Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, neighboring ario and D VOL. 95 -- NO. 136 Pickering and centres in Ont- urham Counties. meme aeara " BSc Per Week Home Delivered MAINT, WINING, Eee She Oshawa Cures ALIF ARIA "THIFCMAY HIKIE 90 1644 MENG ONE te mee tree Weather Report Hot, sunny weather is ex- pected to continue without any change. Low tonight, 62; high Wednesday, 85. Authorized @s Second Class Mall Post Office Department TWENITV TWA BAfre Sitase-and ter paaent of cebccs te Gece in me ip sch mob aro etre Among the highlights of the Sports Day Program, sponsored by the Ajax serv- 'Labor Readies For Struggles Mili tary Provincial Union Leaders Coup Plan Injunction Battle ', MISS OSHAWA FAIR TAKES SECOND TITLE Downs | | BUENOS AIRES (CP) --Ar- gentina's military leaders over- threw elected President Arturo Illia during the night in a swift bloodless coup aimed at shutting the Peronists out of the polit- ical picture. The usually mild - mannered |president, who had served 32 months of. his six-year term, holed up for the night in Casa Rosada, the pink stone seat of government, and defied the gen- erals this morning to remove him by force. | But within 20 minutes he was jon his way to an undisclosed |destination--perhaps under ar- rest. Military sources said the army commander-in-chief who led the coup, Lt.-Gen. Pascual Leader TORONTO (CP)--The threat of province-wide labor demon- strations flared up Monday in the wake of jail sentences handed out to 26 men convicted of defying a court injunction that restricted pickets. The men, five of them union leaders, were sentenced by the Ontario Supreme Court in con- in Peterborough to 12 persons. In an interview after the convictions, David Archer, pres- ident of the Ontario Federation of Labor, said union leaders from across the province will meet here Wednesday to dis- cuss the political implications of the sentences, He said the unionists will shape plans for their fight against injunctions, They also will meet Premier Robarts for nection with an injunction last) February that limited pickets) at the Tilco Plastics Ltd. plant} The five union leaders receiv- ing two-month sentences are: Stanley Rouse, chairman of the Peterborough Labor Coun- cil's injunction committee; Wil- liam Mulders, president of the council; George Rutherford, vice-president of the council; Victor Skurjat, manager of the Textile Workers Union joint board in Toronto, and Charles Clark, international representa- tive of the textile union. Their sentences brought scathing attacks from various labor leaders. BURT REACTS George Burt, Canadian direc- tor of the United Auto Workers Union (CLC), said "organized labor will hang this ruling around the neck of the govern- ment," "Undoubtedly," he said, "the "Miss Oshawa Fair' last year. --Oshawa Times Photo right, is Jane Skalin, of Bay Ridges, the winner of the contest. Miss Skalin was ing the congratulations of "Miss Dominion of Can- ada', Carol Ann Tidey, ice clubs, during the week- end, was the contest to select '"'Miss Ajax." Receiv- Congo - Brazzaville Army BRAZZAVILLE, Congo Repub- lic (Reuters)--The Congo-Braz-/staff officers. They had also|arms and return to their bar-| zaville government moved into|taken the head and deputy head | racks. @ sports stadium here today as/of the national police force into army units attempted an armed! custody, the sources added. military takeover. Cuban soldiers, recruited re-|came while President Alphonse cently, threw a protective cor-|Massemba Debat and a number| don around the massive round|of other senior cabinet minis- stadium built for the first Af-\ters were out of the country. rican olympiad a year ago. Authoritative sources said/|APPEALS TO TROOPS army units, headed by para-| troop companies, imprisoned} Army Commander-in-Chief Da-| A. Pistarini, and the command- ers of the navy and air force \moa 4 form a governing junta a discussion of the whole situ-|!earned judge fancies himself to ation, be upholding and insisting on the dignity of the courts. In- GET TWO MONTHS Se it LT. GEN, PISTARINI stead, he has heaped indignity and then would install Lt.-Gen. | Juan Carlos Ongania, the for- mer army commander-in-chief and Argentina's most prominent Chief Justice G. A. Gale of the Ontario Supreme Court sen- tenced the five union leaders to on them, because in the eyes of the Canadian w man, this ruling shows the courts to EAGER CIVILIAN THWARTED IN BID FOR JUNGLE BATTLE 'SAIGON (AP) -- He was classified 4-F and had only $5 in the pockets of his borrowed uniform when he arrived to join the war. But David Stucki never got a crack at the Viet home on emergency leave from Viet Nam and wanted a hardship discharge because of Tries Coup vid Moutsaka and some of his|to all troops to give up the!r| to return in a few hours. Stucki, whose own military ambitions had been thwarted Cong. The 21-year-old: San Fran- ty a physical disability, About 300 demonstrators Mon- family problems but was due | military man, as interim presi- dent, Vice-President Carlos Perette fled across the Plate River to Uruguay during the night. The rest of the 65-year-old presi- dent's cabinet stood with him as he defied Maj.-Gen. Julio R. Alsogaray, commander of the ist Army Corps who asked Illia to leave Casa Rosada. two months in jail each and 20|be an instrument of the estab- =. La ayy Mg a, ° 15) lishment." ys each. On¢ man had his| famon Park, assistant to the sentence suspended. Canadian director of the United The sentences took effect im-| Steelworkers of America, ac mediately, but appeals against| cused Chief Justice Gale of ime both convictions and sentences] pertinence and of turning the were filed. court into a soap box. Unionist Calls Sentences Prime Minister Ambroise Noumazalay, who is in Brazza- ville, today broadcast an appeal | Final Rhodesian Terms Borne By Wilson's Man LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis-| ter Wilson's special emissary, Oliver Wrighf, returns to the Rhodesian capital of Salisbury in a few days to offer the Ian Smith regime what may be the last chance to open ground for acceptable negotiations before economic screws are tightened against Rhodesia. Informants disclosed Monday that the Commonwealth prime| Political freedom for the. non- conference will be) Whites. minister's held here Sept. 6-15 and this in effect imposes a deadline on the time left for Anglo-Rhodesian exploratory talks. Senior British and Rhodesian officials have been holding con- fidential talks since early May to decide whether there is any ground for launching ministe- rial bargaining to settle the Rhodesian crisis. If no progress is made before Commonwealth leaders gather at Marlborough House, Wilson is expected to come under, heavy African pressure to find new ways of toppling -Smith's white-minority regime which so ° far has refused to make any major concessions to Rhodesia's Negro majority. It was over the concessions issue that the Smith government seized indefend- ence from Britain last year. Commonwealth Secretary Ar- thur Bottomley told the Com- De Gaulle May | Lead Peace Bid PARIS (Reuters) -- Presi-| ters) -- President Charles de Gaulle may lead a now Viet Nam peace offensive after his return from his 10-day Soviet tour, usually well' - informed sources said today. This may include not only his visit to Cambodia, already an- nounced in the Soviet Union by de Gaulle, but an appearance and a speech at the tiext fall session of the United Nations General Assembly. No decision about such a visit has yet been made but it would ave the advantage, the sources aid, of 'making it easy to or- ranize a meeting between Pres- dent Johnson and President} le Gaulle--if such a meeting} vere considered desirable by| oth parties ! day night sacked the Political The apparent coup attempt Bureau headquarters here. country's supreme policy mak-| bers of the government still in Members of the bureau, the ing body, took refuge with mem- Brazzaville in the improvised government headquarters in the sports stadium. Mean w hile, President Mas- cisco computer operator waited today for the long 'We flight back home. He had been discovered as with his crusade hardly under way. So he changed places with a soldier he met at a party in San Francisco a week ago. The soldier was back an imposter seized the opportunity. : decided suddenly to change clothes and I would take his place," Stucki said, He refused to identify the sol- dier, a private first class, He took the soldier's travel orders and army identification papers and boarded a military transport for Viet Nam. semba - Debat, in Tananarive| for the Afro-Malagasy common organization summit meeting, was reported seeking a plane from Malagasy to return home. Sources close to him there Haytime Stalls said he probably would leave Wednesday. Originally he planned to go home Thursday. Tractor Parades Farmers protesting low milk| Bert Dobson, past president of mons that despite the lack Pox og ty ot apr cegt yatgl EP will leave the sivapsline OFU local in Coldwater, 12 progress, the Salisbury talks | day, Observers said there could|t© the automobiles for the next miles west of Orillia, said farm- will continue though Britain be a battle between the Cubans | Couple of weeks while they rushjers in his area hoped to stage will not-launch any full minis- and elements of The Congo to finish their haying. But ence|a demonstration today. terial-bargaining with the Smith) army, : jthe hay is in the tractor demon-| William Langdon of Medina, group except on previously-'-- ------------ |Strations will resume, Ontario|president of the OFU local in enunciated principles. |Farmers Union officials said|Oxford County, said there would These include agreement by| |Monday. ibe no further demonstrations in Rhodesia to return to constitu-! a orce | In Toronto, OFU President|his area until the hay is in un- tional rule under Britain's au- John Dollmer said farmers plan|less rain delays the harvest thority and to move towards full a mass demonstration in about; One of the few demonstrations . 10 days with the legislature;where eight farmers, including al ange building in Toronto the probable|two women, drove their tractors target. " jfrom Thamesford to Woodstock. He said as many as 1,000|Joe Mangold of Oxford Centre tractors could converge onjsaid the turnout was smaller |Queen's Park. jthan expected because of Attor- British officials said later! strikes ins ; ;.|. The farmers are seeking ajney-General Wishart's warning they do not know how long the tm ath Wier Wins diecne firm price of $4 a hundred-| that farmers obstructing the current Anglo-Rhodesian explo-\the last five days were called|Weight for milk supplied for use|highway will be charged. ratory talks will continue off because of "flagrant secu-|in the production of butter and/'GOT SCARED' Bottomley's, remarks in the|rity leaks in Washington." cheese. The price now is $3.25,| "We would have had a lot House that the discussions have! The report by Murray From-|PlUS a 75-cent government sub-|/more but some of the boys got so far shown no major progress|son from Saigon, South Viet Sidy, but farmers are charged|scared of Wishart's warning," was a reiteration of information| Nam, said speculation is that 28 much as 30 cents a hundred-/Mr, Mangold said, he gave the Commonwealth| the leaks came either from U.S, |Weight for shipping to manufac-| 'The vehicles were spaced 400 sanctions committee last week.| government sources -- a trial 'urers. to 500 feet apart. Informants said later Bottomley| balloon -- or from "doves" in| The Peterborough-Durham lo-| The Ontario Milk Distributors' told committee members that|the U.S. Congress who don't|cal of the OFU Monday called| Association said Monday the the talks might soon be broken want the air war expanded. off all demonstrations until hay-|dispute involves only farmers f. Fromson also reported that ajirig is completed. At the same supplying milk for manufacture _ Mrs. Judith Hart, Bottomley's "'high-powered public relations|time the local reaffirmed its|into skim milk powder, butter junior minister, is in Lusaka ex-| effort' had been planned to tell|determination to batk the pro-|and other manufactured prod- ploring with the Zambian gov-'the U.S. administration's side tests against low farm product ucts. ernment what further aid it;of the story after the raids|prices. An OMDA statement. noted may need in connection with! were carried out. Military offi-; At Richmond, 25 miles south-|that farmers who supply fluid Zambian plans to cut more| cers around the world liad been west of Ottawa, the results of a milk to dairies for home use trade. links with Rhodesia. placed on alert, he said, to ex-|ballot taken among farmers jare paid $5.29 a hundredweight Mrs. Hart is to report to the plain the reasons for the air Friday showed more than 90/in southern Ontario and $5.86 a sanctions committee shortly on| strikes on: Hanoi, the capital,'per cent in favor of tractor-|hundredweight in Northern On- her discussions. and Haiphong, the major port. |driving demonstrations. tario. Bottomley also told the Com-} mons that economic sanctions; NEW YORK (AP)--The_ Co-! still are being vigorously ap-|1ymbia Broadcasting System plied against Rhodesia. reported today that planned air 'WON'T SURRENDER' Tilia told Alsogaray he was Argentina's constitutional pr dent and would not surrender to force, A government house source said the president left the build- ing at 6:55 a.m. EDT but did not disclose the circumstances. Although troops of the pres!- dential guard had mounted ma- chine-guns in the halls and en- trances of Casa Rosada, Also- garay's troops ringed the build- ing and occupied it without trou- ble. -- The military declared a bank holiday but said government of- fices and other activities would operate as usual. In a communique read on the radio, Gen. Pistarini announced he had deployed his forces to guarantee the safety of public order. The communique said the PRESIDENT ILLIA forces were in control and would maintain peace in the country. It said all airports: throughout Argentina were under.air force control. The communique went on: "President Illia offered his resignation at 2100 local time (9 p.m. EDT) Monday to the commanders in chief of the navy and air force, Contradictory at- titudes of Illia later compeiled this command to adopt security three branches of the armed action." End Hunger Strike Order Detied By Buddhist Leader SAIGON (AP) -- Buddhist ex- tremist leader Thich Tri Quang defied an order today from South Viet Nam's supreme Buddhist patriarch to end his 21- day hunger strike, Under arrest in a Saigon came from the 80-year-old pa- triarch of the Unified Buddhist Church, Thich Tinh Khiet, whose seat is in the northern Buddhist centre of Hue. The patriarch urged Buddhists to remain calm while the Budd- hist Institute--the church's po- bor Council, said 'this is a torney-general against the la- bor movement." In Ottawa, Donald MacDon- ald, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress, said the matter will come before the CLC executive council meeting there next week. In passing sentence, Chief Justice Gale said retribution was not an element and the sentences were not borne out of judicial petulance. Deterrance was the most important factor. "Citizens cannot act in defi- ance of the law, even if in- spired by allegedly good goals . . » I would have been influ- enced by a sincere apology to the court, but none was forth- coming." Court action against the 26 was started by Attorney-Gen- eral Arthur Wishart Feb. 24 after the second day of mass picketing at Tilco. The pickets were organized by the Peterbo- rough Labor Council in support of a strike by 35 members of the textile union. The strike, which began last Dec. 14, has not been settled but the plant has continued to operate. A suit against the own- ers for alleged failure to bar- gain in good faith has been ad- declaration of war by the at- 'A Declaration Of War' David Montgomery, president of the Toronto and District La- Doughty, Michael Gahagan, Carl Jenson, Robert Kelly, Lockie Longhurst, Roderick Ma- loney, John McGlennon, Merton Pearse, John Pacey, Rice, William Saunton, Robert Sar ginson, Edward Shore, Jack Ure quhart, Clarence Wilson, James Welch and William Woodbeck. Harry Woodbeck of Peterbo- rough had his sentence suse pended because he is recover+ ing from a heart attack. Shipowners Stand Fast LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ain's shipowners were under- stood to have resisted demands today by striking seamen for an increase in the nine days of ex- tra annual leave offered by management last week in an ef- fort to end the strike, now in its Wd day. The two sides met for three hours. They declined all com- ment after the meeting. The union negotiators were to report back to the full 48-man executive of the Seamen's Union Wednesday. Neither side showed any offi- cial optimism as they waited to clinic, the 42-year-old anti-gov- ernment monk clung to his diet of sugary liquids, vowing to fast litical arm--seeks a peaceful|journed until July 4. hear what Prime Minister Wil- accommodation with the junta.| Pickets receiving 15-day sen-|son says in a promised state- FRENCH LEADER RAPPED ... _.. WITH NO APOLOGIES Words Worsen Franco - British Relations By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP)--Defence Sec- retary Denis Healey has apolo- gized for calling President de Gaulle "a bad ally" but he has not formally withdrawn the command, Whitehall showed more anger than any other NATO ally except the United States. Thus, Healey's comment at a Labor party meeting last Satur- Minister Maurice Couve de Murville. ACCORD HOPES FADE There has been speculation and that the Wilson-Pompidou talks not Healey told the Commons Monday. that on reflection, he believed he should not made his '"'bad ally" reference ing increasingly weaker. stitution. gon and the northern provinces, |oPen, revolt in the nor therm Bad] Set For Peterborough Unionists Plastics Ltd. plant here. SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- There was no mention of ajtences are: ment in the House of Commons The ruling generals appeared Tri Quang d ; ° g demanded such a unworried by Tri Quang's stub-| }o.cott, bus his influence among they were confident the monk's| |, ca; o r : defiant gesture would not rekin-| 'ied to bring down ky. > | __ PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Bail has been set at $2,000 Ont. NDP Leader Predicts Fall Election TORONTO (CP) -- The New Democratic Party "plans" Withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Dominican Republic began unto death unless Premier Ngu-| ootened Buddhist boycott of| Carl Ainsworth, Robert Beau-|today about ringleaders of an born persistence. Having over-|1i-° feliow monks has waned die the dying embers of Budd- a | cash for each of five union leaders sentenced to two to be ready" for a fall general elecgion in Ontario because by air and sea today. monn yen Kee Eys Willies Eee the Sept. 11 election for a con-|biah, Bruce Castle, Victor|alleged plot behind the strike. come the last pockets of mili- sharply since his campaign of hist rebellion. months in county jail here on contempt of court charges U.S. Takes "It is not impossible' one will be called, says Donald The Ist Battalion of the 320th|_ ; ... In THE TIMES today... resigned. He was reported grow- stituent assembly to draft a con- tant Buddhist resistance in Sai- The order to end the fast arising from a mass demonstration Feb. 23-24 at the Tilco C. MacDonald, the party's provincial leader. have regretted doing so. He did Artillery, about 900 men, began intend "any personal dis- boarding two ships at dawn, to charge. The result. may be a further deterioration in Anglo- French relations and a blow to hopes that next week's high- level talks can reduce the dis- cord. Friendship between the two governments showed a tendency to cool ever since dt Gaulle slammed the door against Brit- ain's entry into the European Common Market in. 1963. When de Gaulle decided to withdraw his troops from NATO's integrated military , day that de Gaulle was "a bad ally and partner' and that he wouldn't be able to negotiate in the Soviet Union "because no one . trusts' him in Europe" seemed to convey the Whitehall mood, unhedged by normal dip- lomatic niceties. The stunning aspect is that a member of Wilson's- cabinet should make such an outburst just when the prime minister is preparing for next week's talks here with French Premier Georges Pompidou and Foreign might lead to a more receptive attitude in Paris to new British attempts to join the Common Market. There is serious doubt among observers that the meet- ing can lead to anything more than a repetition of platitudes. Paris reports said a summary of Healey's remarks were sent to de Gaulle who continues' his well-publicized Soviet tour with indications that Soviet leaders are giving the French general their closest and warmest at- tention, courtesy." But Healey did not formally withdraw the remark. Conservatives demanded an emergency. debate because Healey had insulted the presi- dent of the French republic, but Speaker Horace King ruled that since Healey had given his ex- planation, he could see no need for an emergency debate on- something a minister had said outside the House. Members could seek further action through a motion of censure which could be debated later. return to Fort Bragg, N.C., headquarters of the 82nd Air-| borne Division. | At the same troops time, other transports at | Base for the. flight home. The, start of withdrawal. was the initial phase in dismantling] = jof the 8,000-man inter-American peace force that has occupied the republic for the last 14 months, began boarding air : San Isidro Air|= GM Summer Slowdown Starts Ann Landers--12 City News--11 Clossified--16, 17, 18, 19 Comics--21 Editorail--4 Financial--7 Whitby Baptists To Build New Church -- P, 5 Green Gaels Enjoy Scoring Splurge -- P. 8 -- P11 Obits--20 Sports--8, 10 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--12, 13, 14 € hacia q |!