judge James L, Cooper, in pronouncing sentence; said the case was without parallel in On- tario courts and, he believed, in Canada. He said he could find no excuse for Linekar's actions. Linekar had pleaded guilty after the Crown amended the charge' to a less serious sub- section of the Criminal Code. The original charge called for a maximum sentence of life im- prisonment. The amended charge called for a maximum sentence of five years. Paul Bernatchez, 22, of Fole- yet, Ont., 150 miles northwest of here, also pleaded not guilty to public mischief in the accident. CRASHED HEAD ON The diesel crashed head on into an east-bound freight train near Foleyet. Gunther Manthieu, 32, of Hornepayne, Ont., lost a leg an a result of the crash, suffered a fractured spine, and had his other leg serously injured. Manthieu was a fireman aboard the freight train. Two other members of the freight train's crew were also injured. Constable Harold Foster of the provincial police testified Linekar admitted, after his ar- rest, he had climbed aboard the diese] unit in the Foleyet yard. Editor Charged After Ruckus With Pickets SARNIA (CP)--John T. Ful- larton, editor of the weekly Sar- nia Gazette, was charged with careless driving and assault Thursday following an incident on a picket line in front of the newspaper where members of Local 837, the International Ty- pographical Union (CLC) are on strike. Mr. Fullarton, charged ' by striker Phillip Boley, ap- peared before Magistrate J. C. general Ottawa's ITO outlet, it said: "In the name of the Indepen- dent Television Organization, I ffer the sum of $30,000 for all of the rights acquired by~ the CBC and the intact negative of the film Mr. Pearson. May I have an immediate acknowl- edgement of this offer and de- cision within 24 hours." A spokesman for the ITO said quired, member stations in- tended to broadcast the film as soon. as possible, ITO's members are also the Stations which form the pri- vately - owned CTV television network, The CBC originally commis- sioned production of the film by independent film - maker Rich- ard Ballentine for $35,000, but has refused to show the com- pleted film on its networks. CBC Would Show Film -- If Ordered | that if the rights can be ac- F J. ALPHONSE OUIMET. TO PROBE INTERFERENCE West Coast OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson told the Commons Thursday he will personally in- vestigate a seamen's dispute on the West Coast which Opposi- tion spokesmen said could swell into a major shipping disrup- tion. NDP Leader Douglas raised the issue, saying the American- owned freighter Alaska is under severe pressure from the Sea- farers' International Union of North America to' employ SIU engineers, masters and- mates. at Vancouver. He asked whether the SIU ac- tion had been taken with the "co-operation and consent" of nadian maritime unions. the labor department. Chief Paul Hall, asked Mr. Pearson to look into the matter. The prime minister agreed. Mr. Diefenbaker said the one- vessel dispute is creating serious repercussions on the coast and there is a threat that it will spread. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Labor leaders charged Thursday that Paul Hall, American chief of the Seafarer's International Union (Ind.), is interfering in water- front affairs on Canada's West Coast. They said he is insisting SIU members be given certain lic- the government-appointed board of; trustees that is running Ca- Health Minister Judy La Marsh, acting in the absence of Labor Minister MacEachen, said she would take it up with Opposition Leader Diefen- Shipping Faces SIU Blockade lensed personnel jobs aboard an American ship. Pat O'Neal, secretary, of B.C. Federation of Labor, in a wire to Labor Minist MacEachen that' "an explosive situation is developing" because of Hall's insistence on SIU men in three deck and five engineer ay the train-car Alaska. | The ship, . akg i il l z 4 ii CITES THREAT Mr. O'Neal's wire, also by .other labor. . "Hall. has sf E baker, referring to the "arro- gance and overbearing meas- ures" taken by American SIU all pickets associated with the Canadian Labor Congress or the B.C. Federation of Labor. But then a "citizen's picket" line appeared, including some women. Their pres ence pre- vented loading of the for her return voyage to ier, Alaska. The tieup is costing the nr an. estimated $1,500 a y. Dunlap on the charges which were adjourned without plea to| July 16. Mr. Boley alleges the editor} pushed him. r Miss Jane Elizabeth Lansche | of New Bern, N.C., and more recently of San Francisco, Calif., and Capt. Clifton Cur- ASTRONAUT TO WED tis . Williams Jr., the bachelor U.S. astronaut, plan fo marry the first week in July. (AP Wirephoto)