Diefenbaker Prefers |f U.S. To Reds In Asia EDMONTON (CP)--Commu- nism would swee P through Southeast Asia if the United States without negotiation with- drew ne nom a Mae oe. position eader efenbaker said Sunda He told conference it might be popularlate Sunday for him to say that the U.S. should leave Viet Nam, How- ever, he was "convinced" U.S. ers, withdrawal would result in a sweep of Southeast Asia byUkra 4 baker sald C ech, Mr, Dief-every opportunity. to let the So- communism. Later in a spe 'enbaker told. 1,500 persons at- tending Ukrainian Day celebra- tions that Canadians must never take freedom for granted 80) long as "millions of people re-| main in bondage to the) U.8.8.R." The Opposition leader arrived) Peditite at a presshere Saturday night and left for Calgary and Ot- talks with Alberta Conservative lead-| | During his address to the) injans, Mr, Diefen- anada must take tawa after Progressive viet Union know that the "bon Johnson Attempts Head Off Strike WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson summoned his special steel mediators to the White House today, determined to head off a country-wide steel strike set for midnight Tues- day, In Pittsburgh, meanwhile, ne- gotiators for the United Steel- workers Union and 10 major steel firms suspended their deadlocked bargaining sessions, The largest steel producer, U.S. Steel Corp., said it was in the process of shutting down some) facilities as the strike deadline approached. It started cooling coke ovens, sion was not a failure," And Collins, said "I am satisfied that this can still be resolved," The Steelworkers are asking} increases of 53 cents an hour over 39 months, Steelworkers }average $4.40 an hour in wages) /and benefits, I, W. Abel, president of the union, and R, Conrad Cooper, chief negotiator. for the 10 ma- jor U.S, steel producers, met secretly Sunday for two hours-- their first session alone, "There is no agreement," Abel said afterward, Morse declined to say whether he and Collins might recommend that Johnson in- dage" of the Ukraine,' Lithu- ania, Latvia; Estonia and other countries is an affront, "Your great contribution as a people is your abiding belief in the guiding principles of de- mocracy and freedom," he told an overflow crowd in the audi- torium of the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox Cathedral of St. John's, He said the outcome in Viet Nam will determine the free- dom of many nations, HIT BY RAIN The Ukrainian Day celebra- tions were to be held at Elk Is- land Park, east of Edmonton, but rain forced activities in- doors, At the press conference, Mr, Diefenbaker scoffed at the idea that Premier E. C, Manning of Alberta is the only real con- servative spokesman in Can- a a, "The voice of conservatism cannot be the voice of reac- ition," he remarked. Mr. Diefenbaker said he does| ? not believe his Progressive Con- servative party must oppose all social advances such as medi-| eal care insurance schemes in! : lorder to qualify as a Conserva-| tive party. | Commenting on Mr, Pear-| son's nine-day tour of Western) |Canada, Mr. Diefenbaker said ithe political climate on the Prairies hasn't changed. He felt | Progressive Conservatives have \great strength in the West. If he chooses to, Johnson : s | lyoke the Taft-Hartley Act for) -- oly gh w fae PY 80-day cooling off period if| law to a ae a trike) the union strikes. But he added! He on 4 "god jesee lls mina teat it had been made clear to! tha h meet the national ine| 00k" union and management) iat he'll act in the nationa '| that the case was not ended as terest if a settlement is no far as the federal government Armament Cost Soars Chrisine Morgan, 7, of Wayne, N. J., last year's winner of the Little Miss America title, turns over her crown and sceptor to 6-year- reached "in the American) way," | The chances of a negotiated settlement dimmed despite ef-, forts of his special mediators, Senator Wayne Morse (Dem. Ore.), and Undersecretary of! Commerce Leroy Colins, Sent to/to the national interest and see Pittsburgh Saturday by the|what it requires and carry itjurday was 5 resident, they left for here Bondy night. Morse said man-| agement and labor were in "'an/ inexcusable and unjust! fie deadlock." Still, Morse said "our mis-| | is concerned : In a Johnson City press con- ference the president had said he wanted to give the parties a chance to work out a settlement through collective bargaining. "If not, we will have to look out,"" Johnson said, However, some union sources interpreted Johnson's com- ments as indicating he would not intervene at least for a while if the union strikes, PM Predicts Improvement In U.K. Financial Crisis LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Wilson said Saturday that Britain's critical balance- of-payments position might be improved upon sooner than ex: pected, The prime minister, looking fit and tannéd on.return to the British capital after a family vacation in the Scilly Isles, said that in the last month "some evidence has come in that the target we set ourselves for re- ducing the balance of payments this year looks like being im- proved upon." Britain's balance-of-payments deficit, measured by the amount of imports over ex- ports, has caused the govern- ment to introduce severe aus- terity measures to bring the country's economic picture into sharper focus, Wilson, who may be forced into a general election early next year because of the state ofthe British-economy, criti- cized what he termed Britain's "self-inflicted wounds'"'--the re- cent rash of wildcat strikes in the auto industry, the worst to hit Britain in the last 20 years. Wilson said Britain could not succeed in bringing its balance of payments into line "if we are going to have unofficial strike activity." Wilson said unrest in the car) Sleeping Sickness Cases On Prairies Number 118 By THE CANADIAN PRESS The number of eases of encephalitis among humans on the Prairies this } industry represented a consid-| erable threat to the country's) prosperity and to hopes of ex- pandins exports, He also said it could seri-! ously prejudice the govern-| ment's plans for solving the balance - of-payments problem| just when the outlook had be-| gun to appear hopeful. Wilson decided to invite union officials and employers in the} British auto industry to attend talks with him on their prob- lems, BALDING WOMEN BLAME CURLER LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ish women are going bald be- cause they put their hair roll- ers and curlers in too tightly at night, doctors here say, Skin specialists have _re- ported increasing numbers of women seeking advice for baldness. They found the complaint more prevalent in OSLO, Norway (AP) ---The lcost of world armaments has old Karen Lynn Schuck of LITTLE MISS AMERICA the title at Pallisades, N.J. Twenty-eight girls between the ages of five and 10 years competed in the fourth annual Little Miss America Pagent finals, --AP Wirephoto DOMINICAN REPUBLIC PROBLEMS who has last six years in the coun- try gives an analysis of the situation today. By ROBERT BERRELLEZ SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- The shooting has died down, but the Dominican people are still caught up in a flood of frustration fed by suspicion and widespread 'feeling against the United States, Offstage, Com- munist elements seem to be waiting to take advantage of any openings they can find, Revolution exploded in the Dominican Republic four months ago. U.S. troops came in, first to protect American lives, then avowedly to prevent a Communist takeover, Later, peacekeeping were troops SANTO DOMINGO (AH) -- Rebel troops and the inter- American peace force engaged in a heavy exchange of fire-dur- ing the night in the most seri- ous outbreak in the Dominican Republic since June. Rebel headquarters reported at 'least- five dead and 10 wounded in the sharp, two- hour exchange. Organization of Amer- ican States sources said rebel casualties had been reported to them as nine dead and 31 soared -to $180,000,000,000 a year, says @ new survey made public at a conference on the economic aspects of disarma- ment, The new figure released Sat- 0 per cent higher ithan a UN estimate of §$120,- 000,000,000 in 1962, It covers weapons procurement, military research and development and other military activity. The report notes that the United States and Soviet Union jaccount for more than four- fifths of the world's military spending, | OTTAWA (CP) -- Maryon Pearson, who has never indi- cated much enthusiasm for publicity or platform politics, got a great deal more atten- tion than she bargained for when she spent nine days in the West with her prime min- ister husband, In Vancouver she was pre- sented with a painting, and in Edmonton she held centre stage for longer than she probably wished. She was given special at- tention by David McDonald, president of the Alberta Lib- eral Association, who intro- duced the prime minister. He Storm Coming Wrote Kennedy WASHINGTON (AP)---Among the many remembrances of the late president John F, Kennedy,| paid tribute to her role as his personal secretary has} Wife of the prime minister saved a slip of paper on which] and her courage and endur- he wrote poetic, perhaps pro-| ance in 'accompanying him phetic words: everywhere. "T know there is a God--and| He didn't say that Mrs. WIFE'S 40-YEAR STRUGGLE PUZZLES SMILING PEARSON Pearson was not enthusiastic about a campaign-type of ex- [J istencé. He merely said "she loves home life." But every- one, including the prime min- ister, indicated by their laugh- ter that the message was 're- rgd Mrs. Pearson joined n, "T am glad you mentioned her,"' Mr, Pearson said later, "You know, when she mar- ried me 40 years ago she had every right to expect a more calm and peaceful existence. I was an assistant history professor and a football coach, . . . I paid my bills from being a football coach, "She married me to get through her fourth year--I was her teacher, She got through her fourth year al- right but I don't know how she got through the next. 40. wounded, An firmed re- port said a Paraguayan soldier of the inter-American force had been slightly wounded, There were indications the shooting was touched off by mortar fire directed at the rebel sector of the city by troops of the civilian-military junta, month Dominican crisis, MAY NOT AFFECT {Bunker of the OAS political not believe the latest shooting incident would affect the peace efforts, claimed earlier internationalized under| The incident occurred amid reliable. reports that an agree- ment was imminent on an OAS iormula for ending the four- U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth committee told reporters he did A peace force spokesman the shooting the banner of the Organization of American States. Today pro - Communist ele- ments in the rebel sector of this divided capital still pro- voke grave concern among Western and Latin American diplomats, Even some among the top-level rebel officials now seem worried about left-wing extremist control or influence in the rebel movement, Some progress has been made in the search for a solu- tion to the political crisis but prospects for a lasting settle- ment remain cloudy, The econ- omy is in a disastrous state, MAY HAVE TO STAY . The reconstruction task looks so complex that some feel the inter-American _ peace forces may have to stay much longer than Dominicans want -- per: haps all through 1966, The drama really began Sept. 23, 1963, the day militarists overthrew Juan Bosch, the first democratically - elected presi- dent in nearly 40 years, Last April, a counter-revolu- Rebels, Peace Force Exchange Heavy Fire started when the rebels at- tacked the presidential palace in the demilitarized zone, The rebels denied this and said it started with mortar fire from junta-held territory north of the presidential palace. ' 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, August 30, 1965 3; -- Frustration Replaces G tion erupted with the an- nounced aim of restoring Bosch, The April revol revived deep resentments against the mili- tary, among people who indi- cated they felt cheated by the loss of their first constitu- 2 - % to be that the army had too heavy a hand on the helm in the past. This is latgely what the fighting is about, . The rebels and many Domin« icans. sympathizing with them. say the military has not been purged of corrupt influences, © + tional government in decad Rising anti-yankeeism is a byproduct of the U.S. troop landings. Left-wing extremism is thriving on this, SPENDS MILLIONS U.S. aid since the revolt started has passed $43 million, excluding $10,000,000 monthly going into the economy as a result of dollar salaries to U.S. government officials and troops. The requirements ahead can be staggering. The capital's division keeps it in a state of paralysis, There are about 9,000 U.S, troops and 2,000 from Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, Nic- aragua and Paraguay in the forces which control the inter- national security zone, a buf- fer between rebel boundaries and the area controlled by the civilian-military junta. Sympathy for the rebels seems widespread throughout the country, perhaps less from support of personalities or ide- ologies than through antipathy to the military hierarchy and to corrupt political forces deemed responsible for the col- Construction Strike Ends TORONTO (CP) -- Members of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers International Union (CLC) voted overwhelmingly Sunday to return to work, end- ing a construction strike which has tied up the building indus- try here since early June. The agreement with the gen- eral contractors section of the Toronto Construction Associa- tion provides for an increase spread over four years of $1.06 an hour in wages and fringe benefits, none of it retroactive. The wage increase alone is about 90 cents, Mr. Williams said. He said the major fringe ben- efit won by the union was the establishment of a supplemen- tary employment insu- rance fund, to which employers will contribute, I see a storm coming; "If He has a place for me, I believe that I am ready," Writing about her former boss, Mrs, Evelyn Lincoln says "Kennedy feared he had failed to make Khrushchev see the dangers of miscalculating America's determination." | Kennedy dropped the. paper on the floor of his plane as he was returning from his historic SAINT JOHN, N.B, (CP) --} Mr, and Mrs, K. C, Irving of Saint John Sunday night be- came the first Canadi to re- Canadians Win Award 'Humanitarian Efforts Social Council, in his speech called for a swords - to - plow- shares approach in Middle East y 1961. meeting with Russian pre-| mier Nikita Khrushchey, | From ready wit to hot tem-| ner, Mrs. Lincoln has complied) remembrances ceive the Eleanor Roosevelt Hu-| manities Award, Coe au ey received-it trom James Roosevelt of California, eldest son of the .late United States president and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, at a dinner given by) of the human side in her book My Twelve Years with John F, Kennedy to be published today by David the younger fashion-conscious woman than ever before, | Various explanations have been advanced but the hair curlers are believed to be the most likely cause, says der- matologist F. F. Hellier, The term encephalitis meéans Dr, Clarkson said. The disease, commonly known as sleeping weekend rose to 118. Five per- Sickness, is difficult to identify sons with suspected encephal- atid there are several varieties itis have died. caused by different viruses, Dr. J, G, Clarkson, Saskatch- Dr, Clarkson said the mumps ewan's deputy health minister, viris appears to be one of the said Saturday the number ofjleading causes of the current suspected cases in Saskatch-| outbreak in Saskatchewan, Four ewan totalled 95. cases have been identified as Health officials reported 15 mumps encephalitis. suspected encephalitis cases in) Encephalitis can be a com Alberta and eight in Manitoba. plication of mumps, but this ree --------------~| type of mumps is not the classic kind with swollen glands, Dr Clarkson said | IDENTIFY TWO . Bar Discusses i I Saskatchew > Ses Breath Tests |, stew oe TORONTO (CP) -- Compul-' western equine encephalitis sory breath tests for drivers) The western equine variety is suspected of drinking will be believed spread by mosquitoes, discussed at the annual meet- which have been heavier than ing of the Canadian Bar Associ- usual through Western Canada the Saint John Israel Bond Com: mittee, McKay Co. Inc. of New York. In it, Mrs. Lincoln notes that when she relayed her husband's! Mr. and Mrs, Irving, who re- fears about Kennedy's forth-iceived the award in tribute to, coming fatal Texas trip, thetheir humanitarian efforts,| president told her: were given a standing ovation If they're going to get me./py the gathering of more than they'll get me even in church." 400 persons. ™| Only other persons to receive the international award have been former U.S. president Harry Truman, U.S. Vice-Pres- ident Hubert Humphrey and} film star Edward G, Robinson. | Mrs. Irving is the first woman) to receive it. Others speaking briefly at the) dinner were Premier Louis J.) mosquitoes, Robichaud, D. Lou Harris, na-| cautions against suspected an inflammation of the brain, The outbreak likely will die out!tional chairman of the State of with the first frost which kills/Israel bond organization and Al- the mosquitoes, they said, tan Bronfman, Canadian indus- Meanwhile two cases of en-|trialist, philanthropist and pa- cephalitis were reported in the'tron of the arts. Matheson region 42 miles east) Mr. Roosevelt, newly desig- of Timmins, Both victims arejnated U.S, representative to the reported recovering. 'United Nations Economic and' He said that if peace and un- derstanding can be established in the-Middle-Bast---"before-the time bomb explodes, we will have set an example for the rest of the world to follow." MORE VEHICLES ENTER Foreign vehicles entering Canada on travellers' vehicle} permits rose nearly eight per cent in numbers during July, compared with July entries last year, the bureau of statistics re- ported Thursday, The number rose to 1,572,510 and brought the number of entries during the first seven months of the year to 4,647,691, up three per cent from the same period of 1964. More ComfortWearing FALSE TEETH Here ts & pleasant way to overcome loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH, an improved powder, sprinkled on upper and lower plates holds them tay Dog Lg) they feel more com- fortadle, No gummy, gooey, it taste or feeling, It's alkaline (none acid). Does not sour. Checks "plate odor breath". Get FASTEETH today at drug counters everywhere. Is There Going To Be A @ EFFECTIVE SPENDING Dale Carnegie Cowrse ® SELF-CONFIDENCE BUILDING ation opening here today. About 2.200 Canadian barris ters are expected to attend the week-long convention, British Columbia lawyers pre this -year, The equine disease, which also attacks horses, not contagious among people. INCLUDE CHILDREN Dr. Clarkson said 15 of the is ® LEADERSHIP TRAINING in Oshawa, specially set up for shift-workers? viously opposed the establish. suspected encephalitis cases in ment of compulsory breath Saskatchewan appear caused by tests after the CRBA's national/an entero virus, which gives council recommended it be an! rise to a variety of illnesses but offence to refuse a test can also cause encephalitis Other topics to be discussed) He added that a large num- at the convention include air,)ber of patients with suspected Maritime and municipal law,'encephalitis appear to be re- taxation and labor cavering but that some are Justice Minister Lacien Car riously i din will address the delegates Health . se authorities advised (Prairie residents to take pre-) THE ANSWER IS: That all depends on the number of people who are Dale Carnegie course partly by afternoons and part! Show your interest by telephoning 728-5032. 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