' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Troubles will meet you more than half way, but you have to pursue happiness. She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with showers and thun- dershowers tonight and Thurs- day. Sunny intervals Thursday afternoon. VOL. 92---NO, 144 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1963 Authorized Ottawa @s Second end for payment Class Mail Post Office Department, THIRTY-TWO PAGES of Postage in Cash. _ Exchange Chie Raps Take- OTTAWA (CP)--A blistering attack on one of the main budget policies of Finance Min- ister Walter Gordon has been launched by Eric W. Kierans, president of the Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges. He delivered to the minister Tuesday a 5l4-page letter de- scribing the new 30-per-cent take-over tax as 'complete and utter nonsense," unconsti- tutional, and "an axe" that will murder foreign confidence in Canada. The tone of his letter was set in the opening sentence: "The financial capitals of the world have just about had enough from Canada." Neither Mr. Kierans nor Mr. Gordon had any comment for reporters following their 20-min- ute meeting in the minister's office. The angry blast from the Gordons Over Tax His attack was on two key;firms without a minimum 25- budget measures. One, aimed at/per-cent Camadian ownership, halting foreign take-overs ofjand reduction of the tax to 10 Canadian firms, levies a 30-per-|per cent for those meeting the cent tax on anyone selling more|requirement, was in effect an than $50,000 a: day of stock injattempt to define "good" and a Canadian company listed on|"bad" subsidiaries. a stock exchange. He suggested it will bring re- The other step alters the rate |taliation by other countries, dis- of withholding taxes on divi-;courage further direct invest- dends paid to foreign investors;ment by foreign firms, and jin order to encourage a mini-|force Canada to look to "the Ot- mum 25-per-cent investment by tawa printing presses" for Canadians in foreign-controlled| money. firms in this country. | Mr. Kierans is a self-styled | "smail-] liberal" who is ae State Troopers Disperse 300 Negroes RED COSM THESE ARE RUSSIA'S six cosmonauts in the order of sama NAUTS ENI sky and "Valentina Teresh- Ist Space Woman Makes 49 Orbits MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Rus- sia's Man and woman in space landed their ships safely in a "pre-set" area today after rec- ord-breaking flights. Tass, the official] Russian hews agency, said the cosmo. nauts--Lt.-Col. Valery Bykovsky and Valentina Tereshkova -- were both "feeling fine." The breaking engine was fired to bring the space raft off the orbit of 'an earth satellite and into a descent trajectory. Valentina reported: "Descent now taking place." Then came the most terrifying moments as Vostok VI entered the dense layers of the earth's atmosphere. kova. This picture is from No- Bykovsky had been in orbit 49-year-old former university economist is likely to be follow- ed by similar criticisms. Infor- mants said investment and stock exchange officials from other cities have asked to see the minister, whose budget speech comes up for Commons debate today. OTHERS PROTEST Shortly before his meeting with Mr. Kierans, Mr. Gordon ity It was "a tax assets to foreign citizens. Thus it appeared to involve property and civil matter under provincial juris- diction and "beyond the com- petence of the federal govern- ment." It was a perfect exam- ple of how a "tax gimmick" could invade provincial author-} U.S. MARKETS FREE | mored as a likely Liberal can- didate in an approaching Que- bec provincial byelection. He said the 'unbelievable' rate of the take-over tax shows the government isn't concerned GADSDEN, Ala, (AP)--Some 300 to 350 Negroes maintaining a protest vigil on the courthouse;®™ lawn were dispersed early today when a force of about 100 state troopers moved in to clamp a with revenue but wants to prohibit the sale of Canadian! tight security lid on this racially troubled city. The riot-trained troopers, un- |der the command of Col. Albert jLingo, state public safety di- rector, quickly brought an end rights -- a on wealth--a told a Commons questioner he has received protests from the Toronto and Vancouver stock exchanges against the take-over Aa "As far as the government is concerned, we propose to go ahead with that tax," he said flatly. Mr. Kierans was accompan- ied by the governing board of the Montreal Stock Exchange. His letter, widely distributed by the Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges last night, said that '"'dipsy-doodling and dis- criminatory"' taxing methods in- troduced in the budget last Thursday night will cause a 'The Camadian investor will be the first casualty of the pro- posed legislation." to the vigil that had. been started following the arrest of 400 demonstrators Tuesday. The Negroes had said they would continue until those arrested were released. The arrival of the state troop- ers, who used night-sticks and electric prods to run off the Ne- groes--and the crowd of about 200 white spectators--ended for the time being the threat of a full scale conflict. Lingo set up a tight patrol of the city with his helmeted troopers. Etowah County Sheriff Dewey Colvard estimated there were about 200 peace officers in Gadsden, including sheriff's dep- uties and policemen from gur- rounding counties, APPFAR BEFORE JUDGE The Negroes will go before Circuit Judge A, B. Cunning- ham who issued the anti-dem- onstration injunction which they capital levy' which expropri- ated 30 per cent of an asset when sold, It would encourage Canadians to invest in Ameri- can securities where markets were free and non-discrimina- tory. "Exchange controls are clearly the next step." Mr. Kierans said it was "fu-| tile and unrealistic' for Mr. Gordon to hope a 5-per-cent Canadian minority ownership in a foreign-controlled subsidiary would provide a greater Cana- dian voice in their management. The budget's increase of with- holding taxes to 20 per cent for firms without a minimum 25- per - cent Canadian minority ownership in a foreign - con- subsidi in their management. The budget's increase of with- holding taxes to 20 per cent for Glimmer For Racial Peace JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- A glimmer of hope for racial peace showed today in Jackson --one week after the slaying of integration leader Medgar Ev- ers--after Negroes tentatively agreed to end demonstrations. The agreement, with minor dissent came at Negro mass meeting Tuesday night in an- swer to further conciliation by city officials to requests of in- tegration leaders. Reports persisted, however, that the Congress of Racial Equality, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinat- ing Committee would carry on demonstrations. An official of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People--which, led by Evers, had spearheaded the drive--said there was no truth in reports of dissension among Negro leaders. "The main strategy and force will be turned toward register- ing to vote," said Rev. G. R. Haughton, a Negro leader who along with four others met with Mayor Allen Thompson and two city commissioners. Mr. Haughton said the accept- ance of Thompson's pleas to halt demonstrations that saw are charged with violating. The familiar pattern of racial disputes was emerging despite efforts by police to avoid ar- rests. For eight days, there had been few arrests although hun- dreds of Negroes marched jthrough town repeatedly, even jextending their efforts to a sub- urban shopping centre. Of Hope 1,048 persons arrested between May 28 and June 15 was "un- der reservations." | "Of course, it will not mean that there will be any lessening of our determination to win our goals," he said. "There were a few" that voted against the West Of Ottawa it sis is oe Ol arson, on. (Ch) A Negotiations with the jfather and his five-year-old son city} : : | > ~jidied today in a fire which de- eee Boe 4 Greceregution| stroyed a two-storey farm home said. jnear this town, 25 miles south- Thompson, spurred by jwest of Ottawa. phone calls from President Ken-| Two Die In Fire tele-| Edward Poole, 34, died in an nedy and Attorney-General Revi Gece We one sh nedy, for the first time set spe-) ife and one-year old daughter |W jeific dates and numbers on al-|,.. Brenda-Lee to safety through a ready conceded demands for downstairs window. Mrs. Poole, 29, and Brenda-Lee are in hos- Negro policemen and_school-| pital in Almonte. crossing guards. He promised the Negro lead-| The house, located five miles ers that six Negro policemen|north of Almonte, belonged to would be hired in 60 days and/William H, Poole, Edward's jthat eight Negro school-crossing father, who escaped by climb- and/ing-onto the veranda roof jguards would be hired trained by Sept. 1 through an upstairs window. His WHERE COSMONAUTS LANDED "Kennedy Presents their launchings. From left are Yuri Gagarin, Gherman Titov, Andrian Nikolayev, Pa- vel Popovich, Valery Bykov- vosti, the Soviet agency. --(AP Wirephoto via cable from Moscow) i in his Vostok V capsule since last Friday and Valentina--the world's first space woman--went up Sunday in Vostok VI. Valen- and Bykovsky, Russia's fifth spaceman, break the world record for a space flight. ern area of Karamganda, in the Central Asian Republic of Ka- zakhstan, as was previously cal- na made 49 orbits of the earth a made 82 orbits to previous Russian Both ships landed in the north- SHOOTS SMOKE, FLAMES The ship's heat shield glowed white hot from the clash with the air. Smoke and flames--red, orange, yellow, green and blue, multi-colored flame -- were seen from the porthole. There may have been a crackling noise as experienced by cosmonaut Andrian Nikola- yev last August, It startled him but he shrugged it off as a nor- mal descent. 5-Point Program culated. 4\solutions to this problem." ©\word special: message legisla- =\proposed in nearly 100 years. 7| commodations in such public fa- j\cilities as restaurants, hotels, CORNWALL, Ont. (CP) Three armed and hooded men robbed a wealthy gasoline sta- tion owner, of a diamond ring and other jewelry and threat- ened to rape his wife here to- day. Louis Emard, owner of three gasoline stations in this area, said he was watching television when three men burst into the room and demanded money. When he denied he had any in the house, the men tied him with neckties and hit him in the face. Then he told them where they could find a man's diamond ring, which he said was worth $4,500. The men then put Mr. Emard into the bathroom of the luxuri- ous home on Highway 2, about five miles east of here, and nailed the door shut with long spikes. Police said the three men then awakened the family's three children--Joanne, 7, Da- nielle, 6, and Mark, 5. They were hustled into a large linen closet, told to be quiet, and the Thompson also told the Ne-|wife also escaped uninjured, door was nailed shut also | Hooded Men Rob Home In Cornwall The men -vere ransacking the house when Mrs, Emard came home about. 12:30 a.m. She told police the men took her to the basement, pulled down her pan- ties and threatened to rape her. She screamed and they tied her up instead, locking her in a cup- board. Then the men went into the kitchen, drank quantities of beer and ate a large meal of ham. When they left they stole the two family cars. Police recov- ered one later in a service sta- tion lot near the Ontario-Que- bec border. ; Mr. Emard broke free about 1:15 a.m. and called police, The couple told police two of the intruders spoke French. The other spoke english with a French accent. They carried revolvers and a rifle and wore black hoods. Besides the diamond _ ring, they stole other articles of jew- elry and about $50 in cash from Mr. Emard's pockets, Mrs. Emard's purse and two chil- dren's piggy banks. groes seven Negroes would be|------ upgraded to drivers of garbage trucks and another would be made foreman of a garbage collecting crew in a Negro sec- tion. Negro. demands for desegre- AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 gation of lunch counters, public |facilities and schools on a vol- untary basis were not brought out in the meetings, nor was a) LONDON (Reuters) -- A 26- |demand for a removal of segre- year-old newspaper man told gation signs. the British government and Thompson said the president/press in February that Dr. Ste- made no direct requests, but|phen Ward, a key figure in called to express his interest,|the Profumo scandal, was a and that Attorney-General Ken-|Communist and wanted nuclear nedy expressed his reqeust for|information, a court here was a peaceful solution. told today aa a Lawrence Terrence Bell's de-| \fence lawyer made the state- |ment at the opening of the news- paper man's trial on four charges of indecent offences in- volving Guardsmen. Lawyer Raphael Tuck said (AP)--The seventh in the series| Bell also gave information about of Tiros weather observatory|{ormer War minister John Pro- satellites rocketed into orbit to./{™° and girl-about-town Chris- day to study the birth and move. ""¢ Keeler ment of hurricanes, typhoons 'He has received threatening and other storm systems over|!etters and has ignored them," a great area of the globe. jthe lawyer said. "The police The satellite, in tandem with|discovered at the end of April the earlier Tiros VI, could pro-|this year he knew about the vide the most extensive photo-/Profumo-Keeler-Ward affair. Seventh Weather Satellite Orbits CAPE CANAVERAL, Fia fore Mr. Profumo resigned and they are now charging him with indecent offences with Guards- men." 'POLITICAL CHICANERY' The lawyer described the case as "one of the biggest pieces of political chicanhery and frameup that we have: experi- jenced for some time." Profumo resigned his pdet June 5 after admit*'ng that he lied in the Commons March 22 when he said there was no im- propriety in his relationship with Miss Keeler, a self-styled 21- year-old model. Government security entered the case when it was learned Miss Keeler was having an af- fair with Russian naval attache Yevgeni Ivanov at the same time as she was involved with Profumo. Ward, a friend of -all three, Was arrested and charged with graphic investigation yet of a '"'At the beginning of the Ward full hurricane season matter they arrested him and The electronic weatherman held him almost incommunicado}| shot into space aboard a three- for 16 days so the press could! stage Delta rocket at 5:50 a.m.|not get near him, | EDT. "They released him just be-! living on immoral earnings. Tuck said his client was re- sponsible for the resignation in February' of Charles Fletcher: Cooke, a joint parliamentary un- dersecretary.. Fletcher - Cooke Reporter Said Ward Wanted Nuclear Data gave up his post after he loaned his car to a youth who was charged with a motoring of- fence, and the case got in the newspapers, UNCOVERED SCANDALS He said the journalist also un- covered "numerous scandals about the guards." "In the circumstances,' he added, "he has been a consid- able embarrassment to the government." He said his client would 'try to prove that the charges are brought to discredit him and so that the Guardsmen will not give any further information and the press will not receive any further information." He asked that postponed to the next session to give him time to gather ev- idence and witnesses. The re- quest was granted. Profumo emerged Tuesday from 13 days of seclusicn with friends in the country. He and his wife, former actress Valerie Hebson, returned to their Lon- don home as police held back a silent crowd. 'be an Italian. |nuclear arms race to the de-| the case bej4, public accommodations and a bar against federal aid for ac- tivities in which such discrimin-|, WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Kennedy sent to Con- gress today a five-point civil GREETED WARMLY As gravitation decreased, Vos- tok bumped as a'cart on @ "At the landing points es bad road. Eventually, however, ation occurs. In obvious anticipation of that battle, Kennedy asked Congress to 'stay in session this year until it has enacted--preferably as a single omnibus bill--the most responsible, reasonable and urgenty needed solutions" to race relations difficulties. He asked every member of Congress to "set aside sectional and political ties, and to look at this issue from the-viewpoint of the nation." On the point of priv: owned facilities serving the lic, Kennedy said simply that he was proposing "'a provision to guarantee all citizens equal access to the services and facil- ities of hotels and restaurants places of amusement and retail rights program which he said provides "the most responsible, reasonable and urgently needed Kennedy outlined in a 5,500- tion that mounts to one of the a broadest civil rights programs The major aims of the pro- grams are: 1. To give Negroes equal ac- theatres and recreational areas. . speed school desegrega- ion, 3, To provide "fair and full employment." 4. To set up on the federal level through executive action in community relations service to 8 landing crews, friends, doctors, journalists and sports commis- sars," Tass said. reshkova and Valery Bykovsky of Soviet cosmonauts this is how the world's first spacewoman returned to earth: tems were switched on by com- mand. from earth or possibly by herself. brea! ready. Valentina--using the call stages as Vostok VI hurtled to- wards Soviet territory at 18,000 miles am hour. s the shaking diminished. Huge parachutes billowed from the space ship as it neared the ground. Valentina, an ace parachute jumper, was prob- ably among them. WAS SUCCESSFUL the landing said: : "The joint flight of the space- ship Vostok VI, piloted by the world's first woman cosmonaut; citizen of the U.S.S.R., Vailen- i the satel. its were "Cosmonauts Valentina Te- re feeling well." Judging 'by previous landing The return and landing sys- Equipment controlling thelby power plant was made ignal Seaguii--checked off the t flight the space ships Vostok VI and Vos- tok V- landed in the pre - set work with local biracial groups. 5. To bar federal assistance to "'any program or activity in which racial discrimination oc- curs." WILL ENGENDER DEBATE The program is certain to set off long weeks of heated, bruis- ing debate in Congress partic- ularly about the sections of dis- crimination by privately-owned establishments." WANTS FULL ACCESS While the message did not go into detail, a draft bill also sent to Congress by Kennedy said that all persons should be en- titled "'to the full and equal en- joyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages and accommodations" of a num- ger of what were termed '"pub- |lic establishments." The proposed measure specif- ically listed hotels and motels furnishing lodging to tr t Cardinals Pray ana (AP)--The government of Prime Minister Cheddi Jagan Tuesday prorogued the legisla- tive assembly and so staved off a noc ateas. of the Soviet Union on Junie 19, 1963. ; "The spaceship Vostok VI landed, as planned on the 49th orbit at 11 hours 20 minutes Moscow time, 11:20 a.m. (4:20 a.m. EDT) 620 kilometres (about 385 miles) northeast of Karanganda, "After this, at the 82nd orbi as calculated, the Vostok space ship landed at 14 hours 06 minutes, 2:06 p.m. (7:06 a.m. EDT) 540 kilometres (about 335 miles) northwest of the city of Karanganda. No Confidence Motion Staved Off By Jagan GEORGETOWN, British Gui- tid. motion which t | guests including travellers from jother states; motion pictures, " :sports arenas, exhibition halls and other public places of amusement and entertainment which move in interstate com- merce, and certain retail shops, department stores, markets, drug stores, gasoline stations, restaurants, lunch counters and soda fountains, In that area of private enter- prise Kennedy already had lost the backing of the Republican congressional leadership. For Guidance In Conclave VATICAN CITY (AP)--Eighty cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church prayed for divine guid- ance today before assembling in conclave to elect a successor to Pope John. The cardinals attended a sol- emn mass to the Holy Spirit of- fered in St. Peter's Basilica by their French dean, Eugene Car- r n was to be moved today. by the minority opposition United Force Party leader, Peter Dag. uiar. killed the controversial labor country into the strike which and three other government members still in effect, the no confidence motion would have been passed because the govern- ment could muster only 13 votes to the opposition's 15. 'In accordance with the cal- culations both space ships landed on the same latitude of - 53 degrees. "At the landing points the cosmonauts were met by land- ing crews, friends, doctors, jour- malists and sports commissars, "Cosmonauts Valentina Ter- eshkova and Valery Bykovsky are feeling well." Karanganda is about 1,600 miles south of Moscow and about 360 miles northeast of Baikonour -- the cosmodrome Prorogation in effect also elations bill which plunged the ow is in its ninth week. With the suspension of Jagan dinal Tisserant. They will not emerge from a sealed-off area of the apostolic palaces around the Sistine Chapel until they have chosen the 262nd pontoff of the church. Voting will begin Thursday. Four ballots will be held daily in the Sistine Chapel--two in the morning and two in the after- noon--until one man gets 54 votes, a two-thirds majority, Al- though church law does not bar a lesser prelate or even a lay- man, the new pope is certain to be a cardinal and probably will The election is expected to be a lengthy process because of the division in the. college be- tween conservatives and pro- gressives, a division. brought to world attention during the first session of Pope John's ecumen- ical council last fall. UAW Chief Urges Arms Race Shift FORT WILLIAM, Ont. (CP)-- Walter Reuther, international president of the 1,300,000-mem: ber United Auto Workers, Tues day called for a shift from the} velopment of peace-time produc- on. He told a public meeting that because of the nuclear arms]: "frenzy," Canada and the United States "are sadly lag. ging" in their provisions for youth and those who can no longer work. Elizabeth Taylor plans to "The problem of adult delin- quency far outweighs the much talked - about juvenile delin- quency. marry actor Richard Burton, with whom she's shown in England last December, a they were launched from, PLAN TO MARRY spokesman said in London today. "'I've just talked to Elizabeth,"' said her secretary, Richard Han- for the acresss ley, 'and she says it's true-- but she doesn't want to say any more than that."' --(AP. Wirephoto) _