Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- crio .and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 132 16 tingle She Per Vieek Home Weather Report Mainly sunny skies with pos- sibility of thunderstorms, Low tonight, 65; high Friday, TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES | TORONTO (CP) -- Farmers' \tractors that block the normal lcourse of highway traffic will be moved off the road, OPP Deputy Commissioner T. H. /Trimble said today. No special directives concern- ling the tractor parades have come from the attorney-gener- al's office, Mr. Trimble said in an interview, But the police have been told to maintain order on the high- ways, and "we'll do what we are paid to do," Mr. Trimble said tractors bloeking traffic will be subject |to ordinary traffic laws, In ad- dition, failure to obey OPP traf- (CP) -- A diplo- fic signals while on the high- matic informant said Wednes-|ways could result in a further jday Britain's exploratory talks! charge. with the Rhodesian white re No charges have yet been jgime are edging towards com- laid in the various tractor pa- |plete paralysis. He predicted|rades throughout the province. |this stage will be followed by|There had been "a bit of a tigher economic screws against| back-up, some congestion and the Ian Smith administration, jexcitement" Wednesday on He said Commonwealth Sec-| Highway 115, near Peterbor- retary Arthur Bottomley indi-|ough, but the incident was cated sanctions committee Wednes-| Trimble said. \day that the exploratory talks| Ali available men are being jhave been fruitless so far, and|used to prevent the situation jthat these confidential discus-|from getting out of hand, he sions may soon be broken off,| added. Bottomley is reported. to have, An Ontario Farmers' Union pledged to his Commonwealih|official said Wednesday that partners that Britain will not)tractor demonstrations protest, negotiate with the Rhodesian|ing what farmers say are low whites except on the. basis of|milk prices will be better or- previously endorsed principles. panes by the end of the week, These include demands for a\But he promised no highway gradual move towards Negro|tie-ups during peak weekend majority rule and a settlement traffic periods. | that can be accepted by Rho-| John Dolmer, of Corbetton,| desians as a whole, Ont., OFU president, said he!/ Smith has been accused of/will explain the union's policy| trying to perpetuate control/to Orillia district officials who} over Rhodesia's 4,000,000 Ne.|threatened earlier to demon-| bid to end the maritime strike now in its sixth week. (CP Wirephoto) 'Rhodesia 'Talks Near 'Standstill Union of Seamen in Clay- ham, South London, today, Woodcock met with sea- men's leaders in a fresh BANNERS ATTACKING British Prime Minister Har- old Wilson form a back- drop as Trades Union Con- triking Seamen. Want New Talks LONDON( Reuters) -- A sign| Dover, to meet its demands in|growing stranglehold on Brit- LONDON @ a break in Britain's 39-day-/full. lain's economy, | old shipping strike emerged to-| Woodcock's visit to the un-| Wilson told Parliament Wed- day with the National Union of|ion's London headquarters to-jnesday the strike has placed Seamen's offer to resume talks day followed a three-hour meet-'Britain in a condition of crisis, with shipownerg, ling with Prime Minister Wilson; The seamen are demanding The union also ed it| Wednesday night to discuss yos-\an immediate reduction of the would allow crews of one Eng-\sible ways of ending the dead-| work week to 40 hours from 56, lish Channel ferry firm which/lock. The ship owners have offered to ised to meet its demands) The government Wednesday|reduce the work week by 16 lor a 40-hour week to resume|set up emergency traffic con-|hours over the next two years, work as s00n as an agreementitro] groups committees at 12/An impartial court of inquiry ie signed. major ports to divert incoming|has proposed a government- ships and prevent dockside con-| backed compromise of 48 hours gestion, which could tighten the!now and 40 hours next year. gress general secretary, George Woodcock, right, gets into car outside head- quarters of the National The seamen's decision -- to meet the shipowners under an bet vom ic. independent chairman fol- lowed a 2% + hour meeting of Sri ant"ete' Ky Klux Klan Stronghold meeting was attended by | piste nenver ire Ur] Target For Marcher Rally, 9,000,000 - member Trades Un- fon as well as three BENTON, Miss, (AP) -- The|adelphia again was made after Mississippi march to promote|a group from the march came other of the controlling body of Britain's labor organi- gations Negro voter registration was\under sporadic attack by white engaged on several fronts to-)youths upon its arrival in the! 'The union said the executive lay. \little town Tuesday, also accepted a proposal from Plans for a rally Friday in| The group attacked was led The talks, designed to assess| whether there are grounds for|reaped hay crops already de- |ministerial negotiations, are|layed by a cold and rainy continuing, though the infor-| spring. |mant said the Smith men have| Police halted a planned 'con- Townsend Ferries Co., based at Philadelphia, Miss, where/by King and had planned to groes by the country's 225,000/strate on Highway 400 Friday: march Jeaders, and two New York whites, An-|cials in London Ma iw | : May 9 and re-| will, | | For many others Canton--site|drew Goodman and Michael sumed them in Salisbury June Farmers across southern On-| 2 OTTAWA (CP)----The RCMP junction to forbid interference | has conducted raids of Seafar-|with the rally in Philadelphia, president of the union, anjadelphia, about 70 miles east of| POMPANO BEACH, Fla.| Some African leaders, par-|fect safety at highway intersec-| P officer sald today. Benton, |\(AP)--A_ precarious peace en-(ticularly President Kennet h|tions. Britain's main channel port of a three civil rights workers were|hold memorial services for the i 2 slain three years ago, occupied | three slain elvil workers: James|whites, Britain o ened explora-|and Saturday. Mr. Dolmer sald, | RCMP Raid the time and energies of most|Chaney, a Meridian Negro, jtory talks with the Smith offi.|the union needed public £000: | : \of several civil rights struggles | Schwerner. tario kept demonstrations to a| ices jin the past--loomed just ahead, | : ve we minimum Wednesday as they| Lawyers sought a federal in-| More Florida ers International Union offices'a Ku Klux Klan stronghold, . ® in six centres in a search for! The march will supply about acial Strife given no grounds for hope of|vergance of 75 tractors on Lon-| evidence against Hal Banks, de-|75 persons for the rally at Phil- jan acceptable compromise, don on the grounds it might af-| Lloyd Bingham, assistant! \forced by steel-helmeted riot|Kaunda of Zambia, have de-| The farmers are asking for a commissioner in charge of SEEK PROTECTION police settled on Pompanojscribed the exploratory discus-| ~ criminal investigations, said the, Hosea' Williams, march| Beach's Negro district early to- |Sions as a British "sell-out" and a) ear Wy to the Commonwealth straightened out quickly, Mr. ' A. MOTORIST DEVAL re He eh were tractor in #éveral parts of Ontario, although numbers were kept down by the hay- ing season now swinging into high gear, on the gravel shoilder highway near London, Ont., Wednesday to get by a long line of tractors driven by farmers protesting milk Marysville, about 15 miles east $4 basic price for a hundred- of Belleville, St."Marys, 25 miles weight of milk with eventual in- creases to $5. The.price now is|north of London, and Mitchell, set at $3.25 with a federal sub-|near Stratford. sidy of 75 cents, part of which} About 40 tractors demon- goes for transportation costs, (strated near Peterborough and |OFU officials hoped about 1,000 REJECT REQUEST lfarmers would attend a mass In a meeting Tuesday with | meeting there tonight. William Stewart, provincial ag-| Mr, Dolmer said the farme: ricuitural- minister, a farmers'}do not expect trouble with p request for an immediate 25-/ lice provided tractors obey traf- cent subsidy was turned down fic rules, Police escorting farm- on the basis it would interfere ers near London stopped motor- with federal programs. jists who passed tractors on the Other demonstrations Wednes: | right side and gave them warn- day took place at Owen Sound,'ings, raids were carried out recently|Jeader, said the federal court|day after a day of violence. |have charged Prime Minister T B ttl Vi t C Iso sked t de | in Quebec, Montreal, Toronto, |also was asked to order police) Despite a truce that was sup- | Wilson with attempting to reach| rOOpSs ad ia 1e ong Thorold, Ont., William, |protection for the rally, to be and Vancouver. led by Dr. Martin Luther King Labor Minister Nicholson said Jr., and Floyd B, McKissivk, in the Commons Wednesday the) King heads the Southern Montreal headquarters of the Christian Leadership Confer- union was searched for evid. ence, McKissick directs the ence in connection with Banks, Congress of Racial Equality, now living in New York. James H, Meredith, who Banks was sentenced to five started the march, was ex- years for conspiracy and pected to join the column at skipped the country while on Canton, next major stop on the $50,000 bail pending an appeal route, hearing. Meredith, recovered frowi Assistant Commissioner Bing-| birdshot pellet wounds inflicted Fort |posed to keep Negroes off the |streets, more than 200 gathered|Ministration to get the Rho- lin bands Wednesday night, |desian problem off his back. egg: bottles and jeering 4 ae ers Ca ee ce, } a secret deal with the Smith ad:| | The bands, who the night be-| N Y R ti | of. MECEPUON | saicon cap) -- south viet} rocks and bottles, dispersed as'| nee .| in the war after four months riot police advanced, No ar |of political involvement, battled Hours before, Negro leaders) NEW YORK (AP) -- Mayor " . the first major government op- arranged a truce after polico|John V. Lindsay said today he| eration since the Buddhist re- ; | fore had showered police with O# F Ki Nam's. Ist Army Division, back rests were made, g Viet Cong guerrillas today in agreed to cut down the number has cancelled tonight's sched-| 9), erupted, ham said the searches of other|by two shotgun blasts the day of patrols, | uled reception for visiting King! SIU offices were undertaken at after he left Memphis, Tenn., the same time to look for fur- to march to Jackson, declined ther evidence against Banks, to say whether he would be In Montreal, Superintendent armed when he returned, J. R. R. Carriere of the RCMP sald 12 plainclothesmen, carry- he said in Washington. "If (the ing out a court order, seized) government) refuses to provide) records and searched other pa- adequate protection to Negroes, | He refused to elaborate on the for the Negro to try to provide investigation but said other SIU these services for himself," The Negroes and whites in Stewart To Stay, the column, who number about the two big tents, one for women, the other for men, a TORONTO (CP) --- Premier ton, Robarts said in the legislature 'The-decision to rally in Phil- fire Agriculture Minister Wil- liam Stewart in whom he has Donald C. MacDonald, leader! of the New Democratic Party,, UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- on the way out "in view of ing more influence in U. Thant's! events of recent days." inner circle as he considers events to warrant the question," | @% UN secretary-general, the premier replied. "I have! Diplomatic sources say the pers during the raid. then there's not a choice but 1 be involved, nla Ail _--. SLEPT IN TENTS 250 persons, spent the night in Robarts Tells M short distance southeast of Ben- Wednesday he doesn't intend to "complete confidence." had asked if Mr. Stewart was, The Russians are reported seek: "LT see nothing in recent whether to seek a second term complete and absolute confi- Soviet Union has suggested to/Say they have withheld public} council, "TL believe in law and order," nt CHARGE ASSAULT The trouble started over al- legations that a white market wher, Arthur Marks, 42, slapped a 10-year-old boy Tues-| day morning, Marks was! charged with assault and bat- tery and will face trial Satur- day. The sudden outbreak of vio- lence caught this city of 16,000, | about 25 miles north of Miami, | by surprise, City officials said! race relations had always been) good | But William Johnson, chief of | a federal agency that handles} problems of migrant workers, | said "there has been racial seg-| regation,"" | pected to arrive there within a} month, Some sources say the Rus- sians are not pressing their con:| sensus suggestion on Thant, let alone making it a condition for} his continuance in office, Others} Faisal of Saudi Arabia. | A government spokesman Lindsay's office issued the fol-;88id_ the fierce fighting in the lowing statement: {shadow of the northern frontler| "The dinner is cancelled, Un.| had cost the guerrillas about der the circumtances, the mayor|300 killed since the 5,000 to has concluded that it would not| 6,000 South Vietnamese soldiers| be feasible to proceed with the|took the field Tuesday. } dinner,"' Units of the Ist Division pro- Faisal had stirred a political| vided the military backbone for storm in New York with re-|the Buddhist uprising against ported remarks that he re-|the Saigon regime in the north- garded the Jews as his coun-|¢rn provinces. try's enemies, | Premier Nguyen Cao Cy! The mayor had said earlier;meanwhile cracked down on that he was "deeply disturbed" | lingering Buddhist resistance in Two congressmen anda city| Saigon, A battalion of rangers councilman, all Jewish, angrily! and 100 police occupied the Bud- protested the city's plans to dhist Institute, the last anti-gov-) hold the reception for Faisal at|ernment stronghold, without fir- hs the Blumenthal patio of the!ing a shot. Metropolitan Museum of Art.| The rangers hustled off scores | REDS SEEK TIES WITH U THANT | The Soviet Union can block his}France, Brazil, India, Nigeria! re-election because the secre-|and the United Arab Republic. | tary-general is chosen by the) The Soviet Union got agree-| General Assembly on the rec: ment to that arrangement after ommendation of the Security) rejection of its proposal for a Council, Russia and the other! three-man troika--one Commu- big powers have a veto In the) nist, one westerner and one neu-| }tralist--to replace the secre: As Buddhists Capitulate of draft-age youths for military! The Vietnamese forces were | service, took the 100 unprotest-|locked in battle with an esti- ing monks one by one to police|mated two Viet Cong battalions headquarters for identity|--about 1,000 men--six miles checks, and a 19-year-old ac-|north of Quang Tri, capital of cused of killing a policeman the northernmost province. Only last weekend. Wednesday Ky sent about 300 In a Saigon clinic under gov-|troops into Quang Tri to quell ernment guard, the militant] pockets of the rebellion that had Buddhist leader Thich Tri/spread out from nearby Hue. Quang abstained from solid food) The battleground lies less for the 16th day in a fast he|than 20 miles from the 17th has vowed to continue until the|allel frontier with North government falls, 'Nam, Martin Refuses Answers On Canada's Peace Feelers OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition) liam Bundy, U.S. assistant state MPs peppered External Affairs|secretary and Lord Chalfont, Minister Martin with questions/British disarmament minister. about Viet Nam peace feelers} At another point Mr, Martin in the Commons formation | pat "comings and goings are ar let but obtained little information.| natural to any diplomatic ef- Mr, Martin said it 1s too early! fort," to assess the resulta of Chester ' Ronning's talks last week with MISSION A PHASE senior personalities in North}. Mr. Martin sald the Ronning Viet Nam, But the retired Ca-| mission was only one phase in nadian diplomat had been well! , continuing effort to start gg por id dt |peace negotiations, He declined 0 ee eee "tg say what the other phases keep the talks confidential, | ; Mr. Ronning had had two ob.|8"@, Saying Opposition Leader jectives--seeking a basis for "direct informal discussions" between countries involved in to publicize his diplomatic ef- ister. Commission TORONTO (CP) -- Organized} crime in Ontario is not neces-| sarily on the increase but a! 'good intelligence system' is! uncovering more than was for-| merly possible, says Attorney-| General Arthur Wishart. Mr. Wishart said in an inter- view Wednesday his department 'Is aware' there is syndicated erime in the province but there has been substantially 'nothing new"' in its development, "We have evidence that crim- inal persons have been found from time to time in Ontario," the attorney-general said, but there isn't any indication that organized crime is on the rise. "It's Just that we are able to uncover more of it than we weré able to a few years ago. The Ontario Police Commis- sion report tabled earlier in the legislature says there is organ- ized crime in Ontario with "tentacles" reaching deep into the United States as well as to other parts of Canada, WATCH BUSINESS The report says that police authorities in the province are closely watching the infiltration of legitimate businesses by known criminals, a trend, it that has become more "There have been several criminal occurrences during the year which have clearly indi- cated the existence of syndi- cated crime control," the com- mission's report for 1965 says. The commission says it has been established there is collu- sion among major criminals in Ontario, Quebec and U.S. bor- der points in narcotics distribu- tion, bankruptcy, arson and in- surance frauds as well as in gambling, counterfeiting, the cage of major robberies and he large-scale disposition of stolen bonds, jewelery and furs, "There are indications that other areas of crime are also within the orbit of organized groups," the commission says. Outside the legislature, Mag- istrate R. P, Milligan, chairman of the commission and author of the report, refused to say whether organized criminais have succeeded in taking over any areas of crime in Ontario. WANT CONTROL "We've discovered that syndi- cated criminals are making a determined effort to get control but I don't say that they have succeeded in getting control," he 'said, Asked if the crime situation is worse now than in previous years, Mr. Milligan replied: "It is worse in this degree, Judge Macdonald (former com- missioner Bruce Macdonald) re- ported there was evidence of or- ganazed crime but there was no syndicated crime, We go further and say that the syndicates are making an effort to get control = we don't say they have con- rol." Increase In Crime Denied By Wishart OPP Will Cl Tractor Tieups U.S. - Canada Crime Links Report Claim filtration by the s lice intelligence, intercommuni- cation and combative forces. The commission says weak links must be strengthened or eliminated so Ontario will even- tually be policed by a system of strong municipal police forces working with the OPP and co - operating with the RCMP, Quebec provincial and municipal police and U.S, and other foreign police. Steps suggested for an attack on crime were: Amalgamation of small police forces into area forces; better training of offi- cers at the Ontario police col- lege; equipment to enable all forces "to do the job expected of them;" and development of a repository of criminal records and statistics gathered from all available sources, De Gaulle On Russia Tour NOVOSIBIRSK (Reuters) ~ President Charles de Gaulle of France arrived in this Siberian city today on the first leg of his tour of the Russian provinces, Travelling with the French leader aboard a special Soviet airliner was it Nikolai Podgorny. Bags mee Hind tenes to spen: © nights Novom- birsk, Siberia's pispest city, be. fore leaving Saturday for Len- ingrad. Also on the plane were de Gaulle's wife and son, navy Commander Pailppe de Gaulle, French Foreign ister Mau rice Couve de Murville, and the Soviet ambassador to Paris, Valerian Zorin. Though French and Russian officials have stayed tight- lipped about the A age it was generally expec de Gaulle would be whisked away to a Soviet space launching site. The "cosmodrome," where spacemen are launched, is 950 miles away from Novosibirsk. A Franco-Soviet space agree- ment will be signed in Moscow next Thursday, and eventually a Russian rocket may be used to carry a French satellite into space, The Soviet press continued to- day to praise prospects for So- viet-French co ~ operation that could in turn increase security in Europe, "Co-operation between France and the Soviet Union would make impossible a new war in Europe," says the Soviet mili- tary newspaper Krasnaya Zve- zda (Red Star). "Our countries have different social systems and there is a good deal of difference in their foreign policy. Yet as was ree peatedly stated by French and Soviet leaders, this cannot be The report stressed three es- sential elements to combat in- n obstacle to their co-opera- on,. Diefenbaker also, would decline |/ forts if he were still prime min-| 3 dence in the minister of agri-| culture and the answer is 'no'." Thant that he decide things by|Support of his candidacy until When Thant was elected in| tary-general, | i - the consensus of a small cab-|they get his reaction to their ne. Cebting, Boe epmioting att 1961, he agreed to work "in| Sources in a position to know) 'tudes to elements of an eventual "No," shot back Mr. Diefen- baker, "We would at least:fiave NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Fraser Bridge Span Drops Into River VANCOUVER (CP) -- A span of the Fraser Bridge across the north arm of the Fraser River collapsed today when struck by a barge. First reports indicate two cars and at least six children dropped into the river. U.S. Crime Fighter Said In Ontario TORONTO (CP)--The Telegram says a Chicago crime expert has been invited to Ontario to help provincial police set up an intelligence system to battle crime syndicates, Udall Here To Talk Of Water Problems OTTAWA (CP) -- U.S. Interior Secretary Stewart Udall arrived in the Canadian Capital today to discuss water resources and Great Lakes pollution with Mines Min- ister Jean-Luc Pepin, nner ... In THE TIMES today... lal Project Campaign On Schedule--P. 13 Boord Awards School Addition Contract-----P, 5 Green Geels Clobber Eobicoke--P. 8 e. Obits---26 Sports--8, 9, 10 Ann Landers-- City News--13 inet of principal advisers in-| Suggestion, The NOP leader's question al- cluding a UN undersecretary Of! yep yy ENDS NOV. 3 luded to a meeting Tuesday: at close collaboration and consul-/say that within a few months| i] n uesday i ; tation' with eight undersecre-| of taking office, Thant stopped which Mr, Stewart told repre- Soviet nationality Thant is committed to an-'taries acting as his "principal! holding aes of the ria. sentatives of the Ontario Farm Thant will have a chance to nounce by early September advisers on important » ques-| cipal advihers and took to con-| ers' Union the government did discuss that suggestion with So- whether he is willing to continue! tions." The eight at the time) sulting undersecretaries individ-| not intend to subsidize milk/tiet officials when he visits| beyond his present five + year) were from the Soviet Union, the/ually on questions relating to prices, | Moscow this summer, He is ex:iterm which ends Nov. 3, (United States, Czechoslovakia, | their particular fields, (U.S. peace settlement, Mr, Martin did not reply when Wallace Nesbitt (PC--Oxford) asked whether there was a con- nection between recent visits to Ottawa by Averell. Harriman, roying ambassador, Wil a reply, not a display of 'yer- bosity,"' =y tion by David. Lewis York South) whether Mr, Ron- ning had carried U.S. The Speaker ruled out a ques- : (NDP--| 7 instruc- F| tions on his mission to Hanoi.' fom Classified--22 to 26 Comics----20 Editoriol---4 Financial--21 Theotre--27 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17