THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some men believes in clubs for 'women -- but only when all else 'fails. le eh eR gp VOL, 92--243 FIRE LEAVES EMPTY RACKS Twin US. Satellites On Secret Test Orbit By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (AP) -- Two sentry satellites raced through space today on a secrecy-cloaked mission aimed et perfecting a fool-proof means 9 policing the limited nuclear Jest ban treaty. Their assignment: Determine the feasibility of using satellite- borne instruments to detect nu- elear explosions as far as 200,- 000,000 miles from earth. The treaty forbids such blasts in outer space. Intricate devices in the twin satellites were designed to draw a chart of space radiation so they and later sentinels can im- mediately spot any sudden surge of energy from a far-out No official announcement is expected on the operation, known by the code name Vela Despite the secrecy, reporters watched from nearby beaches when the Atlas-Agena booster rocket blasted off at 10:32 p.m. EDT Wednesday night with the two satellites aboard. It was the first time in six years that reporters had been barred from Cape Canaveral for a launching. Reliable sources reported the satellites had separated and set- tled into great egg-shaped or- bits ranging from 230 to 57,000 miles above the earth. As the space messangers streaked up- ward, they were about 20 miles apart. The flight plan called for: Seventeen hours 50 minutes after launching--at 4:22: pm EDT today -- a rocket engine aboard estate No. 1 fires to' miles. No. 2 continues in the Original elliptical path for an additional 37 hours until 1{ reaches the 57,000-mile altitude for the second. time. Here an on - board rocket ignite, to jockey it into a circu'ar path. y this time, the two vehicles Students Cause Unemployed Drop OTTAWA (CP)--The end-of- summer movement of students from jobs to school helped re- duce unemployment in Canada to 250,000 at mid - September, down 20,000 from August and 10,000 below the year - earlier level, the labor department and bureau of statistics reported to-' day. 5 The mid - September jobless rate was 3.7 per cent of the la- bor force--the lowest in four' years--compared with 3.9 per cent a year earlier and 4.7 per cent in September, 1961. In Au- gust the rate was 3.8 per cent. The job picture in brief, with estimates in thousands: Sept. Aug. -- 1963 1963 1962 6,815 7,016 6,645 6,565 6,746 6,385 250 270 260 The monthly rt is based on a survey of 35,000 households across Canada for the week ended-Sept. 21, Since figures are based on a sample cross-section of the population, they are es- timates and not precise totals. The mumber of employed Ca- nadians showed an above-aver- age drop of 1818,000 from Au- gust to 6,565,000 in September. This was 180,000 more than the employment total a year earlier a 2.8-per-cent gain. ATTRIBUTED TO STUDENTS The month's employment de- cline was attributed to the back- to-school movement, The report said a record number of 'stu- dents had found temporary jobs during the summer months. The mid - September labor force, at 6,815,000, was 201,000 less than a month earlier. The total was up 170,000--2.6 per cent -- from September last year. The report said that most of the August-to-September drop in unemployment was the re- sult of students leaving the la- bor market. Virtually all-of the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS Labor Force Employed Unemployed 20,000 decline occurred' among persons under 25 years of age.| Of the 250,000 unemployed in| September, some 179,000 had been seeking work for four to six months ang 44,000 for seven months or longer. The unemployment rate, sea- 80..lly adjusted to show under- lying trends not related to sea- sonal factors, was 5.5 per cent in September compared with 5.6 per cent in August and 5.7 per cent a year earlier.. The report carries a cautionary note about the reliability of this figure, which is subject to revision. The September unemployment rate in Ontario was 2.3 com- pared with 2.8 in August. The September unemployment total was 57,000 compared with 72,- 000 in August. "oe Windsor Bank; | will be separated by about 100,- 000 miles. | Two widely - separated satel- lites 'provide a _ sateguard against a false alarm which could be triggered by a cosmic ray shower or a radiation flare on the sun. Scientists consider it unlikely that such phenomena could strike two well - spaced satellites at the same instant but that's something project Vela Hotel aims to earn. A total of 10 research satel- lites are planned in the pro- gram. Eventual goal is a sys- tem of six operational satellites to scan space out to 200,000,000 miles or more. Three Men Rob Net $12,000 WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Three young men brandishing revolv- ers and wearing dark glasses held up a Windsor branch of the Bank of Montreal today and es- caped with more than $12,000 in cash. Bank Manager W. J. Skilli- corn said one of the men or- dered all customers and bank employees against a wall while his two companions scooped money from the tills into paper bags. who is understood to have made of the Block To By ALAN HARVEY LONDON (CP) -- Britain's breathless search for a new prime minister appeared in its final stages today, It could not come too soon for ailing Prime Minister Macmil- lan who was reported 'very tired' after lomg bedside con- sultations to pick his successor. Macmillan is recovering from a prostate operation. It was widely expected that the name of the 43rd premier would be announced from Buck- ingham Palace within the next two or three days, probably by Friday night. The consensus among com- utators was that the choice would be either Richard Austen Butler, one of the most experi- enced politicians in the country, or Reginald Maudling, person- ification of a new Tory tendency to identify the party with mid- dle-class aspirations. The prime minister, who an- ;;nounced his retirement from of- fice shortly after his operation last week, had bedside talks with several Conservative lead- them. MAKES SURVEY Others included party organ- ization chief Lord Poole and ju- diciary chief Lord Dilhorne, a survey of y leadership: x The forecast that 60-year-did Butler or 46-year-old Maudling would be the final beneficiary of a week-long struggle for the succession was accompanied by published reports that opinion was hardening against allowing the highest prize in British pol- itics to fall to someone in the House of Lords. This would seem to militate against the chances of Viscount Hailsham, who is renouncing his peerage to become plain Quin- tin Hogg. Hailsham has been a close second choice to Butler since the race started a week ago with Macmillan's announce- ment that he is leaving 10 Down- City and provincial police threw up roadblocks at all exits from the city in an effort to |\locate the getaway car, de- scribed by witnesses as tan in color and bearing Ontario li- cence plates mounted upside down, " Mr. Skillicorn said the holdup took less than five minutes. He said he was standing in his of- fice talking to a customer when three men walked in waving guns, None of the clerks was able to trip the alarm system until after the three men fled. The manager said the bandits might have had access to an- other $20,000 in multilated bills if they had arrived a few min- utes earlier. He said the money had been locked in the vault moments. before the men en- 2 Britons, Aussie Win Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM (Reut ers)-- The 1963 Nobel Prize for Medi- cine was today awarded jointly to two Britons and an Austral- ian. They were Sir John Carew Eccles of Canberra, Australia; Alan Lloyd Hodgkin of Cam- bridge, England, and Andrew Fielding Huxley of University College, London. They shared the award for their discoveries concerning the 'jonic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition of the peripheral and central portions tered the bank. of the nerve cell membrane." Hailsham Peerage ers today. Butler was amon g| Moroccans Claim Border F eud Over PM Seat ing Street after nearly seven years in office. It also appeared an obstacle to the 14th Earl of Home, for- eign secretary, who commands considerable support in the party but seems reluctant to ac- cept the premiership unless the call is overwhelming. Despite the pattern traced by lobby correspondents, indicat- ing Butler and Maudling as the leading rivals, one firm of book- makers, Ladbroke's, said its odds are virtually unchanged from Wednesday night. FAVOR BUTLER Ladbroke's latest list in the "leadership stakes" Butler favorite at 6 to 4; Lord Hailsham 7 to 4; Maudling 5 to 1; Lord Home 6 to 1; Edward Heath and Iain Macleod 50 to 1. The key man is making the decision is Macmillan. It was thought he would probably send his "'advice" on the leadership by letter to the Queen. Two ironies emerged in this hectic 10 days of speculation and lobbying. showed| F FIREFIGHTERS QUELL ROOF BLAZE , 4,000-man night shift -will be } pumpers, ~ and aeriel and ladder trucks. CP trom AP-Reuters MARRAKECH, 2 ei Moroccan minister of informa- tion said today agreement has been reached with an Algerian delegation on an end to hostili- ties in the frontier dispute. He cautioned that details remain to be worked out, The minister, Abdelhadi Bou- taleb, spoke following a meet- ing of Moroccan and Algerian officials trying to settle fighting which has been going on since Monday in the northwest Sa- hara. He said: "We should achieve results to- day. There may be a joint state- ment. Everyone is in agreement for an end to hostilities, but there are still questions of de- tail to settle." Boutaleb added that a com- mission of Algerian and Moroc- can officiais mey meet at Oujda, near the Algerian fron- ier, to examine problems re- lated to the frontier fighting. He did not elaborate, The Algerian? delegation, headed by M'hammed Yazid, leaves Marrakech this after- noon for Algiers. BATTLE CONTINUES Meanwhile, Algerian officials at Colomb - Bechar, Algeria, about 30, miles from the dis- puted frontier area, said fight- ing was going on this morning. Some sources said Algerian troops had taken the offensive. Moroccan military headquar- OVERSEAS JET BOMBERS NEUTRALIZED FIRST By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment plans to switch half the RCAF strik force of low-level jet bombers in Europe to a non- ulclear role, informed sources say. This move will be part of the administration's emerging de. fence policy and will jibe with Prime Minister Pearson's promise to take Canada even- tually out of the field of nuclear weapons. No change is contemplated until 1966 at least in the defen- sive nuclear role of RCAF air defence command at home. Other parts of the new policy are a planned 10-per-cent re- duction in the manpoer strength of the armed forces, now at about 120,000, defence budgeting on a five-yeur basis with annual expenditures in the neighborhood of $1,500,000,000 and heavier expenditures on POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 new P and equipment. The defence department's main worry at the moment is finding a substitute shipbuilding HOSPITAL 723-2211 program to replace the $452,- 000,000 frigate plan which, in- a b formants say, will be cancelled on the grounds that military reasons for proceding with it are weak, Cost studies of heli- copter carriers and nuclear sub- marines have » been initiated. By January, the eight-squad- ron RCAF air division in Eu- rope will be equipped with 200 CF-104 low-level jet bombers In its present form, this plane can be used only to drop nu- clear bombs. Its radius of \ac- tion is some 500 miles and its targets would be railway yards, troop concentrations, missile sites and airfields. However, four of the squad- rons are based in France, which does not permit American nu- clear warheads on her territory. TO USE OTHER FIELDS The RCAF has made plans whereby. the CF104s in France would pick up their nuciear loads at the two Canadian or other bases in West Germany, Informants say the govern- ment feels it would make far more sense to convert the four squadrons in France to a con- ventional bombing role or all Cut RCAF Atom Arms eight to a dual nuclear-conven- tional role. They said there is another strong reason for doing this: NATO has been reviewing its defence strategy on the basis that even a limited nuclear strike against a conventional So- viet attack in Europ might will lead to all-out nuclear war. A Western response with con- ventional weapons would leave the nuclear RCAF air division idle, thus throwing away a de- fence project on which Canada has spent $468,000,000 for the plane alone. Informed sources said, .con- trary to previous statements on the subject by the RCAF, that the CF-104 can be converted to a conventional or dual role at reasonable cost. Informed sources. also said the government in formulating its new defence policy is deter- mined to strengthen the army by giving it more weapons and more mobility. One of the first things to done will be the. transfer more tanks from Canada be of to Europe, Only one-quarte: of the army's 176 operational tanks now are with the brigade. A source close to the cabinet said it is pointless to keep 132 tanks in Canada when the real need for them would be over- seas. The next move iikely will be acquisition of the American M-113 armored personnel car- rier for the brigade in West Ger- busy round of discussions with U.S. cabinet mentbers, ters. here said Wednesday. the fighting had spread north and south of Hassi-Beida and Tin- joub, two contested desert out- posts about 900 miles southwest of Algiers. 'The outposts appar- ently had changed hands sev- erg times since Tuesday when the fighting in the ill-defined border region broke out. An Algerian government spokesman said the Moroccan forces launched heavy attacks Wednesday, supported by tanks, artillery and jet planes. Guerrillas Kill 18 In Jakarta JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reut- ers)--Rebel killed riper | lh gong 5 aries" po Pa ona om aise 'Jakarta : toda: The reports described the a' tackers as members of the rebel "North Kalimantan (Borneo) National Army" and said they lost two dead and two wounded when they attacked and occu- pied the unnamed village. The broadcast echoed reports of continued tensions in Indo- nesia's confrontation with the British-backed month-old Mal- aysian federation of Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and Sabah (formerly North Borneo). U.S. See Canada Car Parts Program WASHINGTON (CP) -- Indus- try Minister C. M. Drury flew here from Ottawa today for a He was to see Commerce Sec- retary Luther Hodges to make a detailed outline of Canada's new automotive production in- centive program to which the U.S. is objecting. Later he was to confer with Undersecretary of State George Ball and with Defence 'Secre- the. U.S. is strongly opposed to the automobile scheme which would allow Canadian subsidi- aries of U.S. automobile manu- facturers a tariff rebate on that portion of imported parts equiv- alent to an increase in Cana- dian exports over the previous year. The scheme is expected to in- volve about $500,000,000 worth of annual imports of automobile parts, mostly from the U.S. or $300,000 Loss At South Plant Full production will likely re- Ley were. not threatened sume tonight in the. General|by fire. Motors south plant after Wed- nesday night's flash fire, a company spokesman said today. About 2,400 day shift workers stayed home today but the full back on the job tonight. Company officials met today to assess damage caused by the hour - long fire, Non - company sources estimated damage to be 'several hundred thousands of dollars". Fire was confined to a part of the cushion line and storage room, an area. of about 10,000 square feet. Part of the roof =e but walls were left in- ct. FLAMES 100 FEET HIGH Flames shot 100 feet into the' air and could be seen by fire- fighters a mile away as they raced to the scene. All city fire fighting equipment was used to battle the blaze, including three emergency wagon, There were no injuries among the 55 henge, gn or among employees escaped: from Thousands of gallons of water poured into the blazing building from the plant water sprinkler system inside and by city and company firefighters on the out+ side. Two feet of water flooded some offices, it was repre this morning, WATER PRESSURE DROPS. point = pumps were end P4 rt|boost. the pressure to the cessary 100 pounds. Fire Chief Ray Hobbs orci ed at the scene shortly after the 8.12 p.m. when alarm sounded. He had been a at the Oshawa Real Board Civic Night still wore a business 'shirt and tie durin, the firé. was est st and white Mopping up procedure ended at 3.05 a.m. today. In addition to fire damage, water caused extensive damage to the ges | supply. a reserve supply of cushions 'is kept in the north plant which Officials of the building. One report stated that a worker re-entered the burning building to find his coa and fellow-employees had to rescue him froh the dense smé spared inside or Outside the 8. At the height/ of the blaze, steel roof beams could be seen yecring and collapsing. Fire- fighters quickly brought the fire under control Hawrelak Nets Mayor's Post In Edmonton EDMONTON (CP) -- and adjacent innuendo and bitterness, years. Mr. Hawrelak, 49 - year - old businessman, takes 'over the $15,000-a-year post he gave up four years ago after a royal commission charged him with! gross misconduct in land deals. Drury also is scheduled to he made while mayor. march, by members of maverick William Hawrelak, one of Edmonton's most controversial politicians, Wednesday got back his old job as mayor of Alberta's capital city after a stormy. election campaign which seethed with Loser in the two-man race was Stanley Milner, 36-year-old oil company executive who sat on council for the last two MONTREAL ( (CP)--The Star says it has learned sore than 10,000 Canadian seamen plan to walk off their ships and n....n on Ottawa to. protest govern- ment. 'trusteeship of marsime unions. The march was ex- pected to take place within the next seven days, The newspaper says be the Seafarers' Interna- tional 'Union (Ind.), will paral- yse. the mation's commercial navigation on both coasts and across the Great Lakes. The Star says it also Jearned that arrangements have - been made by large unions in the United States to impose a boy- cott on Canadian shipping in U.S. ports the moment the trus- teeship is enforced. The government's trusteeship legislation, aimed at cleaning up the SIU and ending lawless- ness on the Great Lakes, has been approved by the Commons and now is before the Senate. The Star says the seamen do not consider their planned ac- tion a strike. A clause in the collective ba-r- gaining agreement with com ia og ge yw gn! -- ht to leave -a to take care legal problems ashore. tary Robert McNamara. Drury was expected to press McNamara to seek a restora- tion of U.S. congressional funds tinue to purchase the Canadian Caribou transport plane. The minister would make no comment in airport interviews on the Subjects for discussion, saying 'it would be inappropri- ate to make any statement be- fore the meetings." Canada was justified in seeking Asked whether he believed Canada was justified in seeking on the one hand U.S. acceptance of the automotive incentive pro- gram and on the other U.S. purchases of Caribou aircraft, Drury said: "Given the magnitude of our current account imbalance with the U.S., we have to explore all possible' Steps of improving it;" OPPOSES PLAN U.S. informants said earlier Hodges planned to tell Drury many. This will mean junking of the. Canadian Bobcat carrier after nearly 10 years of re- search and development and expenditures of some $7,100,000. Purchase of. the M-113 will de- pend in part on a production- sharing arrangement with the United States. Still in the planning stage are the means to provide the bri- seali't so that reinforcements could be moved overseas quickly in an mergency, try division to the defence of gade in Europe with an air and Canada committed an infan- Western Europe 13. years ago but only one-third of it--a bii- gade -- is actually stetioned there. the two reserve bri- YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Downtown Redevelopment Need Stressed ..... Page 13 GM Will Add More Workers ..... Page 13 Hint Expansion for Oshawa General Hospital ... Page 13 Mayor Deplores "Depressed Area' Designation . Page 13 Police Probing Rash Of Break-ins sosoese Page 3 Polish Veterans Plan the infantry brigade group ~ in gades are in Canada, Charter Anniversary Page 13 so that the U.S. Army can con-| gem MADAME NHU LOCKED OUT Arms akimbo, Mrs. Ngo Dinh Nhu, left, stands at the entrance to her father's Wash- ington home, last night as her daughter, Le Thuy, rings the doorbell At right is Mrs. Nhu's press secretary, To Ngoc Thach. No one answer- ed knocks at front and rear doors of the darkened house. Mrs, Nhu's fether Tran Van Chuong, former Viet Nam Ambassador to the U.S., was weached in New York City a ad newsmen and said he anned to return to Washing- ton today, but would not see, his daughter * 'under any cirt- cumstances", He said he saw no reason why he should not: see his srantdaughter,