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LEVEL, DEPT. 345 OF LE SHOES 'ies and slip-ons in black size range in the group. ir foot. eee Wa he te s VEL, DEPT. 238 BRIDGE CHAIRS 90m don't miss this offer! iolstery. 2 60 e Lp DEPT. 470 Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 225 10 Single Copy SSc Per Ghe Oshawa Gimes Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, Authorized as Second Class Mail Po 1967 Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Weather Report Rain and raw winds will con- tinue with some. thunder- showers. Low tonight, 403 high Friday 48, st Office Department Cash FORTY-TWO PAGES 4.50" 6.50 Anita Jacobson, 25, of Stockholm, was one of a beautiful bevy of girls from Sweden displaying acrobat- fe talents on her country's A HAPPY SWEDE national day at Expo 67 Wednesday. She's an_in- structress with the Swedish acrobatic team which per- ~ Effective Oct. 1 To Attract Private Funds NHA INTEREST AT NEW HIGH OTTAWA (CP) -- Be it ever so humble, a home purchased under the National Housing Act after Oct. 1 is going to cost more. came as the House concluded debate Wednesday on what many MPs have said is a criti- cal wheat situation. His Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre) said the new rate would frighten home buyers and add to housing problems. 'We: didn't think this grade corporate bond ylelds,'* the minister said. "As a result, since March 21, private lenders have shown lit- department's Labor Minister Nicholson announced in the Commens Wednesday the maximum inter- est rate for home-owner and rental-housing loans under the NHA will be raised a full point year come before the today and the ann increase is expected vigorous debate. "The change I formed for Sweden's Prin- cess Christina an Expo visit. during | (CP Wirephoto) Sarnia Pulls Ahead Of Oshawa In Wages OTTAWA (CP)--Sarnia is rapidly outstripping its Ontario high-pay challenger city of Oshawa in average salaries and wages paid to workers in indus- try, new and more detailed fed- eral statistics show. The average of wages and! salaries paid to 17,693 industrial workers in Sarnia in June was $138.68. This is an increase of 19.1 per-cent from the $116.35 paid in 1965, and well above the $126.95 a week paid in 1966. Sarnia took over first place last year from Oshawa in high average weekly pay cheques. Oshawa wage- and _ salary- earners slippéd to $113 a week last year from $117.59 in 1965. In June this year the figure had recovered, reaching $121.84 a week for 30,453 workers. this was only 3.6 per cent above the 1965 figure and the smallest gain to be made by any major industrial centre in the country. jmade public by department, returns. The revenue Aepart-| nities, and-will be useful in per-|five ¢ ment's latest available 'igures.|<onnel offices for comparing Wednesday when their plane nosedived on to a bUSY cvageS A MENACE 'street and richocheted into an ~* school--just 20 min-|. Some other facts revealed by ee iat out. aces But PRODUCED MONTHLY The new figures compiled by Dominion Bureau of Statistics are being made public monthly on a more complete basis than before. They differ from statistics the revenue from tax taken for 1965, showed Oshawa edzed| Sarnia in average incomes by five cents -- Oshawa, $5,820.14; Sarnia $5,820.09. | While the taxation figures Tijuana Locks Bakeries In Wake Of TIJUANA, Mexico (AP)--Au- thorities said today they traced a deadly inseciticide blamed for Tijuana's mass poisoning to a warehouse from which bakery products were distributed. Fifty bakeries were pad- locked and posted with guards, and 35 persons linked to the supplier and bakeries were held for questioning. No. charges were laid, Tijuara residents trooped by thousands across the U.S. bor- der to San Ysidro, Calif., for bread. Hector Valdivia, deputy dis- trict attorney, said 'the insecti- cide parathion was found store: in the warehouse near flour, sugar and possibly other ingre- Destruction Investigation TORONTO (CP)--An_ investi- gation will likely be held into charges made by Satan's Choice motorcycle club mem- bers that police caused wanton and unnecessary damage ii a raid Sunday, Police Inspector Thomas Keightley said Wednes- food or ining samples of flour, bread Poisonings dients used in foods. He refused to identify the warehouse. | Valdivia said: "Until we get test results from Sacramento.| .ith 69.94, has seen its aver- we won't know for sure what ingredient was poi- soned."" | In Sacramento, Calif., chem- ists of the California depart- ment of agriculture were exam- and sugar flown from Tijuana. Valdivia told a press confer-| ence Wednesday that 16 save} died from poisoning since suns] 12.3 per cent from $97.83 in day. About 25 persons were in) 1965. hospital, and an estimated 300) - others were released from hos- pitals and clinics after trea*| ment. Only two or three new cases of sickness were reported) Wednesday, authorities said.| The dead were all believed to be children under 10. The U.S. Food and Drug) Administration in California| confirmed the Sacramento chemists' analysis blaming par- athion, a pesticide related to lethal gases developed by Ger- many. | In northern Mexico, gasatiton| | is used against the boll weevil. day. The inspector, who led the 40-man Toronto police squac aiding in the Markham Town- ship raid, said: "J fully expect an investigation will be held." Club members complained Toronto officers needlessly wrecked their clubhouse and smashed their motorcycles, two trucks and a station wagon. Insp. Keightley said police had ripped off some wallboard at the house in a search for drugs, but he denied seeing any of his men do any of the other damage. He said the house was in a shambles when they arrived. RIVER OF SOUP | STOPS MOTORISTS WIGAN, England ters)--Motorists found themselves in the soup here | --25,000 cans of it. The flood of tomato, oxtail, beef broth, scotch broth, chicken and vegeta- ble soups came when a 12- ton load fell off a truck Wednesday. By the time firemen afrived to mop up, the soup was six inches deep in some places. the poyrolls of firms employing (Reu- | deal in annual incomes of all taxpayers, the statistics bureau's figures deal only with 20 or more persons in a wide range of specific industries. Moreover, the total figures are divided by the number of employees earning wages or salaries, whether or not they | --Royal) asked Prime Minis- LAMARSH SNUBS SEATMATE, TIFFED OVER PARK DISPUTE OTTAWA (CP)--State Sec- . retary Judy LaMarsh and Northern Development Minis- ter Laing are seatmates in the Commons normally but haven't been practising ter Pearson to "use his undis- puted talents in international reconciliation' to see that Miss LaMarsh resumes her proper place. Speaker Kucien Lamoureux togetherness since Monday. capped this by saying the Reported cause of their question '"'is out of place " | difference is that Mr. Laing But David Macdonald (PC hasn't acceded to Miss Seid 7 : LaMarsh's urgings that a fed- aaa be er ot for eral park be developed in her jie asked. Miss Toiliah G Niagara Falls constituency. MPs took note Wednesday of the dispute and of Miss LaMarsh's move to a seat in question, forcing her to walk to her front-row place to reply as is required under Commons rules. the row behind, rather than her regular seat beside Mr. But after making her reply, | Laing. Miss LaMarsh slipped back a | R. G. L. Fairweather (PC row to sit beside Postmaster - General Cote. | Complete Texas City Prepares To Evacuate this city of 41,000 are preparing |home state. waters of the Rio Grande. fled Meanwhile, President lingen and car bodies. Officials planned a mass air- Plane Dives |the city. work a full work-week, which} tends to deflate the figures. | But the new DBS tabulations! show breakdowns between industries in the major commu- wages between cities. OTHER FACTS the new figures: | 1. Moncton, N.B., had the largest gain in average weekly) wages and salaries between) 1966 and June this year, up 18 per cent to $83.13 from $70.42. 2. St. Hyacinthe, Que., the lowest average weekly wages in salaries in June, | $76.19, but this was 10.3 per| field elementary had [het bicycles. meeting day and the 633 pupils) Near School | A 359-foot dam near Harlin- gen burst Monday under pres- DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--Two)sure of waters dumped by hur- aerospace civilian workers and rcane Beulah, making it the military pilots died worst-hit town in the floods-- D small biggest in Tdxas history. The city also faced new men- from swarms of mos- quitoes and from snakes slither- On any other day the Brat- ing out of the floodwaters. school yard) president Johnson planned to would have been buzz at then. over his home state--much time with pupils lingering) (¢ it turned into a vast lake by beside the band hall to pick up the floods. He was expected to declare parts of Texas' disaster But Wednesday was faculiy areas, Water mains in Harlingen 7 j j a were dismissed before the tW0-|....4 smashed and the floodwa- Temco-Vought Electrosystems, |, , bypass dams hastily thrown cent better than the average for/engined plane, owned by Liitg-|tors boiled up through sewers 1965 3. St. John's, Nfld., lowest-| paying industrial city in 1965 age rise to $80.53, a gain of 15.1 per cent. | 4. Highest paying city outside) the industrial heartland of Ontarii is Chicoutimi, Que.,| with an average $123.04 in June| this year, up 16.6 per cent from $105.51 in 1965, 5. Highest paying western! city is Vancouver, with $109.91| a week in June this year, up} Donald Kennedy of In- verness, N.S., and two of his sisters are claiming the world threesome -- longevity title which was claimed 4 > |me. jengulfed in a sea of mud. spiralled down, trailing smoke. up by volunteers with bulldoz- The craft hit a glancing blow ers on a passing car--the driver} ood distribution was difficult escaped 'injury--and careered/and health officials launched an through the bike racks an@/intepsive campaign to inoculate against a wall of the brick band refugees against typhoid. building. It halted within 50 feet) The city's six-storey hospital of the assembled teachers. lwas cut off. Helicopters were Ted Heimberger, 11, a sixth/used to evacuate the sick ard grader, was hurrying past the injured. bike stand to football practice) On the Mexican side of the when, he said, he heard a "wild|Rio Grande, two-thirds of the whirring sound" above. and|important border town of Rey- behind him and "there was that|nosa was flooded and further airplane coming right down at|downstream Matamoros was THEY'VE SEEN A LOT OF YEARS from. left) and Margaret Kennedy, 89, (second from right), the aggregate ages total 291 years, better by six years than the Venezue- earlier this month by three sisters in Venezuela, Mr, Kennedy is 104 years old. With his sister Christina MacLellan, 98, (second pA estimates for the 1967-68 fiscal The remaining population ofjhurricane- end flood-devastated to evacuate before the surging}; About 10,000 residents of Har- to high ground John-|Wednesday night as the swollen son plans to leave Washington|river broke through makeshift this afternoon for a tour of his/barricades of rocks, sandbags lift for those who did not leavé |by the sole remaining road into spending government would go that far." "A grievous rate of interest," mortg. Commons ounced said Howard Johnston (SC -- Mr. Nicholson's announce- to spark Okanagan-Revelstoke). ment came on the eve of what Under a policy announced by shapes up as a heated Com- now am Mr. Nicholson for this year, mons debate on housing. John Diefenbaker occu- pies a seat reserved for him Wednesday night at a giant civic reception in Prince Albert. The 72-year- old former national Con- Won't Separate Sisters PRESTON, Ont. (CP)--Mrs.|ister, that the sisters will not be /Arthur Timbrell stayed at home|separated. this morning and did not make | She said she will refuse entry ithe 10 a.m. deadline by which|to any CAS official or police \she was to turn over two sisters jofficers possessing a warrant to jto the Children's Aid Society in)remove the children, Peggy, 5 |nearby Kitchener, and Valerie, 3. | At a news conference at tier : F |home here today she said she ter mother to the girls since will not give up the two chil-|January. . id ; | . A. Hunsberger of Kitch- dren she has been caring for) ..or director of the Waterloo amb ene. receives. & written County Children's Aid Society a , eae poe are Yaris. lsaid the action to remove the ce a. Ae saudades jsisters was being taken to place ble' atmosphere. | He said reasons for rejecting sisters can be made known only nine children of their own, brell telephoned Governor Gen- aid. She was advised by an aide the situation. ernor general does not act she will ask Queen Elizabeth for help. Sudbury Fire Razes Block streets. injured. Jan claim. With sister Cath- erine Gillis, 87, (left), add- ed, the total comes to 378 years. --CP Wirephoto jfire department captain Saul (Cape Breton Post) Bergeron, ' tle enthusiasm for NHA-insured yes," - jonly Atlantic partner to support | Mrs. Timbrell, has been fos-| jthe children in a more "desira-| to the applicants--who have Wednesday night, Mrs. Tim- that he would be informed of nna Mrs. Timbrell said if the gov-| SUDBURY. (CP)--Fire early) today destroyed 16 businesses and offices and left 20 persons homeless in one business block at downtown Elm and Lisgar The second-floor tenants who were asleep at the time, were evacuated and no one was "If we would have got there | 15 minutes later, there wouldn't}> White House wedding!" have been any survivors," said | to 8% per cent. announcing should not, ba NHA rates have been adjusted Opposition members had The boost was aimed at expected to provide the com- at the end of each calendar sought an emergency debate attracting private funds into plete answer to our current quarter at 1% per cent above shortly after the House housing and to let the govern- housing situation."" Mr. Nichol- the yield of long-term govern« resumed Monday after a sum- ment concentrate "'its future son said. 'Nevertheless it is an ment bonds mer recess. But Speaker Luc ion lending in the important social important part of the whole." "Despite introduction of this Lamoureux housing could areas of greatest need." The rate would come up self-adjusting formula, the NHA be discussed during the esti- These areas he described as again for quarterly review Jan. rate throughout this year. has mates of Mr. Nicholson's public housing, housing for the 1 and he emphasized that !end- been substantially below. on: department. psa Ag students and urban ate go still be able to ventional rates and for the last The government agreed: and 3 ay charge less than the 8'4-per- six months it has fer said they uld i 4 " 4 ; Mr. Nicholson's statement cent maximum, as significant premium aie Wale iy eee ne ae pad gece } eee e! U.S. Israel Under Fire By France UNITED NATIONS (CP) --,reaction to his stand from the France takes its turn in the UN|U.S. He added, however, that general policy debate today and|while the Canadian view would attacks are expected on some|come as no surprise to the U.S., familiar targets: the U.S. role|that fact that it had been jin Vietnam, Israeli actions in\expressed publicly might have. the Middle East and the North) The Canadian stand was simi- Atlantic Treaty Organization. lar to that expressed earlier by French Foreign Minister|Swedén and Denmark. British Maurice Couve de Murville's|Foreign Secretary George speech to the General Assembly| Brown, however, adopted a line seemed certain to follow lines|similar to that of the U.S. when already laid down by President|he told the assembly Tuesday de Gaulle. \that the regretted that North De Gaulle says the United| Vietnamese leaders "have \States should get out of Viet-|never said what they will either nam and Israel should yieldjdo or refrain from doing" in jarms last June. bombing is stopped. | So far, Britain has been the| a |cations nor did he mention Me pen policy in a fae Umit in connection with ly's y .S. bom resumes at 10.30 a.m. today. said: Sot 6 binge He | "There ts not..the |GIVES CANADA'S VIEWS foray one | External Affairs Minister, beng a thet abet es |Paul Martin put Canada's ten-lnegotiations) will involve the U.S. , |uous role as a sort of 'honest/question of the bombing of jbroker between Hanoi and | Washington on the line Wednes- |day in advocating that the U-S. | » RESERVED SEAT | servative leader told: the crowd that if he had his life to live over again, he would again want to serve the | public. (See story Page 3.) | --CP Wirephoto North Vietnam. It seems clear pr " pesiwcanyrd to bring about ' : alks betwi stop the bombing on North Viet-| doomed vo tallcie dese" the nam. {bombing is stopped. This is a It was. the first time the) matter of first priority if we Canadian view in favor of ces-jare to start the process of de- sation of the bombing without/escalation and to open the door prior commitments from North| to the conference room... ." Vietnam had been expressed; He emphasized, however, that publicly, although it had been|the halt in the bombing would conveyed previously in private not, in itself, bring the war to talks with U.S. officials. an end. U.S. activity was but Martin said following his|"one side of a military equa- main policy. speech before the|tion" and there would have to |122-nation UN General Assem-|be, eventually, concessions on 'bly that he received no official|the other side. 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Names Of Biafra Students Refused | WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- A request for the names of | students from the breakaway West African republic of | Biafra who may be studying at the University of Windsor | ds to be ignored. Gabriel DeLuca, dean of men, said he had received a letter from Biafra's special representative in the United States asking for the names of all Biafran students, CAS Director Clarifies Stand | TORONTO (CP) -- Foster mothers must be prepared | to give up children living in their homes, says H. H. | Dymond, director of the Children's Aid Societies in On- | tario. "Foster parents and adoptive parents are in entirely different positions," he said in an interview Wednesday. | | | jthe Timbrell's bid to adopt the} Two Navy Planes Collide, Burn JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Two navy planes col- lided during a rainstorm Wednesday and plunged to earth in flames. Six men were aboard. One body had been re- covered before darkness and rain forced a halt in the : seek| : eral Boland Michenes te a search. One officer said all aboard were believed dead. ssn vgn .. In THE TIMES Today .. betray Minor Hoekey Night -- P. 12 | | ey) < 5272788 New Fire Chief -- P. 15 SSCS LES -- Candidates At School -- P. 5 <-- Ajox News--5 Ann Landers --16 Classified --24, 25, 26 City News--15 Comcis--29 Editorial---4 = Financial--28 : | Obituaries --26 E Sports--12, 13, 14 Television--29 3 Theatres--8 "We've been invited to a Weather--2 Whitby News--3 Women's--16 to 21 liu Pn eR ec i A any Arab soil it won by force of|the way of peace efforts if the Martin suggested no qualifi-