The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 94 -- NO. 97 10¢ Single B0e Per Bes Beverce She Oshawa Time OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1965 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment Class Molt Post Office Department Cash. Weather Report Continuing cool. Cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight 40; high tomorrow 60. TWENTY PAGES of Postage in Toronto Maple Leafs, Arthur EIGHT - YEAR - OLD Arthur Lovell shook hands with his favorite hockey player today--Car] Brewer, star defenceman with the --like any young hockey fan would do -- smiled with delight as Brewer and Leaf trainer Bob Haggart gave him their autographs and LEAFS SIDESTEP "THIN ICE" were really tired," he re- plied. "They weren't as tired as Bathgate would lead us to believe?" he was asked again, "I don't want to say any- thing about that," said Hag- gart. "He had enough to say for all of us," Andy Bathgate told a Bra newspaper days ago that the Leafs were "too tired" to defeat the Canadians. He was quot- ed as blaming coach Punch Two members of the To- ronto Maple Leaf organiza- tion skated past an inter- viewer's questions at noon here today. Carl Brewer and Bob Haggart, trainer, spoke to Oshawa Rotary Club mem- bers at the Genosha Hotel, in conjunction with Boys' Club Week. "Were the Leafs tired the semi-final se- ries with Montreal?" a Times reporter. asked the Leaf trainer, "No, I don't think they NEP ee Re ae SC ee Do Dominicans India A Raid Rebels SANTO DOMINGO (AP)---Do- minican Air Force planes today chatted with him prior to an and Mrs. Stanley Lovell. Oshawa Rotary Club lunch- The two Leafs spoke to eon at the Genosha Hotel. Rotarians in conjunction Arthur is a grade four Dr. with Boys' Club Week in 8. J. Phillip Public School Canada. student and the son of Mr. --Oshawa Times Photo " Flood Crest. Due Today -- In Emerson | EMERSON, Man. (CP)--Th curious flocked to Emerson) Sunday and caused more prob-| lems than the rising floodwa-| ters of the Red River they! came to see. | The river level! edged up slowly but the full impact of the flood crest was not expected un- til today. It had been expected Saturday. Sightseers arrived Sunday by hundreds, their cars churning up clouds of dust on streets above the highwater line. Some- times cars blocked traffic. | Frank Muirhead, provincial flood control co-ordinator here, said traffic caused more prob- lems than the water. About half the business section of this town of 930 just north of the North Dakota border was under wa- ter. Late Sunday the river level those things with us," said Haggart, answering the same question. He said he talked to the coach yester- day after his return from a "good" scouting tour of Leaf farm teams in the United States. He said Imlach will be in Montreal for the fifth game of the Chicago - Mont- real series tomorrow night. Imlach for the Leafs' fail- ure to win a fourth straight Stanley Cup by pushing a few of the players in prac- tice past their physical and .mental limit of endurance, "Will there be any changes in the Leaf lineup next season?" the reporter asked defenceman Brewer. "That's not our job," he here was 785.45 feet above sea! level. It had moved from 785.32 in 12 hours. | | Today's crest, or high point of the flood, was expected to} |mean another six inches of wa-| jter here, Emerson is the first Canadian point to get the Red River crest. The river runs north through Winnipeg and! empties into Lake Winnipeg. | At least three business places| |had water on the floors, but all| replied. "It's a matter of "Any prediction on the | speculation . .. there may series," Mr. Brewer was {had equipment and stock raised) be and there may not asled. lwell above 'the .water level, | be some new faces." "No," he smiled. "We're" |About 12 homes were evacuated) ® "Punch doesn't discuss not working now." 'last week because access was|P a rmy Alerted 3 As Pakistani Raids strafed barracks and positions ? : of posse ous alien te fo NEW DELHI (CP) -- India} Chavan told Parliament he said Indian guns were "si- turn former President Juan D,|Placed its armed forces on the|ordered the alert because of|lenced" with heavy Indian cas- "Pakistan's action both in the/ualties. Bosch to power. There was no/@lert today and recalled all per- report on casualties. isonnel on leave as Defence The planes took off in support : \ of Brig.Gen. Elias Wessin,|that large Pakistani forces were whose tank force is bot-jattacking along India's western tled up at the San Isidro Air| border, : Base outside this capital. Wes-|. Chavan told Parliament a bri- sin is opposed to Bosch's re-/gade--about 5,000 men--of Pak- turn, although he apparently|istani infantry supported -- by had consented to the removal|'anks was attacking Biar Bet, of the civilian junta headed by|about six miles inside territory Donald Reid Cabral. claimed by India in Rebel troops blocked off ap-|puted Rann of Kutch area, proaches to the capital from) He said Pakistan's forces' San Isidro. tacked Biar Bet Sunday night The provisional government, but were beaten off # set up by the rebel military, "This morning's news, commanders after their take-|' over Sunday, announced that}! Wessin had been ordered dis-|With a brigade of infantry and/dian army," 'ernment spokesman said. charged as commander of the!& sizable force of armor." armed forces, ee ess Rebel leaders said they in- = tended to restore Bosch to power. He was ousted in Sep- l es tember, 1963 In San Juan, Puerto Rico, where Bosch has been in exile he was reported waiting in his apartment for clarification of the situation in his homeland He told reporters he understood that a Dominican Air Force plane would take him bdack|than 1,000 cheering, when order is restored. Heling whites paraded through said, however, he had received|downtown Atlanta Sunday be- hind segregationist Lester Mad- ATLANTA, Ga sign-wav- ror green in SageJuan were dox, ignoring heavy rain show- security officers separated the Wilson, mindful of the mount- that the airport at Santo Do-jers, but detouring when atwo groups ing recent flood of new wage|Frances Haw of Fort mingo was closed.) smoke bomb was thrown in tpn Washington, CORE Na-iclaims, said Sunday night that! was fined $250 or two months -- ---- their line of march. tional Director James Farmeriif incomes run ahead of produc-|in jail after he was convicted|earlier this month, the minister Maddox, the former restau- predicted another long summer tion, "it will follow as night fol-| Friday of dangerous driving. |s rant owner who was the first Free Aceused iCivil Rights Act, set up In Murder march, He said it was to pro- street test governmental takeover of)---~ KINGSTON (CP) -- Kenneth'private property rights Harber, 21, of Montreal, who Police said the bomb had been charged with capital gave off a reddish-pink smoke, murder, was freed today when|was' thrown in front of the Crown Attorney J. E. Sampson'marchers by an_ unidentified) offered no evidence during alwhite man. Few marchers were| brief preliminary hearing injaware of the incident as a po-} magistrate's court lice captain quickly re-routed Harber, had been charged'them down another street with Harry Moore, 25, of the Maddox predicted 10,000 Montreal area, with the Christ-,would tarn out for the Sunday mas Eve slaying of Paul Law-|march. He said an -'"'almost rence, 51, who was shot at La|complete news blackout" hurt Salle Park, near Kingston dur-'attendance ing a brewers' retail store' Meanwhile, fists flew briefly holdup attempt at the New York world's fair} Moore was remanded for one Sunday between Congress of week on a charge of capital/Racial Equality pickets and a} murder group of black-jacketed youths} "The evidence we have who called themselves the Soci | against this accused (Harber)'ety for the Prevention of Ne failed to coincide with exhaus-'¢g Getting Evervthin tive identification procedures S.P_0.N.G-E ounte! Mr. Sampson told Magistrate pickets héckled demonstrators ran back and, forth through! P, E. D. Baker. | Rann of Kutch and in ordering |Minister Y. B. Chavan declared] general mobilization," |DENIES ORDER the dis-| word peared that at-|ordered for the Indian forces. For Maddox (AP)--More,)CORE the tions which DEATH RID spokesman said in Karachi that a report broadcast by All-India radio that Pakistan had or- But Pakistan denied it had\dered mobilization was '"'base- ordered mobilization of its|jess and mere fabrication." forces and said the fighting re-| sulted from an outbreak of fir-j/he said, "evidence and reason ing by Indian troops. 'We have, on the contrary," to believe that the Indians have the alerted armored divisions for a ap-|move towards the West Pakis- has tan-East Punjab border." The ministry official claimed to. take swift) the Indians are also concentrat- use of but it he Chavan avoided mobilization was what "Pakistan had retaliatory action last night injing naval ships close to the Gulf said|the-Chad Bet area of the Rannjof Kutch under cover of exer-|weekend by heavy rains. 'havan, "states that Pakistan|of Kutch following repeated fir-/cises and that general orders is again attacking Biar Betling on its positions by the In-jhave been issued to Indian mer- a Pakistani gov-| chant ships to keep away from He'the area. Can't Tolerate | Runaway Hikes By ROD CURRIE | LONDON (CP)--Prime Min- lister Wilson the British economy cannot "tolerate" any en- runaway increases in wages. If Marc says lines and_ finally gaged in a flurry of fisticuffs!) get out of hand. it willl with the pickets . 4 simply mean increased tax- There was at least one bloody nose but no arrests as the fair's ation. of intense civil rights activity,lows day that the only result! the lasting improvement living standards," will be away from in A Pakistani defence ministry] cut off by the rising water. ister Gordon of packed publi¢ | Pumps continued to operate) pajjeries in the Commons to- around the clock, keeping water levels down in basements and in the town's sewer system. Mr.) Muirhead said the situation was well under control. a At nearby Dominion City, a tank car of drinking water was) shipped in because of fears that|@ the town's regular supply would) n 'supplied with boats to get jand from town. ROCK ISLAND, Ill, (AP)--|¢ Muddy floodwaters rolled through an industrial area of Rock Island today as volunteers labored to keep the swirling/? Mississippi River from rushing! jinto a residential section, City officials feared a three- mile earthen dike would burst, sending the water hurtling into a 300-home housing project of 1,200 residents. The floodwaters, which have driven more than 60,000 persons |from their homes in three jstates, were fed during the Ss c e The weather bureau said the worst is still to come. The Quad Cities area in Il- linois and Iowa with a com- |bined population of 250,000 was the prime danger spot. The area is composed of Moline,/¢ Rock Island and East Moline, Ill., and Davenport, Lowa. a Island Sunday, covering iter, The 400 residents had been evacuated earlier. REDS ARE third budget. to delivery, is to start shortly be contaminated. Farmers were| Canada's economy as shown by| {0' Mr. Gordon's pre-budget white jpaper and strong outside pres- are justments aimed at spreading) OTTAWA (CP) -- A month/nominating convention in Dav- the benefits of Canada's boom-|after Finance Minister Gordonjenport (his Toronto riding) on ing economy |throughout the country and in- turing, especially firms actively) grams. observers ' ' nomic Council of Canada said) Another dike burst in Rock) 1 590,000 new jobs must be cre-| \ 4 the ated by 1970 as Canada moves jequivalent of a 54-block indus-/into the highest rate of labor-| jtrial area with six feet of wa-|force expansion in its history. | WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- fence Secretary McNamara said} today Communist aggression against South Viet Nam has be- come "more flagrant and un- constrained"--but added there is no military requirement for the use of nuclear weapons. While the United States is holding open the option of using) small nuclear weapons if it be-| comes necessary, McNamara told a press conference '"'no useful purpose can be served by speculation on remote con- tingencies."' It became known during the) weekend that the administra- tion feels it should use what- ever weapons are needed to end Communist aggression against South Viet Nam. McNamara said the latest step in what he called the in- tensification 'is the covert in- __. filtration of a regular combat unit of the North Vietnamese Army into' South Viet Nam." McNamara made his state- ment at a televised press con- ference in which he reviewed nearly three months of U.S, bombing attacks against roads, bridges, railways and other mil- itary installations in North Viet Nam--all designed to cut down the infiltration of men and sup- plies into the south. "The carefully controlled air strikes will continue as neces- sary to impede the infiltration and persuade the North Vietna- mese leadership that their ag- gression against the south must stop," McNamara said in a statement. | Until now, U.S. officials have stopped short of saying that any formal units of North Viet Nam's Army have .entered the war south of the 17th parallel. McNamara's confirmation to- \day followed an earlier an- MR. MacNAMARA 1,500,000 | New Jobs Are Needed OTTAWA (CP) -- Speculation bout. possible. tax cuts is ex- ected to assure: Finance Min- ight for the presentation of his The address, which custom- rily takes more than two hours fler 8 p.m. EDT. Despite the healthy state of "FLAGRANT" IN AGGRESSION - U.S. g@ North Viet Has Units In South nouncement from Saigon that at least one battalion of the North Vietnamese Army has in- filtrated into South Viet Nam and is fighting there as a unit. McNamara identified the North Vietnamese unit as the 2nd Battalion of the 101st Regi- ment, 325th Division of the Peo- ples Army of Viet Nam. 39,000. "e _ He said evidence accumulat-| It appears that the Viet Cong ing in the last month has now/hard core, or main force units, confirmed the presence of that|"'now are being entirely re- battalion in northwest Kontum| equipped and retrained with the province in the South Vietna-|newest Chinese Communist mese highlands. family of weapons,"" McNamara Recent captures, he said, in-| said. dicate that approximately 75) He said that prisoners cap- per cent of those who have in-jtured in a recent battle said filtrated in the last year were/their units have been quiet in born in North Viet Nam. the last two months because Many of the recent captives,|they have been withdrawn to a McNamara said, "are young|Communist-controlled forest "to draftees called into infiltration|receive and to train with the units that marched southinew family of Chinese Commu- through Laos in units 500-600)nist weapons." strong." "me 4 SHOWS, GUN It is clear that the Commu- nists are determined to keep up McNamara displayed to the this su despi ing television audience a Chinese pport despite the drying Communist machine-gun which up of the supply of former he said it was captured in southerners who were ordered South Viet Nam P Pp te eps Nimh in 1954,"| "whe current South Vietnamese He was. referring here to and U.S. air strikes, under way many natives of South Viet|since Feb. 7 in the north, "have Nam who migrated to North been carefully designed to. im- Viet Nam in an exchange of pede infiltration of the men and population following the 1954 peee se Rb vere make a Revd Geneva conference which parti-|°rence wore: ei eens which is manageable and one tioned the country. : _|which is not manageable inter- An estimated 1,000,000 north nally. by the government of Saar tne" a: ney Viet Nam," McNamara AIDS VIET CONG Primary emphasis, he said, McNamara said the clandes-;/has been placed on_ hitting tine infiltration of personnel and/routes south of the 20th paral- meterial from North Viet Nam/jlel; those routes "which have into South Viet Nam "'continues/been associated with the move- to play a vital role in providingjment of men and material the Viet Cong with the leader-|southward into Laos, and from ship, technical competence,|there ultimately into South Viet weapons, ammunition required|Nam," McNamara said. fo carry on the insurgency against the government of Viet Nam," McNamara said. The defence secretary told the country that recent evi- dence, from newly captured prisoners and documents, has increased the estimate of in- filtrators since 1959 to a total of ures for tax cuts, many ob-| ervers expect any tax changes will be on a_ selective basis, New Boom Buoys Gordon ann tart |On Eve Of Budget Speech some suggest include ad- Measures that mostly likely By STEWART MacLEOD | more evenly|made his first budget speech two years ago, there were many "ih : } who doubted he would ever de- entives to secondary manufac- liver another | Tonight, Mr. Gordon delivers) third. Instead of dangling) over the ropes, as he did after| Basic in any changes, some|pis first speech, he now appears t say, will be stepsito be riding on a new crest of imed at trying to create jobs! confidence, buoyed by a boom- ngaged in large export pro-|,; for the flood of teen-agers noW/ing economy. starting to hit ket. the labor mar-) Jn a sense, the slim, grey- jhaired economist will be under- going a stiffer test this time than in his two previous pres- entations. He now has had the} time, the advice and the neces-| sary exposure to all the inside) jeconomic probabilities to move as he sees fit. . . Age Hé didn't have much time as Fiscally, Mr, Gordon is in)minister when he brought in his SREATE NEW JOBS In its recent report the Eco- ___..|good shape. With an 8.9-per-ifirst budget during the much-| | jcent increase in the gross na-|neralded '60 days of decision" | | Draws $100 Fine lier year, the government's de-| ional product in the 1964 calen-|of the newly-elected Liberal! }government in 1963. icit in its fiscal year ended)" pe moved decisively and dar- | : if 2 Women Killed March 31 dropped to $83,000,000) ingly then in slapping an Li-per FORT FRANCES, Ont. (CP)|from the 'original fovecast of/cent sales tax on building marl after Haw's car struck Dec. 26. ES CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY se | Boy, 16, Kills 2, Self #2555 Frances) $455,000,000 terials and production machin-| ery, and in imposing a 30-per- cent tax. aimed at halting for-| eign takeovers of Canadian) In his pre-budget white paper aid that while 1964's gains may s Two women, Mrs, Tony Van-|not be matched this year, thelfirms. But under a cascade of person convicted under the 1964 but the emphasis in demonstra-|will be higher prices and nojdetti and Mrs. Fred Cooke, diedjeconomy 'as a whole should |criticism he watered down the} them|move forward to new andlimpact of the sales tax, apply- thigher levels of activity." jing it in stages, and he with- -- drew the takeover tax as '"'un-| |workable."' Most observers felt sure the jminister had committed politi- ical suicide, |FELT THE PRESSURE How did he feel during those lis not telling the truth." He argues the 1963 budget the|commission. on Canada's eco- nomic prospects and there was May 17." [speculation he would become_a If the minister had vacated|cabinet minister after the com- the portfolio when he was un-|mission's: preliminary report der fire, it would have been a|was made public in January, personal political diaster for|1957. him. For years, it.seemed, Mr.| Actually, he was approached Gordon was working toward/about a cabinet post before the that ofifce. commission was established He was chairman of the royal'and he turned it down. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Pickering Man Killed TORONTO (CP) -- Felix Camilleri, 20, of nearby Pick- ering, was killed today when his car crossed the meridian of the Macdonald - Cartier Freeway here and met another car head-on, Pass Out Rifles, Guns SANTO DOMINGO (AP) -- Dominican Air Force planes strafed rebel army positions today in an attempt to clear a route into Santo Domingo for a tank unit opposed to the return of ex-president Juan B. Bosch, Rebel army forces passed out rifles and machine-guns to about 3,000 civilians. Another 10,000 to 15,000 civilians were reported to be in possession of bottled gasoline bombs for use against any tank attack, Purely Routine Enforcemént PARIS (AP) -- The landing of additional French police forces on the Atlantic istands of Sf, Pierre and Miquelon, off the coast of ,Newfoundland, was purely a_ routine reinforcement planned for -some time, a_ responsible French source declared today. A report from St. Pierre said the police. were landed after the governor of the islands said an "agitation" party made "direct and indirect threats", "I propose to contest ad SANTA MARIA, Calif. (AP)-- Clark of Long Beach, 200 miles and his son, Kevin Dean, 5, shot was basically a good one, de- F A 16-year-old boy, hidden by south of the battle scene, re- in the head. The child remained signed to get the Sousa roll-| eee In THE TIMES today "es ' waving grass on a windy hill- ported the boy had run away in critical condition after brain ing. And he thinks that if the/! i side teed: down. with a ial ce ee caged ogee = suesaee: Aauiae wa das ae, jgovernment had been in a Tory Move Could Force Vote -- MP -- P 9 : powered rifle on passing cars ment ' : ' mi len, 3, was also shot in the head uae ye eg ay ig IODE Seeks Books For Sale -- § : on busy U.S. 11 Sunday, Killed by bullets from the but not seriously hurt Nabanwar tai: Ann Landers -- 11 Obits -- 18 : Michael Andrew Clark killed youth's .30-06-calibre Swedish Mrs. Lucille Reida, 44, who | Did he consider leaving the'= | City News 9 Sports -- 6 7:2 Hf two persons, injured 11, en- Mauser deer rifle, equipped suffered minor wounds from {government? "No." " ae P Television = 19 : gaged officers in a rattling, 114- with a telescopic sight, were flying glass and metal, pushed | However, he said: "I am 59 = Classified -- 14, 15, 16, 17 Theatre --- 18 : hour gunfire exchange and then Charles Christopher Hogan, 21, her husband aside and drove inow, and I have never felt 11, Comics -- 19 Whitby News -- 5 i too hi own. life by shooting and Joel W.. Kocab, 28 the car out of range, even jwould remain in politics indef- Editorial -- 4 Women's -- 10, : himself between the eyes Of the wounded, two were cri- though, she told officers later, linitely, although I don't intend Financial -- 18 Weather -- 2 . authorities said the sniper's tically hurt--Bill Reida, 42, she had never driven before in stepping out in the immediate : parents, orrest and Joyce shot in the neck and shoulder, her life, |future. | entkateunes ANIA cor Pe oe aia f & ' pe ER. gee