Thought For Today Wife's moan: Retirement is twice as much husband and half as much income. VOL. 93 -- NO. 210 he Osha Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1964 ap Authurized @s Second Class Mai Ottewa ond for payment _ Weather Sunny Sunday and a little warm- Report - er. Winds light overnight. it Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES DECREES E The king of Malaysia, Raja of Perlis, above, signed an emergency decree in Xuala Lampur today which pro- claimed the entire country a national "security area." This was done as Malaysia and Indonesia moved closer to open war. The new decree permits local authorities to impose curfews and ban in- lawful assembly and gives police sweeping powers. --(AP Wirephoto) (See AP Wire story) QGO DOESN'T GO - Earth-Sun Probe Falters In Space | GAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) OGO I swept away from earth a perfect orbital path to- while space agency scien- tried to learn why two key ts and the main radio failed to work prop- . OGO's job is to measure te man's malfun turned up the 1, spacecraft earth will take OGO some 63 hours. Ogo was the most advanced scientific satellite yet launched by the United States. Packed into its dragon fly - shaped frame were instruments for some of the most sop! aboard a satellite. TOOK LARGE EFFORT cineet over the Rosman, N.C., tracking station at midnight day--less than three hours the 9:23 p.m. blast-off. * Scientists promptly put the OGO (Orbital Geophysical Ob- -servatory) in a "hold" position, leaving it whirring through apace until they felt the exper- iments could be tried again. Earlier, the National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- tion that OGO, an oddly shaped metal monster with pro- truding antennae, jets and eyes, had whirled into a giant oval orbit--extending from 177 to 93,- 313 miles, close to its planned They were devised by scien- tists from seven government laboratories and nine universi- ties and were to record a wide range of phenomena in the earth's atmosphere, magnetos- phre and interplanetary space. Besides «the radio antenna, the experiments that failed to work were a magnetometer ex- periment on a 22-foot boom and an ion - electron measurement experiment on a four - foot - boom. By tinkering by radio with OGO as it rocketed through space, scientists. hoped to bring the experiments to path. A single trip around the No Cash, No Care Hospital Orders NORTH BAY (CP) -- Dr. Frank Chirico, medical direc- tor of St. Joseph's General Hospital here, says restrictions will be imposed on.the admis- sion of West Ferris Township residents to the hospital be- cause the township council has refused to pay its share of hospital deficits. life. OGO blasted skyward aboard an Atlas - Agena rocket The second stage of the Atlas- Agena injected itself into orbit as a flying launching .pad and, after it coasted through space for 44 minutes, it kicked OGO into its orbit. This was the first of six scheduled OGO launchings. Dr. George Ludwig, projec: scien- tist for NASA, said "over-all objectives are to find our as much as we can about the en- vironment near earth and to obtain a better idea of earth- sun relations." 'By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP)--Next to the flag debate, nothing raises the emotiong-of Parliament like a good Hal Banks mystery. The question that brought angry members to their feet Friday was what party, if any, coddied the former Canadian head of the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union (Ind.). «| For years he was th anointed of Liberalism, charged Opposition Leader Dief- enbaker. . "Why did he (Mr. Diefen- baker) anoint and coddle Mr. Banks. ... .?" asked an angry Labor Minister MacEachen, as both men pointed accusing fin- ger across the Commons. For years, Banks had been "one of the pally boys with the Liberal party," said the opposi- tion leader as he called for an investigation into the entire Canadian episode of Banks's career. He charged that the ie " conspiracy in a beating inci- dent, "'is one of the highest neg- ligence and worse." CALLS BOND PEANUTS When Banks was released on a $25,000 bond--"'peanuts in that league"'--pending an appeal it should have been known that he could not be extradited from another country for the of- fence for which he was con- victed, "The government did nothing. Banks disappeared. "Here is a man who comes into the country, disregards our laws in connection with im- migration status as no one else could do, is prosecuted and let out on a bail bond that will not be effective because it does not prevent him from leaving the histicated experiments ever to ride}jurisdiction of the court. "What a commentary upon the administration of justice upon which we in this country pride ourselves." When Mr. Diefenbaker said the government previously failed to prosecute the former SIU head when it had an op- portunity, Mr, MacEachen said Banks was prosecuted for an of- fence committed in 1957 and Banks Issue Sparks Feud In House government's record in the case of Banks, who was convicted of the Conservative government had six years in which to take that action. ASKS QUESTION WA | U.S. ENVO R FE | "That is' one mystery that I would like to have cleared up}; by the leader of the opposition. Why did he anoint and coddre Mr. Banks and refuse to prose- cute him on facts that were known in August, 1957, and | widely publicized at that time?" | "The statement that we re- lfused to prosecute is as com- pletely without foundation as it) 4 is possible," shot back the op- position leader. ov "It is a fact," said the labor 'minister. i The Banks debate erupted from an otherwise quite day of plodding through the spending estimates of the labor depart- ment, And once raised, the is- sue was hoisted aloft from ev- ery corner of the House. Jungle Peak Hit By Plane Carrying 39 RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) Rescuers hacked their way) @ through dense forest today in aj § bid to reach the wreckage of Brazilian airliner that crashed into a mountain top 120 miles northwest of here Friday night with 39 persons on board. No survivors were spotted from the air, but helicopters stood by to parachute rescuers to the wrecked Viscount owned The dilemma is that Allan Grossman, Ontario Minister of Reforms had no proof of his identity when he dropped by on a snap inspection of Essex County Jail yesterday. He found everything very much in order, so much so that he F icrisis can be permanently set- BUT, 1 AM THE MINISTER had to wait 20 minutes to see the deputy-governor before he could take a look behind the bars. by the Brazilian airline VASP. Eyewitnesses sald Friday night it burst into Hames. and exploded on«crashng into # peak near Mount Caledonia. Air force planes flew over the wreckage shortly after the crash but were unable to see any trace of survivors. Heavy mountain mist and darkness forced authorities to postpone attempts at rescue un- til morning. The Viscount carried 34 pas- sengers and a crew of five. By PETER REHAK PRAGUE (AP)--Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev flew back to Moscow today after a nine-day visit to Communist Czechoslo- By THOMAS J. STONE SANTIAGO (AP)--Pro-West- ern Eduardo Frei, a moderate leftist, rode to a landslide vic- tory Friday night in Chile's presidential elec tion, setting back a serious Communist threat to the copper-rich Latin- American republic. Frei, 53, a reform - minded Christian Democrat, trounced Communist - backed Social Sal- vador Allende, who had pledged to nationalize nearly $2,000,000,- 000 worth of U.S. property in Chile and restore diplomatic re- lations with Cuba. Tshombe Sends Home §, African Volunteers LEOPOLDVILLE (CP)--Pre mier Moise Tshombe of The Congo said Friday that South African volunteers for his forces) would be sent home. At a press conference before Jeaving for the Or 'African Unity conference at Ad- dis Ababa, Ethiopia, he said: "We haye not appealed to South Africans to restore order, and those who have come and offered their services on their own initiative will be sent back me. "Some of them are taking ad- vantage of their presence in The Congo to put out propa- ganda against: the national in- terest. We cannot tolerate this state of affairs." A special OAU meeting was being convened in the Ethiopian capital today to consider the ganization of) golese rebels at the meeting. MERCENARIES ARRIVE About 200 white mercenary soldiers have arrived here re- cently and more have been ex- pected, Most were recruited in South Africa and the Rhodesias through newspaper advertise- ments. | |by other African leaders for hir- |ing mercenaries and is expected |to come under heavy fire in Addis Ababa. Tshombe said The Congo had asked for the OAU meeting in order to lay before the organ- lization evidence that the Braz- \zaville government and Burundi lwere aiding the rebel move- lment against the Leopoldville \regime. ville) and Burundi to the Con-| citizens of the Brazzaville re- public, Burundi and the West African republic of Mali. to leave The Congo, and Leopold- ville witnessed the exodus of | thousands of people. | The explusions still go on. Tshombe has admitted he is making innocent people suffer, but claims he has no choice. This, he says, is the only way Tshombe has been attacked|tg make the leaders in Brazza-|conda and Kennecott, account ville and Bjumbura change their minds about the rebels. Reds Out In Cold After Chile Vote vakia 'highlighted a blistering attack on his Communist Ch- nese adversaries. In a farewell speech at Prague airport, Khrushchev said his talks with Antonin No- votny, the Czechoslovak presi- dent and party chief and one of his staunchest supporters in the feud with Peking, confirmed "absolute agreement and com- plete unity." Thousands of Czechoslovaks cheered him and his motorcade to the airport where it was showered with flowers, the of- ficial Czech news agency CTK said. In a speech Friday night, he repeatedly referred to the Chi- nese as '"'wreckers" and ac- cusd them of "playing into the hands of the imperialist forces." "Tt is well known," he thun- dered, "that the leaders of the Chinese Communist party do not want to remove differ- ences." This was uttered in connection with a statement which chided certain other Communist leaders for being reluctant to attend a world-wide Communist conference in Mos- cow to settle the Peking-Mos- cow feud. Clear Whites In Slaying Of Educator DANIELSVILLE, Ga. (AP)-- Two white men have been ac- "Revolution! Revolution!" en- raged followers of Allende shouted, ignoring his appeals for calm. They charged that President Johnson and Pope Paul VI had contributed money to defeat Allende, a 56-year-old physician who has lost three times in a bid for the presi- dency. Allende's opponents said Moscow and Havana had smug- gled money into the country for his campaign. Frei, a senator, will take the government reins Nov. 4 for a six-year term, succeeding cen- tralist President Jorge Al dir, barred by the constitution from seeking re-election. Nearly complete unofficial re- turns: Frei 1,463,535; Allende, 975,690. THIRD CANDIDATE TRAILS Julio Duran, candidate of the Centrist Radical Party, was far behind with 128,350. A record of Chile's more than 2,500,000 voters cast ballots, marking the first time a South American nation had_ freely chosen a "democratic leftist" with views similar to European socialists, The outcome came as a relief to U.S. officials who feared the emergence of a Cu- ban-like government i n Chile. Two U.S. companies, Ana- muel Penn, a Washington, D.C.. Negro educationist, but still face federal charges of conspir- ing to injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate Penn and two for 90 per cent of the country's vital copper output, | TIMES HOME D INCREASED BY HIGHER COSTS | Effective the week .of Times carrier home delivery companions. Penn was killed July 11 by a shotgun blast by assailants in a passing car. Penn, an army re- serve lieutenant - colonel, and two other Negro officers were en route home to' Washington from reserve duty at Fort Ben- ning. ELIVERY PRICE September 14, The Oshawa price will be increased to 59 quitted in the slaying of Le-| His statements were regarded by political observers as being partially directed at the big Italian Communist party, which Friday released a manifesto of independence. The manifesto was written by Italian communist leader Pal- miro Togliatti just before he died last month in the Soviet Union, Togliatti suggested that the world's various Cummunist parties should have the freedom to make their own policies, He also expressed reservations about any showdown conference on the Moscow-Peking quarrel. NO PAPER ON MONDAY No edition of the Times will be published Monday, Sept. 7, in observance of the Labor Day holiday. Normal publication will be resuméd Tuesday, Sept. 8 K Slams At' Peking For Red Bloc Split In an apparent reply, Khrush- chevy noted that some Commu- nist parties are "expressing doubt as to whether a confer- ence of Communist and work- ers' parties would be useful un- der the present conditions." He said: '"'They are sincerely trying to prevent a schism in the Communist movement and to seek ways to unity, These intentions are good, but to put them into practice it is neces- sary to get together." But, Khrushchey declared, the Chinese do not want to end the Moscow - Peking feud. He said: 'The leaders of the Chi- nese Communist party are try- ing to form some kind of magic circle and blackmail the fra- ternal parties by threatening them with the rift. Quietly, for some time, they have been pre- paring a conference of the rep- resentatives of the wrecking groups and making every ef- fort to slander the Soviet Union and other socialist countries. Six Month Sentence PETERBOROUGH (CP) | Daniel Boyd MacDonald, 50, of/ 29 North Bay, who ran 'up a $610 bill at Civic Hospital here and jhad no way of paying, was sen- ltenced Friday to six months in reformatory. MacDonald also was given an additional three months for or- dering a $66.95 watch from a |downtown store while he was jin hospital and paying for it {with a worthless cheque. He was also fined $100 and costs or a 30-day concurrent |sentence for having paid the | am \from Bancro with a worthless $35 cheque. |the three charges. | Crown Attorney John Brad- \shaw produced several letters from other Ontario hospitals stating that MacDonald had re- ceived hospitalization | payment. bulance firm that took him} ft to the hospital,| MacDonald pleaded guilty to} without} "We have proof," Tshombe lier he would| said, | The main rebel headquarters) Congo problem, Tshombe said ear denounce support given by the} ! former French Congo (Brazza-|is,said to be in Brazzaville, only| lg 20-minute ferryboat ride from) Leopoldville, The eastern revolt} \for long had its base at Bjum-| pura, the Burundi capital. } There,t the rebels have been} in close Xeontact with Commu- Inist Chinese diplomats who} have been financing. and. advis-} ing rebel leaders. Brazzaville also allowed the rebels to set up a training camp on its soil.| ik CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 ecently Tshombe ordered all! cents per week. The five-cent per week years, is a necessary costs increase, the. first in many one in view of rising newspaper Cost of providing local, national, international news coverage, together with production costs have increased many times in recent years. home delivery prite has remained During this time the Timés constant. It is no longer' possible, however, to hold to the present price in view of the higher cost factors. Your carrier boy will be collecting the new price the week -ending September 19. The Times newstand price will remain at 10 cents per single copy James Hudson, defence law-| When MacDonald arrived a yer, hit hard at a statement of] the hospital in Peterborough by James S. Lackey, also charged) ambulance he told the admit- with the murder, who impli-|ting clerk he had Ontario hos- cated himself with the other] pital insurance but did not have two men, Lackey later repudi-|his certificate and could not re- ated the statement. jeall its number. He said he State prosecutors said the} would supply this information state-_murder charge agains|later. Lackey probably would-be} Const. Robert Lewis said dropped, He still faces federal] MacDonald was in the hospital | charges of conspiracy, however.|from Aug. 10 to Aug. 29. On Lackey's statement, intro-|Aug. 26, he signed a statement | duced in evidence, said hejat: the hospital that he would drove' the car and Myers and|supply his certificate number Sims shot Penn. for hospital insurance. How- ' a For Bilking Hospital ever, he left the hospital Aug. Investigations revealed that MacDonald had no hospital in- surance, and he was charged with having received services \from the Ontario Hospital Serv- ices Commission to which he was not entitled. Other court evidence was that hospitals where MacDonald had stayed under similar cir- cumstances before coming to Peterborough included ones in Bancroft, Bracebridge, North |Bay and St. Catharines. | at almost any moment. | |ported confident that "if we get WASHINGTON (CP - AP) -- The Cyprus situation is so crit- ical that 'war could break out in 25 minutes," Dean Acheson, former United States secretary of state, says. Acheson will tell President Johnson next week, reports John M. Hightower of The As- sociated Press, that the Cypriot tled in time--but as matters stand now war could break 'out However, Acheson was re- a period of peace and tranquil. ity," t over-all problem of Cyprus can be solved. The former state secretary will see the president Tuesday. He returned Friday from 4 negotiation mission to Geneva with word that "a great deal" of progress was made toward resolving Greek and Turkish differences over Cyprus. ON CYPR 'Could Break Out In 25 Minutes sponse to a question, he said publicly what officials here have been saying privately for weeks--that the policy, of Arch- bishop Makarios, the president of Cyprus, created serious dif- ficulty for Acheson's mediation efforts. "The archbishop out of his way to be helpful," Acheson said. "He threw mon- key wrenches into the machin- ery." - DRAWS DISTINCTION Acheson, secretary of state in the Truman administration, drew a sharp distinction be- tween the immediate situation on the island where Greek- Cypriots and Turkish - Cypriot forces are arrayed against each other, and the longer- range prospect for a permanent settlement giving the Mediter- reanean island some new sta- tus in relation to Greece and didn't go At the same time, in re- 'ATHENS (AP)--Gen. George Grivas, commander of the Greek-Cypriot National Guard, met with King Constantine of Greece today on the Cyprus crisis that has raised the dam ger of war between Greece and Turkey. It was the second straight day of conferences in the Greek capital between Greek and Greek-Cypriot officials. Greece Cypriots from action that might is trying to restrain the Greek- lead to war. A palace spokesman said only that Grivas was received in audience by the king. No de- tails were disclosed about the meeting which lasted for an hour. Grivas was head of the Greek- Cypriot underground that fought Britain for independence. Military sources said Greeces armed forces have been placed on alert along its frontier with Turkey since a 15-minute ex- change of shots between a Greek and Turkish border pa- trol two days ago: Turkey. - Greek Military Chief Confers With King Spyros Kyprianou, conferred Friday with government lead- ers here. ros Costopoulos told reporters after the conference that views were exchanged about the re- fusal of the Cypriot govern- ment to allow rotation of Turk- ish troops stationed on the is- land, ; The Greek government is re- ported worried' by the rigid stand which Archbishop Makar- ios, president of Cyprus, is tak- ing on the matter. Sitting in on the conference with Kyprianou was Greek Pre- mier George Papandreou. ~ Greek sources say Kyprianou brought a message from Mak- arios which replied to criticism by the Greek premier about Makarios' single-handed actions in the Cyprus dispute. Details of the message were not avail- able. In Turkey, Premier Ismet Inonu told Parliament that Greece's support of Makarios is leading toward a war be- The Cyprus foreign minister, tween Greece and Turkey. Further By TONY ESCODA KUALA LUMPUR (AP) -- New race rioting flared in Singapore today as Malaysia and Indonesia moved closer to open war. The rioting, blamed by some Malaysian officials on Indones- ian agents, has left nine dead. The king -of Malaysia signed a decree today which pror claimed the entire country a national "security area." It was a stiffer emergency de- cree than the one proclaimed Friday. The new decree per- mits local authorities to impose curfews and ban unlawful as- sembly and gives police sweep- ing powers. In Indonesia, President Su- karno, who has vowed to "crush" Malaysia, held another | LATE NEW S FLASHES Hydro Blast Blacks Out LUTON, England (Reuters) -- A huge explosion in a power station today blacked out this central English town of } 100,000. People were evacuated from a nearby street and t} 200 workers were sent home from a factory in the area. Missing Sloop Feared Cleo's Victim NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. Coast Guard aircraft from Bermuda and New York are s' foot sloop with eight persons unheard from for five days. It Force Seven, may have been | Typhoon Ruby Slams Into Hong Kong HONG KONG (AP) -- Ty Hong Kong today with 160-mil | persons died, 35yare missing. a UK Town earching the Atlantic for a 40- aboard, including a canadian, was feared the vessel, named hit by hurricane Cleo. phoon Ruby roared dead over le-an-hour winds. At least 15 nd feared dead, and 250 hurt. Riois Hit Singapore emergency meeting with his = phony special meeting ef the United Nations Security Coun- cil will be held in New York Wednesday to consider Malay- sia's charges that Indonesia' is committing aggression against the federation. Malaysia has accused Indonesia of backing recent small-scale invasion at- tempts. TROOPS READY Indonesia's armed forces have been placed on a state of alert. In Malaysia's Johore state, a battalion each. of New Zealand infantrymen and Brit- ish Gurkhas were ordered into field positions. In Singapore, just across the Malacca Straits from Indonesia Malaysian officials. battled against more rioting which some suspected was being in- spired by undercover agents from Indonesia, Reports circu- lated that suspected Indonesian agents were hiring gangsters-- members of Singapore's Chi- nese "secret societies'--to kill and create trouble. In addition to the nine dead, 64 persons were listed as in- jured and 160 arrested since the rioting began Wednesday, A break in the curfew was permitted from 5:30.a.m. until 9 a.m. in order to allow the pub- lic to stock vp on provisions. The battalions of New Zea- landers and Gurkhas were or- dered into the field on the Malayan mainland to replace two battalions of Malaysian sol- diers rushed to quell the Singa- pore rioting. It was the first time New Zealand troops have been on an operational basis against the Indonesian guer- rillas Greek Foreign Minister Stav- ~~