Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- 'ario and Durham Countiea, VOL. 94 -- NO, 254 800 Por West Home "Boliveree OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1965 She Oshawa Zines Weather Report Few brief showers or snow- flurries today and Tuesday. Cooler. Low tonight, 27. High tomorrow, 59, Silene ant "fer""scrment of 'bsmogs tr Coun TWENTY PAGES POWER OFF Winds Hit At 72 MPH By THE CANADIAN PRESS Winds up to 25 miles an hour were forecast for central and southern Ontario today, But they'll seem a breeze to some areas battered by gale- force winds of 72 miles an hour Sunday. (See story on page nine). Sections of Midland, Pene- tanguishene, Oshawa, Toronto, struction and hurled them to the street below. David Walkeden, who lives near the building, said there was a "noise like thunder" as 20 of the metal sheets were blown down. Police shut off the area and warned residents throagh a loudspeaker, The strongest gusts of 72 miles an hour were reported at Mount Forest and Centralia in RHODESIAN TRUCE POSSIBLE- WILSON Need Goodwill Both Sides Force Not Needed, PM Says UNIQUE VOTE MAY BE CAST TORONTO (CP) -- Donald Orillia and Waterloo were with- out power Sunday afternoon be- cause of line breaks. the London area. In Oshawa, radio statio n And it's expected to be sev-/CKLB was forced off the air eral days before traffic through/for 10 minutes, the Welland Canal is back to |BARGE ADRIFT normal, A total of 65 ships were i barea wont wasitt th Lake halted when the canal closed in the afternoon, It was reopened this morning there were ships in transit, 39 waiting in was) 16) jported no /Ontario after breaking ay late Sunday. Early|from a tug near Rochester, Police across the province re- |i injuries from the Lake Ontario and 10 in Lake|storm. But in the Toronto sub- Erle part of the dep: ways dock was washed out and the Wolfe Island-Kingston ferry) service was disrupted. THREE CARS WRECKED In Midland, an uprooted tree /for : urb of North York, a fireman At Wolfe Island, off Kingston,|°Ut his hand with a portable artment of high-/POwer saw he was using to cut} a tree entangled in hydro wires, } /He was treated in hospital andj released, 1 The Toronto weather office} \said the storm was,pot unusual | the province around this crashed into a house and three|time of year, Winds blew at a cars were wrecked by a falling|steady 30 to 40 miles an hour power pole. In Port McNicoll &/most of Sunday, gusting to 60 man discovered the porch re- cently added to the rear of his\area, An intense storm centre in Firemen in Toronto answered|northwest Minnesota which close to 100 calls from persons|passed through North Bay Sun- reporting toppled trees, Winds|day was blamed for the hign house in the front yard, } to 60 miles an hour tore/winds, It. brought miles an hour in the Toronto some rain w slabs of sheet metal off a seven-jand snow to the Muskoka re- storey apartment under con! gion. 500 Communists Repulsed By The Indonesian Army | JAKARTA (CP)--The Indone-|jungles. Antara said a Christian sian army reported today it had thrown back a major attack by 500 Communists as flared in fresh areas of the re-ja public. The attack was launched by members of the Pemuda Raj- kat (Communist Youth Organi- sation) at President Sukarno's birthplace of Biltar, in East battle with Communists Tandengan The agency also reported army troops in Minahaha, an-| other part of northern Celebes, | had rounded up suspects be-| lieved involved in the coup at-) was stabbed to death in church) at Tondano and two local civil fighting|defence members were killed in at) { Lovely *'Stormie'™ Ding. ley -- Oshawa's Miss Red RED FEATHER DRIVE PASSES HALF-WAY POINT McAlpine, 20, may be the first Canadian civilian to vote in a federal election before his 21st birthday, Nov, 9, The third-year arts student at the University of Toronto will be able to vote on Nov, 8 because under English com- mon law a person is deemed to be 21 the day before the anniversary of his birthday, not on his actual birthday, His name is not on the voters' list but he lives in a rural riding where it is legal to vote if someone on the list will vouch for him, Nelson J. Castonguay, chief electoral officer at Ottawa, says he can't recall a similar case previously. Mr, McAl- pine, who lives in Marysville, Ont,, wants to vote in Hast- ings South, Members of the armed services can vote at age 18. 'Starts 'Search QUEBEC (CP)--Police today 'received an anonymous tele- (iphone call warning that a bomb i was set to go off at the resi- || dence of the lieutenant-governor lof Quebec, Officers of both the suburban | Sillery and.the Quebec Provin- 'celal Police were searching the \area of the residence, known as |Bols de Coulonges. The call | was received at 9:39 a.m, EST, | The alert was the fourth in- 'cident involving bombs since Saturday, Three bombs linked \to a separatist organization were found and dismantled, | Lt..Gov, Paul Comtois was 'not at the residence today. LONDON (CP)--Prime Min- ister Wilson says he believes a Rhodesian settlement is possi- ble. But Rhodesia's two leading African nationalist leaders have rejected plans for a royal com: mission to work out a settle- sia's parties, Joshua Nkomo, said in a statement that Britain was evading proposing sion, He termed it "'a time-wast- The leader of one of Rhode- two African nationalist in commis- its responsibilities the royal ment, ing device." Wilson returned Sunday night from talks in Rhodesia to report|tionalist thejingi Sithole, issued a statement "unreservedly rejecting the idea of a commission." to Parliament today on agreement he reached with Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith to set up a three-man royal commission that will seek a formula for conditions under which the self-governing central African colony could be granted independence, The British leader said the agreement has provided time for careful thought. Conditions had been created "in which the terrible disaster which I believe, was imminent this weekend, can be averted," Today's call, made to the ma- nicipal police headquarters, |said: | "A bomb is due to go off in jan hour at the governor's resi- idence," | The governor-general also has a reatlanee in Quebec City-- > located in The Citadel, the his- jtorle fortress located on the Plains of Abraham 'high above he St. Lawrence River. But when the word "gover- {nor' is used here it usually re- \fers to Mr. Comtois, | The search apparently was jrestricted to the grounds of the \Bols de Coulonges residence and not to the house itself. linked to the weekend bomb ifinds was the Front de Libera A bomb was found near the jrear wall of the elty hall in jupper town Quebec Sunday jnight, Earlier bombs had been point in the current drive | |found in front of an armory and Deny 5 Slain Border Clash TEL AVIV (AP)--Israel has denied a Jordanian claim that five Israeli soldiers were killed and six injured Sunday in the second border clash in two days, An Israeli military spokes- man also said no equipment was destroyed in the fighting at Latroun, a no man's land 18 ici Cae jan ry 8 a man claimed one Israeli 106- millimetre » two guns, one track three tractors were destroyed, There were no Jordanian losses, he added. The clash ended when UN ob- servers ordered a ceasefire, Jordanian spokesman aaid, Hall 'to illustrate an im- portant announcement, The he said, adding: "We can, given the time, get a settlement, You cannot settle this problem by military force, There must be a@ lot of goodwill on both sides." BUYS TIME British newspaper commenta- tors agreed that Wilson's mis- sion had bought time for more negotiations, But they generally did not consider as bright the prospects for an acceptable set- Ulement, Wilson went to Rhodesia after the colony's ruling white minor- ity threatened to declare inde- [sero without yielding tish for eventual rule of ¢ 000,000 Ne: 'The white population numbers about 220,000, Wilson told reporters his Com- mons statement would deal with the differences between Rhode- sian Prime Minister Ian Smith The leader of the other na- party, Rev. Ndaban- Both the rival nationalist leaders agreed to Wilson's pro- posal that the Rhodesian pew ple as a whole should be asked if they want based on the existing 1961 cone stitution, independence In separate sta ments they insisted this be don by a one-man one-vote staal dum, Wilson and Smith have yet agreed on the ground rule for the commission nor on ways to change the 1961 constitution to make it acceptable to both sides, Wilson said he thought the commission could complete its work by the end of this year, Without referring specifically te a referendum based on univers sal suffrage, the prime minister said the commission might pro- duce an interim report on ways of consulting all Rhodesian opinion, En route home Wilson stopped in Ghana and Nigeria - discuss the Rhodesian situa- tion, President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana told him he consid- ered the royal commission pro- ay heey to} of 4,000,- 000 unrepresented African in- habitants" GF Rhodesia, He said the commission was "a device to sidetrack an issue that can- not be left unsolved any longer without becoming a danger te world peace." Java. tempt. Four Communists and one| They seized Communist docu- Feather for this year--points army corporal were killed in)ments exposing a plan to drop|)) to the Red Feather ther- the battle, which took place last|50,000 weapons from foreign|)) mometer on top of the City Thursday, an army announce-|sources, Antara said. ment said. The military commander in|= Meanwhile, the official Antarajcentral Java, Brig. Gen. Surjo," news agency reported today|Sumpeno, said today that ter-| that fighting between ar medijrorism by young Communists is bands of Communists and relil-/becoming "increasingly se- gious groups had spread to the|rious" around Surakarta, He . s northern part of the island of|called on his troops to destroy) Celebes. them. ° The report followed news of a| Martial law was proclaimed) fierce struggle raging in cen-|last Tuesday in central Java. | 1e tral Java where armed Com-| In. Bojolali, the district army * ' munists were reported in con-jcommander said the death toll) .. trol of vast ruhens. Third Dep-jin the city reached 250 last SAIGON (AP)--Battling their) uty Premier Chaerul Saleh has|month way through heavy missile and described the situation as civil) Further news of the army's Tae Nace anh cis force paskea! war. anti - Communist drive came|;;)' 4), : ie Indonesia's Communists are|from east Java where severaltit three surface-to-air missile strongest in central Java; Many|party~ ieaders "were reported laune bing sites Sunday about, 35 fied there from Jakarta after\captured and in the Bandung malies morwenst Of Hanoi, a U.S the abortive Oct, 1 coup area, west Java, 100 party) military spokesman said | Police patrols in northern Ce-;members have been arrested on' (Reuters uene Saenee quoted lebes today hunted down Com-|suspicion of complicity in the|® U.S. spokesman as saying the} munists who had fled into the/Oct, 1 plot, Antara said sites 'were wiped out. About 45) SEA s ' ees ais uso tatares planes took part in the 2-| alae I minute raid.) | ' | One navy plane was shot down and the -pilot was listed Buckley S Total as: missing, : Pilots reported they counted 17 missiles fired at them dur- ing the attack ay eac 8 PY | They said they observed hits jon launchers and vehicles in the! \target areas of all three instal-| jlations for $306,000. The two bulbs jin a train station. in the picture indicate the LY Police Inspector Gerard Ra- approximate level of the' /cine said the bomb was made money collected thus far up of four sticks of dynamite. It had no detonator. Police said ; it could be dangerous if sub- jected to a shock, Saturday, Quebec City police received an anonymous tip that Planes Attack :2[2222 thermometer has now climbed up to the $156,579. mark, past the half-way lof the main door of the Quebec City Armory. hd be ° The caller said the bomb had been placed their by members lof the separatist Front.de Lib- jeration du Quebec (FLQ) and the carriers Oriskany and Inde-)from the site after the final gg Andy i ot ag Lav: pendence during a bombing raid|On the target, pilots reported. |rin: was sent to the scene and on the key highway bridge. It}, At almost the same time, air/dismantled a home-made bomb was in the centre of the mis-/{rce F-105 Thanderchiets led that consisted of four dynamite by a Navy A-4 Skyhawk were|sticks and detonators. sile installations bombing the two-other-installa-|~ Then, early Sunday, a janitor No missiles . ' 7 were launched tions nearby at the Quebec City railway sta- | The action over the missile |tion discovered another bomb in jarea was the heaviest so farjone of the station's lockers, disclosed in the air war against! Police were called and the iNorth Viet Nam station was evacuated, and the Judy Displays j isti ; The air force planes dropped bomb dismantled. It also. was Linguistic Skill 19 tons of 500- and 750-pound| home-made, consisting of three MONTREAL (CP) -- Health/bombs and fired thousands of dynamite sticks and a battery, Minister Judy LaMarsh, speak-|Pounds of 20-millimetre cannon ing in French, English and Ital- fire on the missile installations " " they hit, a spokesman said, ian, pledged the Liberal party Six U.S. planes are ---- to. the introduction of|to have been shot Fly gn | ELE z ON mort REPORT jsiles installed by the Russians 5 "This government will lay|in North Viet Nam. aside the fear all have of crip-| Wrong directions from the Both aides claim plowing rights te the land. and himself on the terms of ref- erence for the royal commis- Sir L. Byme Dies At 69 LONDON (AP) -- Sir Lew- rence Byrne, 69, the former High Court judge who tried the Lady Chatterley's Lover case, died today at his home at Gos- field Hall, Halstead, Cause of death was not announced, The Lady Chatterley case, In which D. H. Lawrence's fam- ous novel was found to be not on an amended version of thejobscene, was the last major 1961 --", bg hen com yee vty Rage enti g be acceptable to esiansjfore he re' in November, bee oe tiny tae ee tee and to the British government/1960, after 15 years as @ high approach" being taken by the|as & basis for independence. court judge. |parties, on, "With common sense this problem can be solved. The at- mosphere in Rhodesia is highly charged with emotion and fear, which are not conducive to a negotiated settlement." He described the royal com- mission as providing "a means of canvassing views of all Rho- desian people." The commission is intended to consult opinion in Rhodesia Blames Pearson For Interest Lack HAMILTON (CP) -- Social Credit Leader Thompson said Saturday night that Prime Min- ister Pearson must assume re- sponsibility for the "'little inter- est' Canadians are taking in the federal election campaign. Canadians have no enthusi- asm for the election, Mr. Thompson said, because the is- | qmmmnsruxoustnanu. hanno emo Ma Four Killed © NEWS HIGHLIGHTS -- At Cobourg --_ Fight Rivals Attend At Weigh-in | Cobourg, Ont. (CP) -- Four} TORONTO (CP) -- Ernie Terrell, Chicago, weighed in persons were killed and five in-| at 206 and George Chuvalo of Toronto, 209 for their World jured in a head-on collision On' Boxing Association championship fight here tonight Highway 45 Sunday 50 Drown As Bus Plunges In Nile Dead are Henry Haycoup of! nearby Baltimore = Douglas| Wilson, 16, and Barbara and Su- CAIRO. (Reuters) -- A croseded trolley bus plunged inte jsan Lovatt, 17 and 18 respec-) she Nile River today, drowning at least 50 persons, police in this Egyptian capital reported. Police said 19 survivors were taken to hospitals. itively, all of Cobourg. | Walter F. Hearst, 25, and his NEW YORK (CP-AP)--Dem-jon the hustings since May 14, |wife Karen, 23, of Cobourg were ocrat Abraham D. Beame and/Beame since June 29. Republican Liberal John V. Wagner is not seekin Lindsay end one of the city's tion. Yongest, costliest and closest} Buckley says he's surprised campaigns for mayor today. /at the response to his candi- But Tuesday's election may dacy, He doesn't expect to win hinge on the size of the vote "i ~ eg further po - : a, Utical ambitions, saying he will for W illiam F. Buckley Jr. 39 /return to his job as editor of | Conservative party candidate the magazine, National Review, | 'who calls pacifists and anti-! Polls show Buckley with as| draft demonstrators "slobs." much as 18 per cent of the vote, Beame, 59, city comptroller while Beame and Lindsay have under outgoing Democratic Ma- A highway bridge in the midst/pling ex penses for medical South Vietnamese were blamed Diefenbaker -- P. 2 admitted to hospital with minor of the missile installations was|care,"' Miss LaMarsh told a for a weekend U.S. air attack & re-elec-/destroyed, the spokesman said.jcampaign rally for Guy Fav-|that killed 48 civilians and ag 8 we bo gg rhe a cole | The attacks on the missilelreau, president of the Privy|wounded 85 others in a friendly|, Dowslas oa S. Bes cad Mar Geamehy, if sites were ordred after mis-/Council who is seeking re-elec-|village. Many of the victims! Patforms = P.1 were released after treatment jsiles were fired at planes from/|tion in Montreal Papineau, were women and children, Pope Paul Blesses 10,000 VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Paul blessed almost 10,000 persons in St. Peter's Square on this feast day of Al Saints, saying it was a good day "to mediate on this world and the world to come." Jap Express Hits 130 MPH TOKYO (Reuters) -- Japan's super express Bullet trains -- the world's fastest -- reached 130 miles an hour today as they launched a three-hour and 10-minute service between Tokyo and Qsaka, a distance of 130 miles, . at the hospital. AGN at coeenaaes ISSUES NOTABLE MORE FOR QUANTITY THAN DRAMA yor Robert F. Wagner, and or Lindsay, a 43-year-old Republi can congressman. are reported to have spent $1,500,000 each on the campaign. Lindsay has been as at th around 40 per cent each, give would be take a few points, That three or. four times many votes as any Conserv- ive candidate has received in @ party's three-year history. | GOLFER DIES, MATES HURT CABLE SNAPS ON ELEVATOR COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- ¢ redit was in fair. condition | Arthur Lancaster, 40, of Tor- with a fractured arm and leg. | onto was killed Saturday and two others were injured when cables on an outdoor elevator at the Credit Valley Golf Club snapped, plunging the 120 feet into the valley In good condition in hospital was Peter McKeown. 27 Islington, wi and arm injuries old Patchett, 53, men fi of t while Har- of Port Police said the accident oc- curred after the men had teed off on the fifth hole. The tee- off point Is elevated from the | fth hole in the valley The men then clinbed into 1e electrically-powered ele a broken ankle vator and had just begun their | descent broke. when the cables} Some See 10 PC Federal Vote Drop OTTAWA (CP)--The issues in the Nov. 8 election campaign have been notable more for quantity than high drama. And the important ones hinge on domestic rather than foreign affairs, None of the wide range of 1965 talking points has the life- and-death quality of the nuclear question that stimulated § the 1963 campaign and produced Sharp conflict beth between and within political parties, Instead, the politicians are talking about majority govern- ment, morality in government, national unity, Conservative party unity, a national 'medical program and the Canada- auto trade agreement care Us Such ampaign wheat prices and the. cost of living also have been tossed into the cauldren, The only for- eign affairs issue ig the ques- staples as uuon of sending Canadian troops to Viet Nam. The last election's big argu- ment over whether Canadian forces should be equipped with nuclear warheads is not even an issue this time. And the flag controversy, the greatest issue of the 1963-65 Parliament, crops up only infrequently, and then in a minor way Prime Minister Pearson has keyed his campaign to what he terms the need for majority government Conservative Leader Diefen- baker has repeatedly sought to link the Liberal government to the underworld, his comments covering everything from the Lucien Rivard scandal to Que- bec bankruptcy rackets The taunts went largely answered by Mr, Pearson until late in the campaign when he delivered a blistering television Genunciation of the accusations, It was a temporary break in his pedestal-type approach to the campaign The over-all Liberal tactic was to avold trading long-range insults or accusations with Mr. Diefenbaker, Mr. Pearson generally dis- missed the opposition with oblique, but sometimes cutting, references in his campaign speeches, At the same time he defended Liberal policies with- out naming their detractors, The subdued interest in the election by the voters has been attributed in a small way to the lack of 'cut-and-thrust public debate by the leaders of the two traditional parties For this 'and other reasons some political observers have forecast a drop of 10 percentage points from 1963 in the number of eligible voters who exercise A late surge of interest could change the picture. A recent national survey showed the number of undecided voters at a fairly normal 11 per cent. This was well down from an earlier estimate of 36 per cent. Some interpret it as a sign of in- creased electorate interest, However, if the early predic- tions hold up, only about 69 per cent of the electorate will vote compared with 79 per cent in 1963, As a partial explanation, some note that even the avail able issues fail to produce a clear-cut, inter-party conflict. For example the Liberals seek a mandate to introduce what Mr, Pearson has called a mid- die-of - program satisfactory to provinces by July 1, 1967, TURN TO P. 3 the the-road medical care. In THE TIMES Expresswey Topic -- P, 9. Survey Sees Parking Need --~ P.5 Gonerels Sutter First Lees -- P.é Ann Lenders--- City News--9 Clossified--16, 17,18 Comies--15 Editorial--4 Finoneioh--19 Odits--19 Sports---6, 7, 8 Theotre---14 Whitby News--5 1c Ne NS ARP Now in its 16th day, the Greater Oshawa Community Women's---10, 11 Chest's drive for funds has Weather--2 reached the $156,57%mark of 30-target. li its $306, ane ee ee ee ee rt rn ew