THOUGHT FOR TODAY The man in the moon nowadays gets less attention than a lady in the sun. Oshawa Zines WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny Sunday and con- tinuing cool. Winds light. Bb VOL. 92--NO. 193 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES Anglicans et Out Area Plan TORONTO (CP) -- Anglican; Vatican authority four centuries church leaders today called on'ago, is playing an important if their 44,000,000 followers around) A desire in the leadership for the world to support a new plan/ better organization in the world- of action designed to replace|wide Anglican communion found parochialism with a truly glo-|expression Friday in announce- bal operation. jment of a program to establish The Archbishop of Canter-|"esional liaison officers, bury, Dr. Michael Ramsey, pre.|_, These officers will co - ordin- : jate operations within eight des-| sented the Anglican Congress|ionated areas and maintain with a program drawn up up by\ciose relations with the church a pre - congress meeting Of/elsewhere through a centrall | bishops who said it could meanirondon office and in meetings! | "the death of much that is fa-!at jeast annually, it miliar about our churches now) ; : .. . the birth of entirely new re-|, THe } asis of Anglican organ- jatiinships." ization is summed up in the} | 7 ou yee tel enomination's other name--Ep-| | "mutual reepeueaiity and Pad oa. ong Reger go a ; terdependence"' in the 18-church! dependent "of higher human au- x peng ogee Nat benni * administering their] ' e dioceses. . and share the » out on the ba-| Canterbury F } Aan Wh abt aod y exercises no con- sis "- worl, wide survey Of/irol over some 350 other dio-! prior es. : jceses around the world beyond) The immedi e aim is to/the influence it wields as senior boost mission { 4s of the com-'see in the Anglican communion. munion by 30 cent in the). next five yeai 15,000,000 ex-/ SHUN COMPULSION Church leaders shun any idea! RAR call, COMMITS SUICIDE Hue, Soviet Viet Nam. It was the fifth in a series of protest immolations --AP Wirephoto " +, from last year's opening day but about 2,500 short of the 1955 rec- ord Most. Rev. Michael Ramsey, bury, declared The Ex open rockets high into the air to ex- plode and i flags of many nations d ng back to earth, CNE President J. M, Fraser, a farmer,- made a plea on be- half of the h y one-third of the world's ation at the afternoon ceremony. "The real challenge world today is food," he said as he urged Canadians to "work out a better distribution of our production and surpluses." pe tra on top of th 50,000,000 bud-| geted for overs is work in the|° Setting up a system of cen- : period--to mee: existing needs| tral compulsion over the 18. This is a portrait of Thich and commitme: is, particularly} member churches in the com-| Tieu Dieu, 71 - year - old in Asia, Africa, and Latin| union. But they are talking) Buddhist monk who burned America. -- P ce ee himself to déath Friday in The long . range program,|. Se. O. coerewmatel ae designed to replace piecemeal| mre moe oo unity" of R 104 F operations carried on separ-| through urches scattered) AESCUC rom aly. by individual groups-.of| ee more than 70 countries. | F churches, would co - ordinate| jounced in dattien nes Ges ae Japanese erry tesa a peer analog! runs at Mendy TORO (AP)--A anon fr ; rr bury, was presented in more|P08t carrying 194 passengers enin WOULD ALTER TRADITION _ | "etail Friday by Bishop Stephen|S2nk today 16 miles west of Bishop Stephen Bayne, execu-| Bayne, dynamic executive offi./Okinawa but 104 persons were tive officer of the Anglican com.-/ Ce! Of the Anglican communion, |'¢scued the semi - official Ja-- TORONTO (CP)--Teeth. chat- munion, said the program seeks|B'Shops meeting in London,|Pan Broadcasting Corporation|tered and spines quivered but to alter the traditional view of Ont. before the congress de-|"eported : mission work as.a charitable en-|"4¢d on the new plan. | The Japanese maritime safety/opening - day visitors away terprise carried out by the; Bishop Bayne's office, cre./@8°cy Said it had monitored from the Canadian National Ex church in the West for young/ated by decision of the 1958/9" Okinawa radio broadcast hibition. churches in Africa, Asia and|Lambeth conference of bishops,|@¥i0& the sinking occurred four) 4 total of 124,000 persons Latin America. represents the first Anglican at.|™Miles north of Maejitna Island,| clicked through the gates Fri- He ssid ; tempt to establish a system of vol ery weet of Naha, the caPl-/day as the world's larg would flow in all directions|Permanent consultation among Fe sg eee eae ere. Inual exhibition was officially throughout the com munion.|rondon a1 Since moving to™ his pwn pcan al While the main financial burden| "40 office from Olympic dio-|*eSPondents in Okinawa said the would be borne by the richer|°®S¢ i@ Washington state three|"€'ry, which also carried a crew} Western churches, return con-|yone ago, he has travelled|f 15, had sailed from Naha at tributions in men and ideas| keep: 250,000 miles annually! Spon and ran into heavy seas would be essential in making the! eeping personal contact with ih sank near the Kerama arch- chuteh truly cosmopolitan. -- churches. pong to which Maejima be- " nie : new regional officers, ex./'°"8S- Bishop Bayne said Indian and | nected to be appointed within BERT eT ere eee re ee African clergy already areithe next few year »i . working in England. He sug-|Bishop Bayne's' aide, will be 1pe Out l t gested Asian and African teach-|spot in the eight arene wine' | p $s ers in Western schools and sem-| India, Pakistan eat te Daan rae sao gg fresh ideas East, Southeast Asia, the South| Four Grades : 2g pistes _ America, North n comments to reporters out-|/ rica and the British Isles, T h S Side the congress meeting, Bi-| They will. be appointed by! eac ers ay shop Bayne suggested that "the agreement between Bishop! TORONTO (CP)--A wavering witness of some Epis-/Bayne and the Archbishop of f 1,200 Ontario teache copalians in the United States! Canterbury on one han 4 naling a ee to the majority ts favor d and the wiping out the grade levels in respective re-ithe first four years of school Tr. the Ontario Téachers Federa te ee designed tojtion annual meeting was told | BY. l church keep pace with Friday confront it change is a plan to hold meet-| The report was intended The bishops in their ap-jings of the heads of the 18\suggestion for the denat peal asked individual churches; member churches at least every of education 'ta planned rev to alter their system of budget. two years, with the executive'sions of the study 'courses up to ing or seeking help with a "rad-|and regional officers in attend- Grade 6 ical change"' in outlook--balanc-| anc The grade system and ar the needs of the whole com- hor 7 SUGa aRGGWA Wa Cane , pon eed caatiit Wanat wibic Bishop Bayne; scheduled to,promotion should be replaced g ane eosin address the congress next Tues-/by smaller units or levels and Tokyo from Hachijo Island, 100 As one bishop explained it: day on the theme of "organ-/more frequent promotion, the/miles south of the capital : "The individual church would/!#!ng for action," stressed that|teachers suggested, Such a sys-| A spokesman for the plane's decide whether its desire for a|!0Cal autonomy will be strictly|tem, said the report, would al- ijita Airline said the new organ took precedence over|™aintained in the church. The|!ow for the wide differences in} d only three hours' the need to train a new clergy-/"¢W. Plans are designed to elim-jlearning speed of children in fuel ply and it was feared man for West Africa or build a|'@#te waste effort, overlapping/kindergarten and the first three|\down somewhere between the new school in northern Can. &%d neglect. grades lisland and Tokyo a SHORT, INTENSIVE CAMPAIGN SEEN on the racial issue might be) archbishops in the stiffened by a shot in the arm gions on the othe from African Christians. who learned by experience how to/he Japanese Plane Reported Lost TOKYO (AP) -- A Japanese four - ed airliner with 19 persons aboard was reported missing today on a flight to supy COULD BE BIG STEP Said Bishop Bayne outside the congress: "This program will either be the biggest lead bal-} Joon in the Anglican communion) or it will be the most impor-| tant step forward in its his- tory." .- | Centralization, a scary word among Anglicans since they de- TORONTO (CP)--Ontario po-! scribe. ing party '-!Since 2 +: clared their independence of litical leaders are preparing ig p Boni eA sald cok Levies en a_ short ~ -- election the Conservatives are campaign before voting day, different, too tired and > ar-| Mr. Frost steppe { s Wednesday, Sept. 25. Party/rogant to serve the os alillandek sed seek er erent | chiefs will start their tours of of Ontario's people." after 12 years at the party heim the hustings by the end of next) Mr. Macz.onald. predicting/ almost two years ago. Mr. Ro- week. : jthat the NDP will win 55 of the barts, a London, Ont., lawyer Premier Robarts announced) 108 seats in the new legislature,|now 45 years old. took over the the election date at a Queen's'said voters would turn against/leadership and was sworn in as oe press erage siege f the Conservatives largely be-|premier Nov. 8, 1961 jHe is expected to kick o! is\cause of what he termed their! While the term of the overn- jformal campaign Aug. 23 at ajinadequate medical insurance ment's office does nat tormally jtestimonial dinner for former|program and their handling of end until next June, there had -- Leslie Frost in Lind-|the report of the Ontario crime been persistent reports of a fall 3 commission, election this year. | bi ' ; is | Liberal Leader John Winter-| yf, Robarts, who said he ex. The premier told the' press resignations and said'and byelections have altered the "too in-|standing AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 ;| WASHINGTON = | '* jagreements '|lies the cautious optimism indi-| ,|cated by State Secretary Dean} /Rusk at his press 124,000 Attend _ cool temperatures failed to keep est an-idoes its best to prevent inde- __|and pushed a button which sent - Death Ship's Motor Strategy Mapped Ou needs of all/leader and went into retirement, | the jtended that the resignation in-|/RECALL STORM Soviet Premier Facing Pressure (AP)--Soviet|against the danger of surprise |Premier Khrushchev is believed/ attack. | At the same time he warned to be under domestic as well 4Sithat the hopeful situation could iforeign pressures to reach NeW|be turned upside down "by to-| with the United/morrow morning," and added:) States and its allies for easing ae just _ = ee | ' ; a see whé t appen, | tensions and reducing the dan- ge tg aa TT aan Back sere Ot Wet, lago and held talks with Khrush-| This belief evidently under-|chey and Soviet Foreign Minis- ter Gromyko. nat | Rusk is scheduled to meet} conte wen Gromyko in New York next} | ,,{month for more discussions on accords -- following up the Mu he US Sovelt nepolitions to Inossible. z ay . reduce tensions. Meanwhile, he} kee ' : is directing consultations with] Rusk particularly cited the/the United States' North Atlan-| possibility of working out a SYS"itic Treaty Organization allies on tem for stationing observers in}, possible non - key transportation centres of| ithe great powers to guard) |Friday that further East-We on related issues. Speaking against the back- ground of his exploratory talks jin Russia, Rusk said some real interest in this test)~ and in exploring! (issues of pos-} agreement) fur- | jban_ treaty jthese matters |sible . future ther." Robert Goulet, Broadway and) ""! think th argument be-| $ x 4 th tween Moscow and Peking} television singing star, and the yout the role of thermonuclear|, Royal Canadian Mounted Police war in the modern world is a musical ride shared the spot-jserious argument," light at the evening grandstand i performance flict between Russia eet }China was in line with a view Of CNE | ley Rusk said,|lisher of the Globe and Maillin case any gang member at- Rusk's reference to the con-|since 1957, died of a heart seiz-;tempted to slip over to the Con- and Redjure Friday night HEADS CONGO Alphonse Massamba-Debat, lieves the Soviet Union 'thas| He is 42, Glo Da Mr. aggression pact| described as a moderate left- with Soviet - bloc countries and! ist, was announced today as | the new head of a: provisional government for the Congo Re- public, he be-| made by the Republic's army. Announcement was (AP Wirephoto). be Publisher Has Heart Attack TORONTO (CP)--Oakley Hed-| Igleish, editor and pub- He was 53. Dalgleish was taken to sito join a mammoth weekend LONDON (AP)--Police called on hikers and picnickers today treasure hunt for the rest of the; Britain's great train robbery. "Whenever you go, in woods, common land or open spaces, watch for anything, any clue, which is out of the ordinary," a police announcement said. Any hole. found dug in the) should be reported, the police! said. | The appeal came after the) discovery Friday of four hastily discarded bags stuffed with £100,900 ($302,700) in bank notes in a wooded Surrey beauty spot. The find; bringing the total amount recovered thus far to £242,207 ($726,621), strengthened a police theory that the gang which pounced with such pre- cision on the Glasgow - London mail train 10 days ago now was panicking. Five persons have been ar- rested and charged with smail- fry roles in the robbery. Scot- lland Yard pressed the hunt for the big shots. |WATCH THE CHANNEL The police, coast guard and naval vessels kept a_ special jwatch on. the English Channel | tinent, A yacht sought for several |. The national society which) widely held by top government|hospital after he complained ofjdays turned up at Folkestone jeent exposure of animals failed! | horses. Today is Warriors' Day andiand feels that he more than 5,000 Canadian vet-iprove his relations should with the! ny rE Pg erans took part in a parade|/West and demonstrate that. his|ent, editor Anglican Archbishop of Canter-|trom Old Fort York to the CNE/policy of peaceful coexistence|tive, he rose rapidly to positions of responsibility grounls. 'can produce results writer and execu- S Made Peculiar Noise QUEBEC ica's engines were making pe-|liar vibrating noise ; He said William Shannon, sec- coulis ises just s - culiar noises just before she col ond engineer on duty at the lided with the Roonagh Headitime, told him he had turned and an electric storm disrupted) the engines full astern after get- rescue communications for al-| img an order to do so from the most an hour, an admiralty/ridge. court inquiry into the disaster) eNGINES sTOP was told Friday. Suddenly, Bulley said, the en Albert Bulley, chief engineer gines stopped, and Shannon ran of the Tritonica, was:the first/for the: bri shouting:. "I've} survivor of the ship to testify.) got an idea what's going on and jShe sank quickly July 20 in aiI'm getting out of here." foggy St. Lawrence River 45! The ship began . sloping m downstream from Quebecjsharply to starboard, Bulley tity, taking 33 seamen to their said, and he took the controls deaths for several minutes until the Bulley, 37-year-old Briton said, boat righted somewhat and he he-went to the Tritonica's en-|/made for his cabin. By gineroom minutes bi tL jthe ship's corridors, i | Bulley, who spoke clearly but| appeared to grow more and more excited as his testimony continued, did 'not say at what j|moment'during these events the) jeollision occurred. The engine-/ jroom was located deep in the! jeentre. of the ship, while the! }Roonagh Head crashed into the} | Tritonica's first hold. | three days earlier to fill the va- Pg nd -- Pa Bev cancy left by the resignation of/4 Jarge plan "of the Bermuda-! Bryan Cathcart as minister of/owned Tritonica's interior, will] travel and publicity, attended! continue his testimony Monday! press conference with the/when the admiralty court hear-| premier in a show of solidarity./ing resumes Opposition critics had con- dicated dissension in the gov-| In Friday morning's. sitting,| ernment, although both the pre-|Wireless operators from the mier and Mr. Cathcart denied) Roonagh Head and the transport! this. department's maritime signals} Opposition spokesmen also Service at the Quebec City air-/ had criticism for the election/port explained an electric storm} late. With enumeration starting|made reception extremely diffi- in urban. areas Aug. 26, they!" a charged that many voters away) France To Aid before the|time water was rushing throughithe m $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 . $50,000 1) meyer will open his campaign in jOttawa Aug. 26, start of a 32- jday tour ofthe province by jchartered bus and airplane. The New Democratic Party's forma! start of campaigning is expected Ito be launched b St rage MacDonald at the par- jty's provincial council meeting here next. weekend. The premier expressed confi- jdence in announcing the elec- jtion after weeks of speculation, jthat his Progressive Conserva- tive government will continue its rule which has been un- jbroken for just over 20 years |PREDICT CHANGE two opposition leaders ed that Ontario voters will go for a change in govern- iment. Mr. Wintermieyer de-i y NDP Leader) ant F in ed s 2 comm velop during the campaign, de-|ered calling an election in late D€ overlooked. Mr. Robarts said/ said "we'll win enough." results" of the federal election Courts will sit Sept. .13 and 14.) MONTREAL (CP)--Le Devoir its dissolution. Frid ressive Conservatives 62, Lib-/ty which followed in its 'wake.' ave been active in recent/of the nt de Liberation Que- erals 24, : lature just dissolved but 10 "without the most serious conse. three parties in tlie jast legisla-| France. liminary distribution ap- provincia) talks lay in the near been made in a majority of the/St. Pierre and Miquelon off the WON 71 SEATS speak for the people of Onta-|seventh provincial contest since|North America : : : f : ch he CABINET ATTENDS Scotia are the only provincer/o explosive party to victory in 71 seats i jclined to predict how manyispring, but had decided against he expected little difficulty and/ lature at/jast April 8 "'and the period of| Although the formal cam-/says it has learned that' Rich- & NDP 5. va 7.| -But now he felt that an elec. Months in preparing for an elec-/becois terrorist group has ob- more in Metropolitan Toronto quences" to future Ontario je-/ture are expected to.run again) The newspaper Says Bizier is proved during the 26th legisia- future and it was important that| Tidings cast of Newfound! and, last November. Britis Solum-| Bizie 2 In the last Ontar - fp sacs, Mivong an oe BP at € All 18 of the Ro-|where elections have not beer Liberals won 22 and the CCF 5.iba : ns p' jpects the major issues to de-\conference that he had consid-/ffom home on vacations would FLQ Terrorist ? Seats his party would win, butiit because of 'the "inconclusive Pointed out that urban revision! : Standing of the legis ay was: Pro-linsta and uncertain-|Paign lies ahead, all parties|ard Bizi suspectel member There were 98 seats in the legis- tion could no longer be delayed tion. All sitting members of al!/tained political asylum from will be contested under a pre-'velopment. Important federal-@"%d nominations already have/'iving on the French islands of ture we be left in no doubt that we. The Ontario vote will be the/France's only possessions ection ora, Saskatchewan y stand tria June 11, 1959, Mr ed wo lbggee Fou <a ae tls cabinet, shuffled only'called in the last year. sion. ise an explo-} St i ang to round a jetty on the The tug, one of the largest on it We 2:45 Jacqu } (CP)--The Triton-|collision to investigate a '"'pecu-,cult in the hour after the colli- sion at 1:53 a.m Ronald Falvey, unable to reach the as Quebec City signals service un- zes_ Laflamme, wireless operator at the Quebec City port, said he was told at a.m. by another freighter, the| well elects to return to duty as Hallfax, that the Roonagh Head/traffic inspector and we "are was trying to reach him, but/afraid it will lead to further dif- that the content of the message/ticulties and crea was not given, When he was unable to get in ats Je jtouch with the Roonagh Head,jsion was asked to investigate that/he asked the Hal essage the ship had been/council after numerous reports trying to send him, Ifax to release officials that Khrushchev is ser-|chest pains in his office follow- Harbor Friday night. Detectives lo jized crime in Canada HIKERS JOIN POLICE IN TREASURE HUNT Thousands Seek Mail Train Loot questioned the owner and then said they no longer were inter- ested in the vessel. A man and a woman on the £2,600,000 ($7,800,000) loot from/way to work found the four jmoney bags -- two zippered grips, a briefcase and suitcase ---30 yards from a road through Surrey's Redlands Wood, The. loot apparently had been dumped only a short time be- fore the discovery by John countryside, for example,|Ahern, a 53 - year - old clerk, and Mrs, Esa Hargrave, Ahern said he first thought a picnic party had left the bags. On finding them stuffed with money, he said: "I couldn't be- lieve it. I've never seen so much money before." Police said the gang evidently was on the run, dumping loot too hot to handle anywhere and by the caseful. U.S. Backed: Syndicates In Canada TORONTO (CP) RCMP Commissioner C. W, Harvison said Friday night most organ- is con- rolled by Mafia - like United tes. told a t States - based syndica The i " iously worried about the' grow-|ing a routine meeting with de-' opened. The figure was up 6,000)in a bidt o clothe the mounties'|ing hostility in the Red Chinese;partment, heads and others on jjeadership toward the Kremlin|the newspaper, He died several im-jhours later. Reporter, foreign correspond-} | Traffic Head |Gets Job Back Over Protests | | press conference at the Cana- dian Nationa] Exhibition that re- cent arrésts in narcotics, coun- terfeiting and fraudulent stocks have indicated the three rack- ets are directed by U.S. synli- cates. "Any incursions by U.S. crime syndicates is serious and will be more serious unless we SUDBURY (CP) -- The Sud-/do something about them," he bury. Police Commission has of-/said fered Inspector Lloyd Hanwell his job back as city traffic in- spector, but it did so under pro-/ musical jyrandstand In a letter to Attorney-Gen-| Commissioner Frederick Cass the, com-/ferred to talk about crime, test. jeral mission said it feared that it] The press conference was jcalled to publicize the RCMP ride at the CNE's show. However, Harvison pre He said it was a matter of Insp. Hanwell accepted the job, debate among law enforcement offered to him under the rec-jofficers as to whether U.S. syn- mined A statement issued by com- mission chairman Judge Ailbert St. Aubin said: "We have grave |misgivings on the effect of the recommendation if Insp, Han- e two factions t jwithin the force." \ The provincia! police commis- the Sudbury department by city 'of dissension and poor morale. 25-year-old /ommendation of the Ontario Po-|dicates at work in Canada were wireless operator aboard the/jice Commission, the authority/actually the Mafia or simply Roonagh Head, said he sent out\of the city's police chief andialong Mafia lines. the first distress signal at 1:55,/commission would be under- All police knew for certain, the commissioner added, was that: the: syndicates were con- trollel from the United States. "We've had domestic crime erganizations in Canada for many years . .. but they don't have back of them the tremen- aous power of the big syndi- cates or millions of dollars with which to corrupt." Commissioner Harvison said bioody clashes between Cana- dian and American syndicates had resulted in several mur- ders of mobsters in the last 10 years. He di@ not elaborate. S-foot tug, Charlotte rar aground while try- south arm of the Fraser River near Vancouver Thursday. the coast has been refioated and is in drydock for repairs. --CP Wirephote