Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Oct 1963, p. 1

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Clear witn ers and slightly cooler tonight a Thursday. "THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'A weary father says. his chil- dren are properly spaced--about ten feet apart. ne, er = A. & Ene a. jew joudy per ic da nd VOL. 92--231 Third Man | Nabbed In | Bombings BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)--) Charles Cagle, 22, of Birming- A third white man has been|ham, who was arrested with arrested and more than 100/Chambliss Sunday, remains in sticks of dynamite were found|jail on a charge of illegal pos- hidden in a wooded area in the ion of d ite. A hab continuing investigation of ra-|corpus hearing for Cagle has cial bombings. been set for today. John W. Hall, 36, of suburban} Col. Al Lingo, commander of Gardendale; was charged with|the state highway patrol, said illegal possession of dynamite|that state investigators found Tuesday. He posted bond--set at|133 sticks of dynamite in a} $300--shortly afterwards |wooden crate and 2% sticks ly-| Robert E, Chambliss, 59, who|ing nearby in a wooded area in| was arrested Sunday by state|North Birmingham, just outside investigators, also was free on/the city limits. $300 bond on the same charze.. He said the dynamite had Chambliss posted bond shortly|been hidden in some bushes. after a habeas corpus hearing'Lingo hailed the discovery as) in circuit court. \significant in the investigation! dh --__--_-------- of borhbings." Dodgers Lead | FRENCH LA a4 | Ahmed Ben Bella Waits" UK. Evacuates For Diplomatic Storm E. Borneo Area, 1:22:21: sass), sergoe mon cota |matic storm from France today|saw mutinous troops haul Chi- JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Brit-| relations with Indonesia and the|after naticnalizing immediately|nese-made cannon up the moun- ain began the evacuation of|Philippines when they refused all the land still held by French tainsides while infantry soldiers about 140 foreign women andito recognize the new Malaysian|settlers in Algeria. |were digging in. nA children today from the' huge|federation of Malaya, Singapore,| Ben Bella's annuoncemert of| Tracts distributed by the in- Shell Oil refinery. centre at|Sabah (North Borneo) and Sar-\the nationalization. move Tues-|SUrgents called on the rest "Of ------ | Balikpapan, in Indonesian East|awak. ' day night before a cheering|the army to jon their movement Borneo. The Malaya Tunku (Prince)|crowd of 100,000 persons in the | ' rid the country of "fascisni,"' Indonesian Air Force planes|Abdul Rahman has insisted that| Algiers Forum served to rally| Ben Bella ripped into the re- lflew the evacuees to Jakarta,|talks be preceded by Ind ian| hungry ts in defence of|el appeal for an armed t iwhere Royal Air Force planesjand Philippine recognition f/nis regime, torn by an insurrec-|@8ainst his "dictatorial" mi were waiting to take them to|Malaysia; a guarantee that de-jtional movement in Kabylia. |00S and also rejected | Singapore. cisions reached at talks be! But Battier siitiosers manned |S brand of socialism would The evacuation was arrangedjadhered to, and withdrawal of cannon on' Algerian mountain {24 to chaos. re |because of strong Indonesian|Indonesian troops from the Sar-| ridges vowing to defy. Ben Bella| "Dictatorship is known by i | i inst Britain and the|awak border, | ti Pap? methods," he told the huge feelings against even at the cost of civil war. aa * S BEN BELLA ADDRESSES SUPPORTERS 855.3 4,129.4 2,949.2 392.2 198.1 687.8 "We are stepping in the right ; % : BE direction. We are making pro- gress." Rey. Fred Shuttlesworth, for- as emp xpec eS First Game mer Birmingham minister and president of the Alabama Chris- i tian Movement for Human ° Of Series Rights, charged that the inves-| tigation appeared to be "'a sham! V = on the part_of law agencies, in | British- ; ti f| Fish K - i Pied YORK (AP) -- Sandy|an effort to soothe the national ' be rorhaggat de Frye "ioe sae cgamcl rl Corie ponent Col. Mohand ou el Hadj, mili- paged pccenntmrvcist. 4 Koufax and Whitey Ford meticonscience and placate Ne-- OTTAWA (CP)--Last - ditchjCLC, the Canadian government Workers; the Canadian Mari-|"@\@YS!2, | Stories in Northiclaimed that tadonest | der of the anti-B 4 in bright sunshine in todays} ag ae A ~ : taal } i ' ni imer British territories in No! claime at Indonesian gun-|tary commander of the anti-Bem|We do not have that in Algeria. , fie groes. efforts were expected today injand*the AFL-CIO in the United|time Union; the Canadian Mer-|\- ted from|boats were terrorizing coastal|Bella uprising, told reporters he| "Dj ion fa World Series opener at Yankee!" . ; : aga f \States chant Service Guild and th children were evacuated {rom)Duats rizing coastal |Bella uprising, told repo Dictators live in palaces far Stadium with Ford favored to| Shuttlesworth issued a pre-ja bid to break a stalemate in/States. =~ eee Aging at MEd Na-\Takarta after mobs sacked thejshipping and driving Malaysians|would like to avoid a clash but|from the people, but Abn give New York Yankees a first-|P2"ed statement criticizing the|trade union _talks aimed at} The CLC's eight-member ex- > sae Association of Marine |» vitish Embassy and burned a/from Straits of Malacca fishing} would not hesitate to fire if fired/Ben Bella lives among you, "i game victory over Los Angeles investigation shortly after a cir./averting government trustee-\ecutive committee considered *Ngincers. 1 : number of British homes. grounds. on. the bosom of the people. Ofily Dodgers "\cuit court jury--which included|ship over five marine unions in|the situation Tuesday and ad- a i io Foreigr Minister Subandrio}------__ wo one title pleases him--that of @ i jone Negro--found him guilty of|Canada. journed until next Monday. This|resent some 21,000 Canadian) .:4 today President Sukarno! militant Algerian, and 1 shi hone lines curled around the) ,,rading. without a permit on} The llth - hour manoeuvres|was interpreted to mean that/sailors, marine engineers and| ss" given instructions to 'main-| . always we militant a stadium, waiting for a chance|Good Friday and fined him $75.|will likely continue even while|there is mo concrete solution in| deck officers on Canadian ships, tain security" in the capital and| anda 1q0n Tra e you." peo to grab a few remaining) Judge George Lewis Bailes|Parliament debates a govern-|immediate prospect. Mr. MacEachen has said he| several other cities because , He added: 'From this : bleacher seats. Indications were|added a term of 90 days to the|ment measure to establish a} A CLC spokesman said, with-| Plans kid asinovord with the trus-|internal danger from counter- ; not a single hectare (2% a that the final crowd total would|fine. Shuttlesworth's lawyers|three-man board of trustees to.oyt elaborating, that "certain| 7 ip legislation today, but| revolutionaries. | Sur lus Increa belongs to foreign settlers." =" be around 70,000 people. jappealed the sentence and he|take over ,"'management andj proposals" are under considera-| rovernment House Leader J.) ae The Dodgers lost a scrim-|¥4S released under $2,500 bond.|control" of 'Canada's maritime tion. ouar' Teestey 'sight' th tol ae tng. with, Sukarno to cuny cut toe Selenaneae adceecia : it : ie ead ' y ni at to- meeting wi mage before the first ball was| In his statement, Shutt'es-/transportation unicns. The government trusteeship/ aay, debate an begin within ican (freedom) Palace,, OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's All others 918.3 "humanely and correctly" at thrown when manager Walter|worth noted that his bond was| A resolution preceding the ac-| would involve the SIU of Can-),,; government's pensio es-|Subandrio announced the secur-\world trade position remained| Total 4,398.3 said the European farmers were Alston decided that Ken Mc-|$2,500 while that of the three|tual trusteeship legisla-|ada; the marine section of the \iijis, eee ee eae ves. He added: \buoyant in the first eight months| Imports authorized to take their personal Mullen was not able to play in|men charged with possession of|tion moves on to the Commons|Canadian Brotherhood of Rail-) 37 -twhile William J Smith ee a i get of indications|of the year with the country's|United States 2,918 property. the opener. As a result he/dynamite $300. jorder paper today--without any|way, Transport and General) resident of the 32 000-member| groups might try to capitalize|trade surplus continuing to 'jn- Britain 344.7 =. weve Jim Gilliam to third! "Where are the FBI and the|debate, unless the government|----------~~ |r, aia) Brotherhood of Rail-lon the genuine spirit of the In-|crease. Other GET CROP VALUE > ase and started Dick Tracew-|tederal experts brought in--and|seeks nanimous consent to} way, Transport and 'General|donesian people oppesing..Ma-| The bureau of s'ati-tics re-) Commonwealth He shined tnt cana hectares ) Dodgers -- Wills was out. So) 4 Ne no in no errors. ski, a .226 hitter and defensive deal with it. |ported today that the trade sur-|All others : plus in the January-August pe- riod totalled' $175,400,000, \ in sharp contrast with a $98,000,- 000 deficit in the same period last 'year. At the end of July the trade flash, at second FIRST INNING Yankees -- Kubek struck out. \what part did they play in this?) Is this the best the nation can) | eapect of the combined efficient) 'or Jaw. agencies?" Shutties- said. Richardson struck out. Tresh struck out. No runs, no hits, no errors. SECOND INNING Dodgers -- T. Davis grounded out. Howard doubled to centre. Skowron singled scoring How- ard. Tracewski singled sending Skowron to second. Roseboro homered bringing in Skowron and Tracewski. Koufax flied out. Wills struck out. Four runs, four hits, no errors: Yankees ~~ Manile struck out. Maris struck out. Howard flied $1,000 REWARD IF GIRL FOUND BOWMANVILLE (Staff) A $1000 reward has been offered for information lead- ing to the return of Noreen Ann Greenley, 13, to her Maple Grove home. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey J Greenley announced today | that the money would be | paid to the person or 92r- sons who provide informa- of the federal, state and|port to the Commons on t nadian-United States. eff find a private, voluntary sub-) Stitute for the government trus-/ jtrusteeship -- However, Labor Minister MacEachen is expected to re- Ca- to teeship. Informants said Tuesday night that no definite proposal has been advanced that would --in the eyes of Canadian labor leaders--guarantee a thorough cleanup of labor lawlessness on the Great Lakes waterfront LAYS OUT CONDITIONS The Canadian Labor Congress was reported to have laid out specific conditions which must be met in any union-sponsored conditions that would guarantee the reforms in the Seafarers' International Un- Workers, said he met Tuesday with the CLC's executive com- Pope's Effort "= ; mittee. , ' Continuing. sey Yow share 2 3 rha.said in an interview. "*An.air 'of mystery sul rounds this whole goa ie reiterated the CBRT's 0; VATICAN CITY (AP)--Many| position to any private wiiee non-Catholic observers at theltristeeship and indicated that Vatican ecumenical council are|ni, union would defy a move by deeply impressed by the efforts|the CLC. and the AFL-CIO to of Pope Paul to continue the/impose trustees on the CBRT's drive toward Christian unity) marine gection started by Pope John. . Toward Unity 'f wrecked and burned ysia."' ish Embassy Since Malaysia came The Indonesian representative to the United Nations, Lam- bertus Palar, alleged Monday. that a large cache of. arms and -- was found in the Brit fter it was Sept. 18: into being Sept. 16 Indonesia has been pursuing a policy. of "con- frontation" of Malaysia which includes the severing of diplo- matic and trade ties. Malaysia severed diplomatic) fractionally. surplus--excess of exports over imports--was $138,100,000, com- pared with a $131,600,000 deficit a year previous. Exports in the first eight months of 1963 were up 6.5 per icent, while imports Sixty-three delegates from 21) non-Catholic church bodies have| privileged seats inside St. Pe-) ter's Basilica when the 2,500) council fathers meet, The new pontiff obviously) made a mark when he said at) the resumption of the council! Gromyko, Discuss Issues Home The trade balance is likely to continue to show improvement during the fall season--a period when the country's trade posi- tion is traditionally strong. By the end of the year the surplus should be the largest in a dec- ade. In 1962 Canada had a trade declined) | Total 4,222.9 4,227.4 | The month of Augtst produced a trade surplus of $32,800,000 lit- tle changed from $33,600,000 a lyear ago. Exports rose .5 per. cent to $557,700,000.-while im- ports advanced .7 per cent to | Exports in the January-August |period were up 3.5 per cent, 10.8, per cent to Britain, 26.6 per cent to other Commonwealth coun- tries and 7.4 per cent to all other countries. Exports to the U.S. fell 2.4 per' cent in August to $317,500,000 from $325,500,000. a year pre- (2,500,000 acres), he said, and French: colonial settlers w be repaid the value of the crop land. - ence in July, 1962. Ben Bella. bern - Freni vernment, Ww 'm) fim during the bitter guerrilla war leading to could still co-operate with a free ~ Algeria. vious and imports declined 1.6 per cent to $337,200,000 from $342,800,000. Shipments in the months to Britain dropped 10.6 per cent to $85,500,000 from $95,700,000, while imports decreased eight International out. No runs, no hits, no errors.| tion resulting in the return jig, of Canada proposed by Mr,|Sunday: |surplus of $82,000,000, compared|per cent to $48,100,000 from. $52,- THIRD INNING Dodgers -- Gilliam singled. W. Davis singled. T. Davis singled sending W. Davis to third. How-| ard flied out. Skowron singled scoring Gilliam. Tracewski hit into a force play. 1 run, 4 hits, 0) errors. | Yankees -- Pepitone was out.| Boyer was out. Ford popped out. | of their daughter. Noreen has been missing since Sept. 14 Any information concern- ing the girl's whereabouts Should be given to the Bow- manville Town Police, Phone 623-3323, or the Bowman- ville detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police, 623-3384. No runs, No hits, No errors Justice T. G. Norris to the Ca-| "If we are in any way to blame for .. . separation; we humbly ask God's . forgivness and ask pardon, too, of our brethren who fee] themselves to have been injured by us." jnadian governmen}. So far, the AFL-ClO--and in |particular, Paul Hall, an AFL- |CIO vice-president who heads UNITED NATIONS (CP) -~,antees for West Berlin as par* \Britain's Foreign Secretary|of any non-aggression pact. |Lord Home and Russia's For-, Gromyko repeated Russia's jeign Minister Andrei Gromyko|suggestion that Western troops in West Berlin be replaced by |discussed a full range of East- | West issues at a two-hour meet-/UN troops, and Home repeated |with a surplus of $125,000,000 in 1961. The previous eight years showed an unbroken succession} of deficits. Much of the improved _trade ithe 75,000-member SIU of North |America--has balked at accept- ing the guarantees sought by jthe CLC Labor sources still held hope for a last-minute solution that Said Dr. Harold de Soysa, An- glican archdeacon of Colombo, Ceylon: "That was far more than any pope has said before." "Pope Paul," he added, "spoke with real sincerity and ing Tuesday but there were no concessions on either side, Brit- ish sources reported. The meeting took place after Home, in a policy speech to tne United Nations General Assem- 1 the 'Western stand should be stationed in East Ber- that in as well. Gromyko planned to meet sep- arately .with State Secretary Rusk today and on Thursday they 'would meet the views of the/roiing about his desire : for Story Of Cosa Nostra Continued By Valachi unity, He is following in the |footsteps of Pope John and that is a general impression among the observers here," Rev. Albert C. Outler, Ameri- can delegate from the World Methodist Council, commented: "T think it was a splendid state- ment of the spirit of Pope John and a new level of precision and direction has been given to the program of work for the pon- all three foreign ministers are to meet together. Home also was expected to see President bly, accepted a Soviet proposal for an 18-nation summit meet- ing next year--provided careful|Kennedy in Washington Friday spadwork is done first. {before returning to London. Informants said the Home-| External Affairs Minister Gromyko meeting, for the first|Martin, who met with Gromyko time in current big three meet-|here last week, conferred with ings in New York, went into|both Home and. Rusk Tuesday depth on various disarmament|and scheduled a meeting today possibilities that could 'oliow|with Secretary General U the partial nuclear test - ban|Thant. position is attributed by govern- ment officials to the devaluation and pegging of the Canadian dol- lar's exchange rate in May of last year. Total exports during the Jan- uary - August period rose to $4,398,300,000 from $4,129,400,000 a year earlier. Imports. eased .1 per cent to $4,222,900,000 from $4,227,400,000. The trade picture for the Jan- uary-August periods of 1963 and 1962 in millions of dollars: Exports 1963 1962 United States $2,556.1 $2,470 3 660.7 596.0 'Other 200,000. Valachi May Help On Canadian Crime WASHINGTON (CP)--A con- gressional aide, guiding mobster informant Joseph Valachi through a review of the bloody killings of New York gangiand wars, says Valachi may shed new light next week on Cusa Nostra operations in Canada. Lavern Duffy, an investigator for the Senate investigations subcommittee, said in an inter- view today he could not divulge names at this stage of the hear- had certain information that would come out in later ses- ings. But he was sure Valachi|! Policing Urged | TORONTO (CP)--The. Onta 2, Police Commission is repo: ready to ask the United States to aid in setting up a North American - intelligence network to. crack down on organized crime. * The réport comes. from 'Téf- ing newspapers, ram, being given the U.S. Sen eee eeceaniiies in Wash- ington. ' q The subcommittee 1 lee 1 testimony from mobster' J: i' Valachi, convicted. a oe dealer and killer, on i Britain 207.8 ' Commonwealth 263.2 sions. treaty. _WASHINGTON (CP-AP) --,question Valachi about before;power and linked Genovese's Mobster Joseph Valachi con-jreturning. to discussion about|name with bloody gang wars for tinues today to trace the fam-|present-day crimes. power. ily tree and murderous growing) Judge Bruce Macdonald, Genovese is serving 15 years | sue out of the confusion of tne/for a non - aggression pact be-| pains of Cosa Nostra. 'chairman of the Ontario Police,at Leavenworth, Kans., federaljlast three years. He has pro-|tween NATO and Warsaw pact! The convicted narcotics|Commission, said Valachi's tes-|prison as a norcotics racketeer.|duced a prism which focuses the) countries, | dealer and killer has beenjtimony Tuesday was interesting, Valachi swore Genovese and/entire effort for wider Christian' i. jog to the Berlin iasue bringing the Senate rackets sub-|in what it disclosed about New/|the notorious Salvatore (Lucky) |union." ; because the West wants guar- committee up to date with a|York underworld operations, but/Luciano lured another New| Canon Peter John Mann of the) = BU tificate of Pope Paul. Gromyko for the first time "He has lifted the whole is-\here raised the Soviet proposal Jent liaison between our com-| mission and the U.S. depart-/ ment of justice on this entire investigation." The subcommittee has indi- jcated the aim of the hearings jis to draw public attention to/ \the racketeering activities and| |to explore the possible need of jnew laws to battle organized jcrime, ses, alliances and blood oaths. 'in Ontario. Coney Island, N.Y., restaurantjspeech "very encouraging " gang warfare in the 1920s and|Kennedy Thursday to arrange| Luciano, who was described injmonths with members of the| ct Sees eee ies it violin enable Canadian officials to ex-|ets, was deported after the Sec-| ------------# bang 7 etal wl re I'm tell you now," the 60-year-|in Ontario, which Valachi says! A recess came before Valachi eoment oe ome we with a Knife and gun beforeis set up some form of perman-|seria which the New York au-, of Cananien nroiinctinn ii Sew ing in his hand to remind him Senator John L. McClellan, committee has "two or three PHONE NUMBERS Valachi has told the senators ihe wants to destroy Cosa Nostra |through his testimony because it exploited rank-and-file mem- sometimes - bewildering narra-|it shed no new light on the/York gangster, Giuseppe Mas-/Old Catholic Church (Union of} tive of strange names and alia-|Cosa Nostra or Mafia operations seria, to his "death meal' in a/Utrecht) termed the '2Pe's| Canadian Auto Valachi spent most of Tues- Judge Macdonald said he will}to set him up for gang war ex-| The Observers Tuesday night! day telling of assassinations and confer with Attorney - General ecution. jhad their first meeting in "he! EXD nsion Ho hood A _|some kind of permanent Can-|the past as one of the leaders|Vatican secretariat for promot- pa pe 6 wae sar ginal lada-U.S. machinery that would/of the vice and narcotics rack-\ing Christian unity, cases, A ie | jnance Minister Walter Gordon penny jplore fully the connections be-|ond World War and died in Italy! i i This is my doom . Whatitween Cosa Nostra and crimelast year. No Heavy Threat said Tuesday the Canadian gov old hoodlum said grimly after! eyicts * U.S.-controlled automotive in- ; | s. jhad a chance, however, to de-| : dustry to start major expansion relating how he was sworn in| «what we would like to do is) scribe the actual murder-of Mas-| From Hurricane 4 ' " him, his finger pricked to draw or three years, gradually reduc- bleod and a piece of paper burn- that he too would be burned to ashes if he broke his oath. Arkansas Democrat, announced his Senate investigations sub- ie more murders" from the past to POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 jas Cosa Nostra's dominant'gun in a violin or guitar case. ber's as himself and has marked thorities list as unsolved. PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad-- Masseria was slain April 20, 1931, in a war with another mob headed by Salvatore Maran- zano, himself a later victim of the war. Valachi told of accepting with- out question "contracts" for murder, including the slaying of James Catania, also known as Joe Baker, on Feb., 3, 1931. Six bullets: cut Baker down as he walked toward his office. Va- lachi said'the actual kill'ng was done by Salvatore (Sally Shields) Shillitani, Nick Capuzzi him for execution as an infor-|and a Chicago mobster known ing automotive imports from ithe U.S. now running about! 1$450,000,000 a year Hurricane Flora roared over the central Manges north of Vene- zuela today, menacing shipping) _, | lanes but posing no immediate rordon told a Dress confer- threat to any land areas. ence this "lead" time of two or _ The centre of the storm, pack- three years is necessary to al- "td top se ga ta Av low for extensive retooling and our, was place od miles! north-northeast of the Dutch FP pia -- Hland of Curacao this morning. }will be required to boost Cana- The U.S. weather bureau at/dian production. San Juan, Puerto Rico, said} Far from giving up this idea Flora was moving steadily west-|of expanding the Canadian pro- northwest at 14 m.p.h. across}duction, Gordon said the Cana-| construction that) # Representatives of ricane should be 250 miles south tic that the industry will in time| protesting the use of. non- Osh- open seas. By mid-day, the hur-jdia administration is optimis-| awa's building trade unions, mer. He has named Vito Genovese jas Buster who looked like a col- |lege boy and carried a machine-|Dominican. Republic, weather bureau said. ity at aR Rast yg a Ri a NET OT of Santo Domingo, capital.of thé/come up with fruitful decisions} union labor, began picketing the|to meet the government's sug-| igestions. the site of a. shopping plaza on Wilson road south today. PICKETS PROTEST NON-UNION LABOR Shown above at: the site are: left, front, Jim McKelvey and Jim Marshall, carpenters lo: cal 297; Jack Connors, plumb- ers and pipefitters local 463; Don Urquhart, local 397; Fred : fh Aa: a ge" I Seccieenys : a OEE Sianslasactiiedl Pate mening "oA ge oe Oe ahi Topas M89: Beckstead, common 'laborers, local 597 and Leo Steffler, bricklayers, masons and plas- ters local 20. Back: row, left; Maldon 'Sudsbury,- painters local 1832;"Russ Aldred, team, sters local 880 and Bill John+ ston, lathers local 97, (See story on page 17) --Oshawa Times Phota. were a linia Ree Ee

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