THOUGHT FOR TODAY If you think no one has faith these days, reme is still popular. ° mber that hash _ WEATHER REPORT Occasional rain tonight and Thursday morning, tapering to a few showers Thursday after- noon. VOL. 91 -- NO. 231 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for paymen' Class Mail Post Office Department it of P in THIRTY-FOUR PAGES ostage Cash, 2 Men Safe Pilot In Quebec TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) ~Two men, a salesman and a butcher, were alive today after surviving a plane crash and four days of clawing their way through mountainous country trying to reach civilization. Their pilot, Jean Sansfacon, was. apparently burned to death in the crash of the single-en- gined Aeronca last Saturday in mountains north of here. His passengers, Paul-Emile Bellemarre, a Shawinigan trav- elling salesman, and Joseph Laroche, a St, Etienne des Gres Dead Bellemarre, his leg broken and with a severely injured) back, was flown from Lac Sand to hospital in Grand'mere by privately-owned Bel-Air Serv- ices. Laroche, his face 'badly cut but with apparently no other} © serious injuries, drove on a bush tractor five miles to a highway where he was taken by car to hospital in Louiseville. They told their story to res- cuers. |SPENT TIME SLEEPING butcher, turned up Tuesday) 'After the plane crashed into night at a lumber camp near/|@ mountainside in fog, the two Lac Sand, about 60 miles frum/SUtvivors stumbled free and here. jwere "'too numb' to do any- They had been walking since|'ing for two days but sleep early Monday, both in Pain, oranges." Bg Bie ll through rugged country. os of the crashed plane. Bellemarre told Gilles Caston- guay, pilot of the Bel-Air plane that airlifted him to hospital, |that he remembers at one point seeing the body of Sansfacon | "lying at my feet." | Finally, the two men made Gas Inquiry May Extend ToLakehead TORONTO (CP)--There are indications that an inquiry into operations of the Northern On- tario Natural Gas Company may ; be extended to the Lakehead/day night. cities of Port Arthur and Fort) A rescue party was to enter William. the area today on foot to try to The inquiry, into the distribu-jreach the wreckage. tion of as dear rt 4) NONG, now i d Sud Faulty Brakes Thought Cause In Fatal Crash HAMILTON (CP)--Police sus- pect faulty brakes or steering may have led to the crash that jmountain--the range is about 1,750 feet high-in the area--and followed a.creek to the lumber jcamp. Lumbermen phoned Grand'mere for help. The actual site of the crash is still undetermined. The sur- vivors were in "too great shock"' to help questioners Tues- ry. a The Ontario Securities Com- mission reopened the investiga- tion after receiving new evi- dence that the full story of the stock distribution was not told at the initial probe four years) ag0. " | The inquiry was launched to investigate charges that promo- jtheir way down the side of the LONDON (AP) -- A 24-hour rail strike halted all British trains and the London subwa' SCHIRRA IN ORBIT;| NS 6 CIRCUITS 1 Good Shape Despite Heat Control Error CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. {AP)--Performing as if he were right at home in the weightless world of space, astronaut Wal- ter M. Schirra Jr. completed two orbits of the earth today and described his flight as a "real, real thrill.' He was in complete com- mand of his Sigma 7 spacecraft as he passed over Cape Cana- veral at 11:23 a.m, EDT ai the end of the second orbit and swung into the third, There was all evidence that pilot and spacecraft were in condition to |bite-sized solid cubes of high. protein food. The temperature problem de- veloped when Schirra was above the Kano, Nigeria, station on the first orbit, He reported then a reading of 82 degrees. But by the time he passed over Cape Canaveral at the end of the first orbit, he said the temperature Strike Halts | U.K. Trains | today, k ig many th d home. from work in other in- dustry and business. The British Automobile Asso- ciation said the combination of stay at homes and a system of temporary one-way streets kept motor traffic in London about normal. Traffic conditions also were reported: near normal in other large cities. This contrasted with a sim- ilar rail strike in January, 1961, when London traffic jammed up for as much as 11 miles on ma- jor roads into the city. SCHIRRA BLASTS OFF. IN ATLAS ROCKET was dropping. Minutes later he told the Kano station that he had the problem "under control." The two-ton capsule, travel- ling 17,560 miles an hour, swept high above Cape Canaveral at 9:49 a.m. EDT at the comple. tion of the first orbit and swung into the second. The flight plan called for six orbits laste ing nine hours, 11 minutes -- which is nearly double the time ~\ im space by any preévi- ous American astronaut. | is far short of what Russians have accomplished. If all six orbits were com- pleted, Schirra's capsule would parachute to a landing in the Pacific ocean 275 miles north. east of Midway Island. Approx. complete the full six-orbit mis- sion. ; BULLETIN CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (AP) -- Walter M. Schirra set a space flight record for American astronauts today when he completed a third orbit of. the earth at 12:57 pm. EDT. His Sigma 7 capsule zipped on in a "go position" for the planned six-orbit mission. His exhuberant description of the flight came down from the sky a few minutes earlier in a Dwindling Troops In Oxford Quell Ole Miss St Riot ep tat tional s had been distributed to east NONG's application for municipal franchises. Mr. Justice L. A. Landreville of the Ontario Supreme Court tefused Tuesday night to con- firm or deny that he has been killed a pregnant mother on a steep road near Winona Tues- day night. Mrs. Jack Vandenbrink of Grimsby died one day before her 30th birthday, a short This time many business firms gave most of the em- ployees the day off. Key exec- utives spent the night in down- town hotels or Turkish baths close to work. By EDMOND LEBRETON in quickly demonstration that broke out in OXFORD, Miss. (AP) -- A dwindling military force moved| today to quell a Negro student has an. apart- ment. Between 35 and 50 students \gathered in front of Baxter Hall, set fire to an effigy of James H. Meredith and ex- tion officer for the army field command in Oxford, said two battle groups--about 2,400 men --left Oxford for Memphis while a third of 1,200 was redeployed to Columbus, sissippi situation, former Maj.- Gen. Edwin A. Walker, the commandant of troops during the school integration crisis at Little Rock, Ark., in. 1957, was Miss. ordered to undergo psychiatric All were time after her husband's 1949- model car, purchased last week, missed a jack-knife curve on McNeilly Road, leaped a ditch and crashed head - on into a tree. subpoenaed to appear before the commission. Mr. Justice Landreville was mayor of Sudbury .in 1956, the year NONG obtained the natural gas distribution frarichise for} Mrs. Vandenbrink, who was that city. \four months pregnant, was Subpoenas have been served| thrown from the car. on members of the 1956 council,| Her seven-year-old daughter, ordering them to appear at|May, was admitted to hospital court in Sudbury Oct. 10, 11 andj in critical condition with severe 12. They were ordered to bring}fractures of the left 'leg, face any records they may possess|cuts and possible internal in- bearing on distribution of NONG| juries. stock by, or on behalf of, a num- ber of companies and individ- uals, including the 'Honorable Leo Albert Landreville." of the car, suffered face and back injuries and a broken left elbow. PROTESTS CLOSING The National Union of Rail- waymen ordered the strike to executive's plans to close down railroad workshops made super- fluous by the switchover from steam to diesel locomotives. The economy move is expected to put some 33,000 employees out of work. The union complained it had not been consulted before the plan was presented and that in- Mr. Vandenbrink, 30, driver|adequate compensation was of- |fered men who had worked all [their lives at crafts now becom. ling useless. Boyd Blames Crimes On Rebellious TORONTO (CP) Newly-jembarked on his crime career paroled Edwin Alonzo Boyd,|in 1949 and in a three - year whose three - year career iniperiod st'ole $115,000 from crime yielded him .a life 'sen-|banks. It's estimated that only tence for armed robbery, says/$36,000 was recove-ed: He all he wants now is "to be anitwice escaped from Toronto's intelligent human being." Don Jail and as a result Boyd, 48, was paroled Mon-|of his subsequent imprisonment day after 10 years in Kingston'at Kingston will be on parole penitentiary. Tuesday night hejfor the rest of his life. met reporters for the first time} Boyd hasn't seen his wife at a press conference in a sub-jsince his release although he urban Scarborough moie!. 'telephoned her Tuesday. He told the reporters his main| "He said 'Hello, hello,' " said ambition now is to get ciear of|the 42-year-old Mr:. Boyd, "but publicity and find a way to/I didn't know his voice and at help others benefit from what/first I didn't answer. Then he S 1 it | Parole [for his release were so secret jthat Mrs, Boyd learned of his parole from news reports. R. S. Beames, an official of the National Parole Board said |Boyd had been kept out of con- jtact with his family until "'a few }things" in the family situation had been cleared up. "We thought he needed a breather before the roof of pub- licity fell in on him," ex- plained Mr. Beames. During his press conference Boyd thanked reporters for the protest the government railway] »& board arrangements} front of the dormitory where the University. of Mississippi's Ploded fireworks. Armed soldiers scattered the erowd quickly. There were no arrests. Attendance at the university dropped after the enrolment of Meredith, 29, a Negro ex-serv- iceman. Many students had re- turned to their homes after the weekend riots in which two men died. University Chancellor J. D. Williams appealed to the stu- dents. to return, contending he had been informed that 'the Ole Miss campus is now se- cure, and that parents can be assured of the complete safety of sons and daughters." Meredith spent his second day as a student Tuesday, accom- 4 panied to classes by federal @ marshals. There were no dem- onstrations, RECEIVES DELAY In another development over Mississippi's defiance of federai court orders to enrol Meredith, Governor Ross Barnett received a 10-day delay from federal ef- forts to punish him. A U.S. Appeals Court in New Orleans gave Barnett a form of probation until Oct. 12 on the contempt citation against him. This apparently was a move de- signed to test Barnett's willing- ness to accept Meredith's entry into the university. Barnett, who was not in court, had no comment on the deci- sion. He could be subject to Alfanette Bracy, above, 21- year-old Negro girl fom Ray- mond, Miss., is reported to- night to have applied for ad- mittance to the University of Mississippi. Her application, which has been on file since last summer, was said to be under consideration by the col- ment, Army authorities announced $10,000 fine daily and imprison-| sion. Whiting described the move as "regrouping" and noted that ford--87 miles. Meredith has met mixed re- action in classes. One girl turned away from the. class- room when told. Meredith was inside and said,-"I guess I'll have to stay out." "But another claimed: "It's my class, too. I don't care. if he's in there," LETTERS BACK BARNETT Barnett worked in his private office in Jackson with hordes of side. Telegrams and letters poured into his officé and one aide said almost all of them supported the 64-year-old gov- ernor. Another principal in the Mis- YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Shopping Centre Asks Assessment Cut ...... P. 15 Work Begins On Ajax- Pickering Hospital .. P. 15 Jury Finds No Blame In 'Death ..... P. 5 School Auditorium Opium Smuggling Trial Examined from the 11st Airborne Divi- Memphis is not far from Ox- state highway patrolmen out- Movie Plan Vetoed ., P. 3 |said money his department nor- examination for his part in the weekend riots. Walker, 53, took charge of a group of 1,000 students Sunday night and led them through a cloud of tear gas toward fed- eral marshals at he univer- sity's registration building. Walker was arrested and charged, among other things, with inciting insurrection. He was taken to the federal prison at Springfield, Mo., and a psy- chiatric examination was or- dered. U.S. District Attorney F. Rus- sell Millin said in Kansas City the examination would reqmre from 60 to 90 days and means that Walker cannot obtain his release by posting the $100,000 bond set by the court. The number of prisoners held here by federal officers dropped to five. 'They were jailed in a special stockade near the tiny university airport after their arrests for taking part in the riots or for carrying weapons. SEEKS ADMITTANCE Other developments scene: Alfanette Bracy, 21, a Negro girl from Raymond, near the state capital of Jackson, applied for admittance to Ole Miss. She had been enrolled at Jackson State College for Negroes. Her application was said to be un- der consideration by the board. In Washington, Welfare Sec- retary Anthony J. Celebrezze on the mally would make available to the university is being withheld. he has learned in prison Boyd blamed his careers as a bank robber on a spirit of r said 'This is Eddie. Hello, dar-|publicity. He said he wouldn't ling'. and I couldn't say any-|have got out of the penitentiary ing for a few minutes." 'two days early otherwise. lege board. Miss Bracy is en- rolled at Jackson State Col- lege. (AP Wirephoto) a cut in the 12,000-man federal force Tuesday night. Lt.-Col. ee | The funds, he said, would be held back until the situation Roger Whiting, public informa-| iis clarified." bellion he said he acquired as} a child. "My father was a re-| ligious man and I fought against! everything he told me." He said SOCRED NON-CONFIDENCE MOTION the attitude grew against his} teachers and authority. sce Dief Backed By Full-House Vote make anything of yourself You're a bum." i He blamed his apparent ig- By KEN KELLY norance as a child on his home| OTTAWA (CP)--A full-House environment and other prob-| vote, possibly unprecedented in lems. Canadian parliamentary his- Boyd said he rarely went to|tory, easily sustained the minor- church during his term of im-|ity Progressive Conservative prisonment but that his new life|Sovernment Tuesday night in its would be founded on_ biblica:/first non-confidence test. ; 'principles. Progressive Conservatives, The former military police-/Liberals and New Democrats man and commando member|made strange bedfellows as they combined to cast 233 votes| against a non-confidence motion| |proposed and backed only by! the 30 Social Credit MPs. | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Thompson, by tion erals and New Democrats, could haye brought down }the igovernment by voting for) it. {Liberals made it plain that only jthe call for Social Credit doc- |trine in the motion caused them \to vote against it. The vote, technically the first jtest of the House's confidence in the govenment since the June 18 election;-may have been jthe first since Confederation in |which all possible votes, except jthe Speaker's, were cast in the House. Only once before in recent decades has there heen so nearly a full turnout of mem- Social Credit Leader Robert|bers to vote. In 1926, there were|government was follow citing govern-|243 votes cast on a non-confi-|day by Mr. Thompson, his: dep-| ment "failure" to espouse Social'dence motion in a 245-member|uty Real Caouette: Credit principles, made hisymo- House. The Speaker, who votes|ridge, New Democratic House public debt charges, thus assur-| unacceptable to' the "Lib- only in case of a tie, did notileader; and John R. Matheson,|ing Canadians a standard of life wWho|vote and one member was ab-|Liberal MP for Leeds. sent. 264th vote was not cast because| pains to make it clear that heir of a vacancy in British Colum-|policy differences and com- bia's Burnaby-Coquitlam con-|plaints against the Liberals stituency where a byelection)made it unlikely they would has been called for Oct. 22. form a solid front against the The vote itself was anti-cli-| government mactic. il gente rae ie ' Liberal Leader Pearson had) ENSURED DIVISION launched the threme speech de-/ Mr. Thompson ensured-a di- bate Monday with a lengthy in-| vided opposition by stating in dictment of the government 'in}his motion that the government moving his own non-confidence/|did not possess the House's con- motion which comes up for a/fidence because it "'failed to vote Thursday night. |Pursue economic and financial The pattern of-criticism of the|policies based on Social Credit ed Tues-| principles designed to establish ja balanced economy and relieve compatible with this. nation's But the Social Credit and New|capacity to produce." H. W. Her-|the burden of public debt and] on in a crowded House and be- fore official, diplomatic and public galleries crowded to the doors as they have been since lon i and evening sittings went day. Prime Minister Diefenbaker |spoke for more than three jhours, appealing for a further jlease on life for his ministry io present legislation to meet cur- rent problems. He denied Mr. Pearson's charge, made on Monday, that the government had concealed ja foreign exchange crisis from the public during the election campaign. The prime minister talled Mr Pearson's charge "unprin- | cipled" and maintained the na-\therr $115,000,000 between June In Tuesday night's voting #|Democratic speakers also tooki The debate at morning, after-|tional economy was on the "up!25 and June 29, |Parliament opened last Thurs-jexchange crisis, during which and up" during the campaign and still is "on the upsurge." ACTED 'ILLEGALLY' He compared the June foreign Canada's reserves of gold and} foreign currencies dipped} Sharply, to that of 1947 when the Liberals acted "'ilegally' to discussion with astronaut John H.. Glenn Jr., monitoring the flight at the Point Arguello, Calif., tracking station. "It's hard to describe things up here," Schirra told the man who had pioneered U.S, orbita flight earlier this year. SHUTS OFF CONTROLS As Schirra zipped above Cape Canaveral to begin the third orbit, he commenced drifting imate impact time would be 5:26 p.m. EDT. : CONFERS BY RADIO As Sigma 7 passed more than 100 miles above the Cape at the end of the first pass, Schirra conferred by radio with fellow astroWaut Donald K. Slayton, stationed below at the Mercury control centre. The 39-year-old U.S. navy commander. told Slayton that all systems in the flight for the first time. He shut] capsule were working perfectly off all controls and electrical)and that he was feeling "very power and allowed the craft to} good. x move freely on its roll, pitch e said a suit temperature and yaw axis. which has caused some concern In this phase, the vehicle ro-| throughout most of the first or- tates slowly, making about one| Dit apparently was being licked. revolution every 30 minutes if|He still felt a little warm control is not re-established by| Ut the suit temperature had ie i gery BE Purpose of the drifting is to oa conserve control fuel and nee var to. 76 degrees above the trical power. Just how wel v Schirra did this was important Pi ge Pre dm gers of to an 18-orbit, 24-hour flight--| {fe Suit temperature ee, the next U.S. man-in-space shot hie le change the reading on set for 1963. is valve control. But Schirra Schirra's flight, if if went six answered that he "'felt a litie " orbits, would nearly double the Parag perth sae spy to°nats time spent by astronauts Glenn ' Minutes earlier, Schirra and Scott Malcolm Carpenter . earlier this year. But it would talked with fellow . astronaut rer Malcolm Scott Carpenter who dt Gat ee s manned) was- the capsule communicator ¥ th as, Mexico, 'sta- Early in the flight, 'Schirra|2t the Guaymas, Mexico, 's tion. literally sweat out a problem) Using astronaut lingo, with his spacesuit temperature-| «chimp configuration." Trans- control system. But as he Schirra reported he was in neared the end of the second|*chimp configuratien." Trans- orbit, he said the problem had cl Pp id) Jated, this means that tho cap- diminished to a point where it/sule was an automatic control. wasn't worth discussion, . and that a chimpanzee would About the end of the second be able to do as well at this orbit, Schirra still had 90 per/time as an astronaut. cent of his fuel supply remain- Rahal ing and Mercury control re-/SEES BRIGHE PARTICLES ported he was managing it very . Schirra also repovied seeing well, The hydrogen peroxide|"some of Colonel John's fuel is used to fire small jets| friends. located on the capsule surface to help maintain the capsule's desired position in flight. The flight plan called for? Schirra to have 48 per cent fuel in both his tanks for both' the % automatic 'and manual control systems, and 35 per cent re- maining in each before the vital % re-entry manoeuvre at the end of the flight. Glenn and Carpenter both ran © dangerously low on fuel during their three-orbit flights. Both, in # fact, had empty tanks after re- entry. Mismanagement of the fuel system was blamed for the low supply in both cases. Schirra carried the same? amount of fuel that Glenn and Carpenter did, and one of. his main assignments was to deter- mine how well he could con- serve it in setting guidelines for future U.S. space flights. TIME FOR LUNCH At 11:25 am.., after three hours and 10 minutes of flight, © the Bermuda tracking station asked him if it weren't time for him to eat and Schirra' replied: "T'm about due for lunch now." The space meal consisted of counter it with measures em- ployed legally by the Conserv- atives this summer. The foreign exchange fund had expended $128,000,000 in gold and United States dollars June 18)between June 1 and 14 Between to support the Canadian dollar June 15 and 22 another $270,- 000,000 was needed and a fur- 20 People Killed In Boiler Blast -- NEW YORK: (AP)--A. base-|} ment boiler explosion killed at}: least 20 persons. today in a New York Telephone Company]: building. Thiee - dozen pan ; : sca were reported injured. MRS..W. M, SCHIRRA JR.