\ THOUGHT FOR TODAY If takes only a little toothache to drive a person to extraction. ! ¢ Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT " Wednesday increasing cloudiness and warmer. Winds southerly 15 to 20, VOL. 92---NO. 224 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1963. Cute iane <0 Srcene Civey saan Teel Sinan Peper ers Ottawa and Payment ot Postage in Cash. ' TWENTY-TWO PAGES BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- 'Eight white men including a Toronto youth have been in- dicted by a special federal grand jury investigating inter- ference with school desegrega- tion court orders in Birming- ham. The indictments result from incidents which occurred when three Birmingham schools were desegregated Sept. 4 as pickets appeared at each school. There was no widespread vio- lence although several times po- lic used. force to restrain pro- testing entry of five young Ne- groes in the three schools. Named in the indictments were: Edward R. Fields, 30, infor- mation director and leader of the pro - segregation National States Rights Party; Gerald Q. Dutton, 22; James K. Warner, 24; Barney M, Carmack Jr., the capture of persons respon- sible for recent racially - con- nected bombings in Birming- ham had risen to nearly $80,000. SUSPEND NEGRO At Oxferd, Miss., Negro stu- dent Cleve McDowell .was sus- pehded by the University of Mississippi after he was ar- rested on a charge of carrying a pistol. Sheriff Joe Ford said the gun was in McDowell's inside coat pocket, He said McDowell agreed the gun was his but re- fused any other stat t conferred with his son's law- yer. He said: David was in Toronto but unavailable for comment. A Metropolitan Toronto police spokesman said the department had received no warrant for Stanley's arrest, He said the charges against him were sufficient to warrant extradition but may not be pro- ceeded with in view of the Bir- mingham magistrate's decision in ordering Stanley back to Tor- onto last week, JOHN F. KENNEDY McDowell, 21, was jailed on a charge of carrying a' con- cealed deadly weapon, Univer- sity authorities said the suspen- sion would remain in effect pending a school hearing. In Toronto, accountant R. A. Stanley, father of David Stanley, declined to comment until he 29; Jack Cash, 56, all of Bir- mingham, and Jesse B. Stoner, Test-Ban WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Senate ratified the history- making limited nuclear test-ban Senate Ratifies Treaty jeopardizes national security, freezes a Soviet advantage in high-yield weapons and permits Building BROOKLIN (Staff) -- Con- struction of a multi-million dol- lar rolling steel mill in Whitby Township was announced today by representatives of the newly- formed Lake Ontario Stee] Co. Lid. Building permits for the four- building, $7 to $8 million plant were issued today by the Town- ship Municipal office. The steel plant will be located on 375 acres of land just east of the DuPont plant. Highway 401 runs across the northern por- tion of the plant and Lake Ontario borders on the south, A CNR line and Hopkins street run through the property. 275 EMPLOYEES The new firm, largest in Whitby Township; will initially employ 275 persons; A spokes- man for the company said today that employment in both the of- fice and industrial portion will reach about 500 in about five years. Permits were issued to John Permits Issued To Firm Maintenance and Storage, $40,000; Melt Shop, $350,000, The remainder of the $7 to $8 million working capital will be spent on equipment and fur- nishings, The firm will produce re- inforced bars'and a wide range of steel merchant' bars for am Ontario, and especially south- ern Ontario, market. Electric arc furnaces will be used to melt scrap metal brought in by rail car. Billets will be formed in a continuous casting machine and processed in the rolling mill into finished products. EXPANDING MARKET . The market may be expandéd to the United States in the f ture, Mr, Gibson said. ze Whitby Township Reeve John Goodwin predicted a- growth in secondary industry in the area. "This. primary industry will; undoubtedly, be followed by a rise in. secondary industries associated with the steel mill." ; $7 MILLION STEEL MILL LOCATES NEAR WHITBY Metro Youth With 8 In Racial Indictment ) { } L: Miller, chief engineer of G. R. Heffernan and Associates, Whit- by, a consulting engineering firm, Leonard J. Gibson, a The steel company represen- tatives indicated that facilities at. the Whitby harbor was 4 strong point in deciding where an Atlanta lawyer; Ralph Le- wandowski, 18, Chicago; anl David A. Stanley, 19, Toronto. A US, district court hearing treaty today. Approval of the pact banning nuclear wapons testing in the the Russians to continue devel- opment underground in the small weapons field where Coroner Urges oS « ~ RODEO RIDER TRAMPLED A rodeo contestant at the Oshawa Fair is lifted onto a stretcher Monday night afte he was thrown and trampl - a horse. William Cruwy: taken to Oshawa General Hospital for observation. He was separ, fe good; condi- SF teats 1183, than on the same day last year. However, this year children under 12 were let in sooo. dat year they were in- ttendance Z *~ hawa Times Photo of RR 2, Oshawa, wi Red errilla. | Shots Hit U.S. Jet Airliner SAIGON, South Viet Nam (Reuters)--A Pan American 707 jet airliner was hit by a Com- munist guerrilla bullet early to- day in firing that some sources said could have been directed against United States Defence Secretary Robert McNamara and his special mission. The plane, on a flight from Singapore to Manila, was hit in charged the religious movement had been infiltrated by Com- munists. NEW YORK (AP) -- A USS. diplomatic cable backfired in South Viet Nam and is provok- ing a_ heated feud involving Kennedy administration officials in the Pentagon and the state persecuting the Buddhists and|department, the New York Her- ald Tribune says. A Washington dispatch said the bitter background to the dispute became known Monday. Pentagon sources said they knew nothing about the re- ported situation, A state depart- ment spokesman declined com- ment until officials had a chance to see the entire story. one engine seven miles from the Saigon airport but managed to land safely here on thre engines. Some sources said the guer- rillas might have thought the airliner was bringing in McNa- mara and Gen. Maxwell Tay- lor, chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff. They were due in Saigon to- night to make a special exami- nation of the four-year war against the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam. It was understood this was the first time a civil airliner has been hit by a guerrilla fire. Passengers on the flight were unaware of the incident. The guerrilla bullet, estimated at .303 calibre, severed the oil lines in the Boeing 707's No. 3 engine as thé plane flew at 1.000 feet. A Pan American! spokesman said 'he damage| could be repaired locally, President Kennedy announced Saturday he was sending McNa- mara and Taylor, to South Viet Nam for a review of the guer-| Trilla war. Kennedy's two top military! advisers were expected to see President Ngo Dinh Diem shortly after their arrival. McNamara and Taylor also will get out into the field, where US. military advisers report the Viet Cong guerrillas are Vital Papers JAKARTA, Indonesia --- Brit- ish officials cleared out vital documents from the vault of their ruined embassy today, wiping 'out a possible source of mew friction between Britain and Indonesia. The embassy was sacked and set on fire and British homes were pillaged by mobs Wednes- day in the backlash of the In- donesian hostility to the British- sponsored federation of Malay- sia, Red dispatch cases, canvas pouches and -'voode, crates, some containing top-secret pa- pers, were carried by .two trucks to the U.S, Embassy. Ca- nadian, American, Australian and other Westem embassy of- ficers helped to load the trucks. Cleared From Ruined Embassy Informed Monday that some Indonesians were trying to open the vault, British Ambassador Andrew Gilchrist hurried to the embassy and stood watch over the vault until Jakarta officials agreed to a joint British-Indo- nesian guard. The British government ordered evacuation today of the five women still attached to the British embassy .as word was received that the Indonesian government would prohibit in- ternational airlines from pick- ing up passengers and cargo: in Jakarta for Singapore after Thursday. British firms were advised to evacuate all remaining depend- ents and non + essential staff members. on an order prohibiting Gov- ernor George Wallace of Ala- bama_ from interfering with school integration is scheduled at Montgomery today. Wallace, Alabama Public Saf- aides were a ° porary restraining order Sept. 9 after state troopers barred Ne- gro pupils from integrated schools at Bimingham, Mobile and Tuskegee. Wallace said he would be rep- resented at the hearing by a lawyer. The hearing is to de- termine whether the restraining order should be made perman- ent. In Washington, Presi- dent Kennedy expressed belief that Birmingham leaders, work- ing with his special emissaries, can settle that city's racial problems at the local level. The president met with the two special representatives, Earl (Red) Laik and Kenneth Cc. Royall. Kennedy conferred also wih Birmingham civil leaders and Alabama religious leaders in a busy day of dealing wih the Birmingham racial crisis. Mayor. Albert Boutwell an- nounced that a reward fund for comment statements. Cancer Death Charge Laid TORONTO (CP) Toronto's has ety Director Al Lingo and five|chief coroner recommended) placed under that a charge conduct, be of medical mis- laid against 9 Tor- onto doctor by the College of Physicians .and Surgeons, Dr. Morton B. Shulman said Monday he had sent the rec- ommendation to the college after investigating. the death of Margaret Power, who died at 44 of cancer of the left breast May 8, 1962. The college today declined to on Dr, Shulman's In a statement written and signed two months before her death Miss Powers said Dr. L. V. Roy had treated her with various serums, health foods and an electrical machine re- sembling short-wave apparatus. She said in the 10-page_ state- ment that at one time she was taking 14 kinds of health foods each day. She said she had gone to Dr. Roy because she was afraid of an operation. Dr. Roy, who graduated from the University of Montreal in Plumbers Free Child In Drain PICKERING (Staff) --A 14- month-old Pickering Township boy had his right foot stuck in a drain in the b t of his 1950, said today: "If any claim is made against me I consider it grossly exaggerated and highly unjustified, "There are gross exaggera- tions in the story and some half-truths but the history of the woman's case is partly cor- rect." grandmother's Pickering Village home for 70 minutes Monday morning. Roger Cook, of Highbush Trail, was freed by plumbers from Whitehall Plumbing and Heating shortly after noon yes- terday. His leg was encased by the drain right up to his knee. The workmen had to smash through a concrete floor and break the pipe to release the Charges Laid Against Union Nationale Men QUEBEC (CP)--Charges of boy. defrauding the province of Que bec were laid today against two Ontario Party Chiefs former Union Nationale cabinet ministers, one legislative coun- cillor and a former high-rank- ing civil servant. Charged with fraud are J. D. Begin, former minister of col- onization; Antonio Talbot, for- mer minister of highways; Leg- atmosphere, in outer space and underwater, came after more than two weeks of committee hearings and an equal time of Senate debate. With a two-thirds vote of the Senate fi e treaty, at Mo: Aug. 5 by the United et Union. = B ) was nt to the SeAate by President Kenndy Aug. 8 with these words: "While it will not end the threat of nuclear war or out- law the use of nuclear weap- ons, it can reduce world ten- sions, open a way to further the threat of war." WORRY ABOUT SECURITY But opponents, who fought vainly to the last, contended it Latest Haitian Crisis Simmers Down Today SANTO DOMINGO, Domin- ican Republic (AP)--Dhe latest crisis between Haiti and the Do- minican Republic simmered down to. another war of words today after each accused the other of firing across the bor- der. Haitian troops were reported to have fired Monday into a Domin'san border town, appar- ently trying vainly to head off a rebel chief and his band who had just lost, a battle in a Hai- tian frontier town, Dominican officials interned about 120 fugitives, Informed sources said the rebels were headed by Haitian ex-Gen. Leon Cantave, who last month led a band of exiles in an invasion attempt to overthrow Haitia dictator Francois Duva- lier, Haiti charged the Domin- can Republc aided Cantave's operation. S an to Domingo de- nied it, As the rebel band streamed across the border, witnesses re- ported rifle and machine-gun bullets hit the Dominican town of Dajabon. isla'Ave Councillor Gerald Mar- States, the ritain agreements" and "help to ease this country now leads. Senator Richard B. Russell (Dem. Ga.), chairman of the Senate armed services committee, expressed toward compleie without the safeguard of imspec- "atm them at an advantage in weapons system know! in way tg harden missile em- fears it might be the first step|€d structed at the beginning,' Mr. Fg oat pr and will cover about}i iste yield weapons, in anti-balli ~ member of the Heffernan firm and future Works Manager for the steel company, also attend- 'G. R, Heffernan is an 'officer te the Lake Ontario Steel Co. FOUR BUI wage" will Miller I 40 acres. will be im oper- ation sometime in 1964. costs The i of construction, are --! placements. ling Mill, $300,000; Office, $100,000; the $7 million steel plant lo- cating in Whitby Township are issued by - Township Reeve ceiving the four permits are company representatives John L. Miller (left) and Leonard portion of to locate, ' ANNEX CONSIDERED Whitby's plan to oe the con: ) new: steel firm was -by 'Reeve Good- John Goodwin it). Re- J, Gibson. Construction on the BUILDING PERMITS for Jol (righ' 55. acre rolling ill few ol begin within two weeks. --Oshawa Times Photo Martin Explores New Bid For Home Ridings Idea On Disarmament growing bolder and increasing tineau and Alfred Hardy, for- mer. director of their resistance, particularly in the Mekong River delia south of a efore leaving Washington, McNamara told iiportere tas war had been going well until recently. He said he and Taylor were going to Saigon primarily, to see whether the military op- eration '"'has been adversely af- fected 'by the unrest of the last several weeks," This was a reference to the Diem regime's crackdown on Buddhist and student demon- Strators who accuse the g0v- ernment of religious persecu- tion. The government denied CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario's three party leaders, after making a big bid for Metropolitan Toronto's 29 seats, headed for their home ridings today to do some last-minute pitching to retain their seats in Wednesday's provincial election. New Democratic Party Chief Donald MacDonald got a bit of a head start, appearing in a three-way debate of his Metro riding of York South Monday night, Premier John Robarts headed for London, Ont., where he will stand for re-election as Progressive Conservative candi- date in. one of. the two city rid- ings, and Liberal leader John Wintermeyer headed home to Kitchener. The premier told a luncheon for 1,600 party workers in Tor- onto--his largest. audience of the campaign--that the elector- ate should return his "no-non- sense"' administration and pre- HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 dicted "'economic disruption"' if the Liberals gained power. He did not mention the NDP. Mr. Wintermeyer drew some 1,900 to a rally closing his Tor- onto campaign Monday night and told them Mr. Robarts, an Anglican, had tried to "exploit religious prejudice" in the late, days. of the campaign. Mr. Win- termeyer is a Roman Catholic. His statement was directed at a comment by Mr. Robarts earlier in the day.that the Lib- eral leader had tried to "'set re- ligion against religion' on the separate school issue. He described the premier's statement as "the act of a des-|}, perate man" and said he would not answer the charge. Mr. MacDonald and his op- ponents in York South set forth their views and fielded ques- tions from the audience. He listened to PC candidate W. C. Thomson state his support for a medical care program as ford and one that will not in- volve compulsion." The Progressive Conservative government had been converted to a medical care program '"'in the last 12 months," Mr. Mac- Donald countered. "If a party talks about something for 38 years and does nothing about it, obviously it doesn't believe it."" i A questioner asked Mr. Thomson and Mr; Macdonald-- Liberal candidate Herbert Ro- binson had left to attend an- other rally--whether they fav- ored an increase from the $7,000 a year paid legislature mem- ers. Mr. Thomson said he would vote against a pay raise. "He'll damn well do what the caucus says," Mr. MacDonald stated. "Politics has ceased to be an old man's hobby or rich man's game and remuneration should be comparable to full-time jobs jong as it was "'one we can af- outside public life." + government purchasing services. At the same time a charge of conspiracy to defraud the province was laid against Ar- thur Bouchard, a Quebec City busipessnaan. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Library Book Circulation Up .... Page 11 Lieutenant-Governor Opens Auto Museum Page 11 Jaycees Plan Miss Oshawa Contest ... Page 11 Rotary Aids Boys' Club Building Fund Page 11 Road Blamed In Fatal Accident ... Page 11 Area Sheep Breeders Win At Lindsay .... Page 3 Rail Service Said Problem For Province TORONTO (CP) -- A com- muter nailway service, includ- ing ) its costs, isa provincial government responsibility since it would provide transportaton for persons not living in Metro- politan Toronto, Metro Chair- man William Allen said Mon- day. He told Metro transportation committee that the cost of the provincial study of commuter service in the Metro area is be- ing met by the province. Mayor Donald Summerville suggested that a plan to inte- grate a commuter service with the Metro rapid transit system should reduce, if not eliminate, any loss of passengers predicted for the Toronto Transit Com- mission in future years. UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- External Affairs Minister Mar- tin has explored a possible new initiative in the disarmament field with Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko, it was learned today. The Canadian minister, who met with Gromyko for more than an hour late Monday at the Soviet United Nations mis- Pandit, and Foreign Minister Mongi Slim of Tunisia--both of whom he also saw Monday -- then was to meet with South Africa's chief delegate, G. P. Joost. : It was understood that the talks were to deal with the is- sue of South Africa's racial pol- icy but the Canadian role was not known. Mrs. Pandit, 63-year-old sis- ter of Prime Minister Nehru, is reported to have exercised a restraining influence in: Afro- Asian meetings dealing with moves planned against South Africa, : There has also been specula- tion that Martin may have been exploring ways of improving sion, was understood to have sought the Soviet reaction on an initiative the Canadian delega- tion has been considering. The nature of the move was not disclosed, but it was under- stood to involve an area where considerable agreement already exists between East and West. Martin, who flies back to Ot- tawa today for trade talks with a Japanese ministerial delega- tion, scheduled several other conferences before his depar- ture. He was to meet with India's chief delegate, Mrs. Vijaya L. TP Treen sg ce ae Mit West German Ship Sinks After Crash KIEL, West Germany (Reu- ters)--The 249-ton West German coastal vessel Roland sank after a collision with the Argentinian freighter Rio Quequen in the Baltic Sea today, Kiel rado re- ported. The radio said two of the four crew members of the German vessel are miss:ng l'ho ether two were picked up by a Danis ferry. o we bah oer ee Ci lati between India and Pakistan, but a qualified source today discounted these reports, Martin also planned to meet again today--for the third time in the week he has been at the UN--with Japan's Foreign Min- ister Masayoshi Ohira, Prime Minister Pearson also met with Ohira at the UN last week, Martin said the two-day Ot- tawa talks would involve a wide range of problems and that the Canadian government attached considerable ance to them, import- 4,