ro =? Community Heart Beats In The Community Ch Oshawa Canes -- THOUGHT FOR TODAY Those bucket.seats are really sporty, but not everyone has the same size bucket. eee yi a een! ap re ae a oy ER i tne ae eee ae ee eee ah seiph cite sade ain ne ate ee es nts. ate vant WEATHER e REPORT Cloudy Thursday with sunny periods and a little warmer. Price B 10 Cents Per Copy he OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 Authorized os Ottawa THIRTY PAGES VOL. 92 -- NO. 254 Two Men Face Spy Charges After FBI Raid NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--Agents the United Nations in New York| chauffeur for Amtorg,' a Soviet of the FBI have capped seven|City also were apprehended by| government - sponsored agency months of around-the-clock work|the FBI but they were released|that handles U.S.-Russian trade with the arrests of an Amer-|because of their diplomatic im-| relations. He came to the United ioan electronics engineer,| munity. |States in March, 1962. cleared to handle top secret ma-| Seized in the Russians' car; U.S. Commissioner Theodore terial, and a Russian chauffeur|were a brief case that contained|Kiscaras ordered both men held on espionage charges. jinformation about a secret airjin $100,000 bail pending _action They were arrested Tuesday|force contract and a tiny docu-|/by a federal grand jury. They night after a rendezvous near|ment camera designed to oper-|pleaded not guilty. an old stone railway station injate from the car's cigarette! The two Russian di | Extra Day Ses | Englewood, N.J. lighter. Two Russian diplomats serv-- The accused spies, charged ing with the Soviet mission to| early today with "delivering to a foreign government informa- ve tion relating to the national de- fence of the United States," are John William Butenko, 38, of Orange, N.J., and Igor A. Iva- nov, 33, of New York City. Butenko, a bachelor of Rus- sian parentage, is a $14,700-a- year control administrator for the International Electric Cor- poration of Paramus, N.J. IS RED CHAUFFEUR Ivanov, married and father of a six-year-old daughter, was a In plomats; were brusque when released) from FBI custody here, cats the FBI's offer ot provide: them transportation. | "Th conduct of the FBI! M |agents was very rude," snapped| TORONTO (CP) -- Premier |Yuri A. Romashin, 38, third sec-|Robarts, frustrated in his plan jretary of the Soviet UN mis-|to have a short one-day special jsion. His companion, Gleb A.jsession of the legislature, is ex- Pavlov, 39, an attache of the|pected to push ahead today with |Soviet UN mission, had nothing|passage of legislation bringing jto say. [Ontario into the federal muni- | The FBI complaint alsojcipal development and ivan amed a staff member of the/|fund. |Soviet mission, Viadimir I. Ole-| The government had hoped to! nev, but he was not appre-|complete passage in a brief ses- 'hended, |sion but a combined Liberal and |New. Democratic party opposi- prorogation preceding the Sept.| 25 election, hope earlier the agenda could be cleaned up ina few hours, rush in connection with the mu- |nicipal loan bill was to get it jinto effect by Oct. 13 so muni- cipalities could get in on their share of the federal funds this winter. He convened the legisla- The premier had expressed Premier Robarts said the '|seeking clarification from U.S,|before the trusteeship beeame j|unions as to whether they in-jeffective, Ritchie said he had in 'jassistant to St ate Secretary|judge fined a labor union local | US. Cracks Down On Ship Picketing WASHINGTON (CP - AP) --,company vessel, John Ericsson, The U.S. state department is|which had started in Chicago tend to respect the Canadianjmind the week-end picketing government trusteeship over Ca-|that took place in Supreior, Wis. nadian maritime unions. jand Buffalo, N.Y. ~ George P. Delaney, special; At Chicago a U.S. federal Dean Rusk, said in an interview|$12,000 Tuesday for its refusal Tuesday he is deeply concerned|to load wheat on the Ericsson, over reports of sporadic picket-| The judge, James B. Parsons ing in U.S. ports against Cana- : : 5 !ture just one day after it be- tion forced the legislature into|.ame legailly, possible. sitting today, starting at 10) He said a previous special a.m. j Liberal House Leader Far- quhar Oliver charged Premier Robaris. with attempting to| Ben Bella - Hassan block discussion on important * public business when the pre! Reach Agreement mier made a motion to waive! debate on the throne speech. | | BAMAKO, Mali (AP) -- A Liberal amendment con- President Ahmed Ben Bella demning the Progressive Con- of Algeria and Moroccan servative government for failing) King Hassan II were re- to allow debate time was de-| ported today to have reach- feated 73-28, But time had run} ed agreement on the basis of out and the House was ad-| a compromise formula set- journed until today. tling their border conflict. The newly-elected legislature) The formula was said to also will be asked today to re-| have been suggested by Em- constitute committees dealing) peror Haile Selassie of Ethi- with consumer credit and mu-| -opia. dian ships and will seek to in- nicipal Jaw, which expired 'with > 6 IGOR A. IVANO tervene with U.S. union heads "to reason with the institutions involved." Earlier, Canadian Ambassa- dor Charles Ritchie said he ex- pressed the concern of the Ca- nadian government to the state department over "'continuation" of picketing of Canadian ships in U.S. ports. While there appeared to be no current episode of picketing ex- cept that of the upper lakes Snow Covers Ginnys Path HALIFAX (CP) -- Hurricane Ginny moved over the Gulf of St. Lawrence early today on a course. for the west coast of Newfoundland after lashing the Maritime provinces with winds up to 100 milés: an hour. In her wake, she left uprooted trees, disrupted communi- cations, stalled shipping and da- maged buildings. There were no reports of deaths or injuries. he weather office at Gander, Nfld., predicted Ginny would die in the North Atlantic. Newfoundland's western shore Was expected to receive winds gusting to 60 miles an hou while the rest of the province? was to get easier treatment. Th storm swept across the Northumberland Strait after its onslaught. on mainland Nova Scot'a and attacked Prince Ed- ward Island with ferocity de- scribed by veteran Alberton HELP The Chest CLIMB __ 261,800 250,000 225,000 200,000 ___175,000 __150,000 125,000 _| 100,000 fisherman as "the worst in |memory." But the blow appar- jently did little damage on the island, Earlier Tuesday, two barns and a two-storey home were engulfed by wind-fanned flames near Amherst, destroying one |of Nova Scotia's best (@air y farms. CAUSES SNOWFALL Northern New Brunswick did not receive as severe a lashing from wind and rain as other parts .of the Maritimes, but a cold front and Ginny combined' |to drop from two to 12 inches of ,snow in many sections. Residents of northern and western New Brunswick were surprised by the sudden arrival of winter. The region had bee! basking in the Warm fall sun last week, with temperatures as high as 76 degrees. Tuesday, Edmundston, reported about snow Ginny produced 90 - mile - an |hour gusts at Saint John, N.B.,| where trees were uprooted, basements flooded and 'the 50- foot steeple of an Anglican| church toppled. Several chim-| neys were blown down N.B., 12 inches of Secrecy Hides Baker Details WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ators delving into the business affairs of Robert G. Baker are working behind a barrier of se-! union, The union is Local 418 of the Grain Workers Union. For more than six months members of the local have refused to pour grain into the holds of vessels owned by Upper Lakes Shipping Lim- ited of Toronto. The local members said they were acting in sympathy with the Seafarers' International Un- ion. The company once drew its crews from the ranks of the SIU but switched last year to the Canadian Maritime Union. That caused a flare-up of inter-| union tension. | Parsons fined Local 418 $3,000 for each of four days--Oct.4, 7, 11 and 26--on which members- declined to put wheat aboard the John Ericsson. Parsons announced that a fine! of $500 a day was being set im- mediately for continued refusall of members of the local to obey| a June 14 court order to end a| secondary boycott on handling| cargoes for Upper Lakes ships.| The court allowed the prev-| ious fines totalling $14,000 against the local to stand. That means the local owned $26,500 as of Tuesday if its appeal to a higher court is lost. Irving Friedman, lawyer for the local, said its income is only| $1,500 a month, | The previous fines were grad-| uated from $100 to $200 and ul-| timately to $500 a day. They were decreed when the local de- clined to load the Howard L. Shaw, also owned by Upper Lakes, which arrived in Chicago April 22 and sailed for Fort Wil-| am without a cargo on Sept.! PEARSON TELLS PARTY RALLY U.S. Has Key To Cleanup Of SIU OTTAWA (CP) -- Main ob-|that frankly," Mr. Pearson said. jective for the federal govern-|"Naturally I wish we.had not ment in the Great Lakes labor|done so, But they were not ir- war is to "clean up" the Sea-|retrievable mistakes, On the farers' International Union in|contrary, we recognized them, Canada, Prime Minister Pear-|have corrected them and have sion 'Frustrates Robarts session in 1955 lasted only one day, and the throne speech de- bate was waived then. He at- to sell the public the impres- sion he was trying to block de- bate on public business. "I don't know how mary times I have stood here and said we will stay here until the business is complete," he said. "Tt sounds trite, but I say it at least every three days." Mr. Oliver charged the pre- mier with attempting to close off debate so that he would not be put on the spot on the Can- ada Pension Plan. He said Ontario is run by the cabinet for 10 months of the year and by the members of the legislature for only two months. The House should sit longer to deal with the complex issues. "The province is not a corner grocery store any more. It is a billion-dollar business." His remarks were echoed by New Democratic Leader Don- ald MacDonald who also charged the government was going back on its word by not having ¥ Eimer Sopha (L-- ... .ry), Iwho seconded. the non-confi- dence motion, declared North- ern Ontario was restless, par- ticularly in view of mine lay- offs, and it was no wonder that members complained of inade- quate time to discuss business. "We insist on the opportunity to meet here," he said. Mr. Robarts said he was not in favor of fall sessions because of the difficulties they pre- sented to civil servants and be- cause of the distractions inher- ent in the holiday season. He said he intended to call the next session early jn Janu ary insead of the usual middle son said Tuesday night. 'learned from them." sessions, Two other targets are to keep ships moving, especially with) record wheat-export traffic and| "to prevent these labor disputes! poisoning our relations with the United States." , "This means--I wish to speak Pl OK very frankly--full acceptance by an the U.S. government and by the} U.S. labor organizafions of the action that the Canadian Parlia-|_ UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- ment has taken to deal with aj Creation of nuclear-free zones in Canadian problem," Mr. Pear.|some areas of the world as a son told the National Federation|™eans of halting a spread of nu- of Liberal Women of Canada.|°!¢a' weapons was given lim- It was his first address to aloes, bag Soh Tuesday by the major party gathering since his| "© oiee , minority government took office| .canede, a h mesele Pp after the April 8 general elec-| Oe er eee: aCe tion Se tae sKTLOCT chashas : | n _ His remarks were contained | qualifications and the Us. di- a text ate tag issued to rectly ruled out Europe, Asia ~ Bond pe sei tga " ane the rae regions for outla move quickly and "in moving| without other pehiat| te quickly we inevitably fell into|ment steps that would maintain some mistakes, I acknowledge | the East-West military balance. Pension Plan In '64 If 'Best' C OTTAWA (CP) -- Health Min- ister Judy LaMarsh turned on her pension plan critics Tuesday night in the Commons, Agreement with Ontario re-| |mains essential, but the por-| The next step would be the table, contributory Canada Pen- sion Plan may still be approved} by Parliament in time to meet}! the original schedule to pay ben-| jefits by January, 1966, she said./only three weeks in the current While she cheerfully acknow-| ledged her own lack of patience, | onditions Met She gave this information: An Ontario-federal technical | surances of co - operating to committee, set up at the last/mesh its provincial plan with federal - provincial conference, |ine federal proposal. would meet this week. At least one of the two main provinces is required to make the federal scheme work, Miss LaMarsh re-emphasized Tues- day night. The Canada Pension Plan would supplement the universal imenthly old age pension just raised to $75 from $65 for per- sons aged 70 or more. jence -- has given qualified as- federal - provincial conference beginning Nov. 25 and even with unanimity there it would take a week to settle details, leaving parliamentary session. Further, the bill would be re- Atom-Free Areas d By US. to the UN's main political com- mittee, said that creation of nu- clear-free zones in those three areas would upset this military balance, increase tensions and promote instability. Canada's Gen. E. L. M. litical committee in general de- agreement for a nuclear - free give one side a new advantage' in the military balance. Stelle's speech appeared to. leave only .Africa and Latin America as free-zone areas ac- ceptable to the United States, although he mentioned neither directly. Burns. said Canada wel- comed 'a Brazilian suggestion that Latin America become a nuclear-free zone. Both Stelle and Burns also at- tached two other qualifications: 1. That the idea for such a zone must be initiated within the area and freely accepted by all coun- tries there; and 2. That there must be arrangements for ade- quate inspection for verification that commitments made were being carried out. Judge Quashes tacked the opposition for trying} of February, thus making up); the 17 days taken by the old fall}; U.S. Ambassador Charles C. ; Stelle, in a major policy speech) | Burns, also addressing the po-| * bate on disarmament, said any] | crecy they say is essential in|the government did not intend |ferred to a parliamentary com- the early stages. of the investi-|t© Stampede into action which|mittee so that representatives | gation. is misunderstood and against including the | Baker, the on time page boy which there has been a deliber- of insurance an who achieved wealth and power ate lobby of misinformation. as secretary to the Senate's) Miss LaMarsh indicated that Democratic majority, resignedjeven with the most favorable|came after a demand by Stan-|i under fire Oct. 7. ies could be heard. 75,000 50,000 25,000 Start "* |with others in the inquiry. is chairman of the Senate rules|ment. | committee, said it was neces-| She spoke to an attentive|sion with the pension legisiation. | sary to take testimony behind House of Commons in her first! closed doors at this' time avvid hurting innocent persons since merely because of the subject association|duced--in a one-da last July 18. was opposing "'lobby"|employers and employees would id trust compan-| contribute equal amounts and benefits would start to flow by| The pension - plan statement! January, 1966, at the rate of an conditions, the pay-as-you-go|ley Knowles (NDP -- Winnipeg! month, rising to a maximum Senator B. Everett Jordan,|/plan won't become law until|/North Centre) that the govern-|$.00 more monthly on top of the North Carolina Democrat who} 1964 in a new session of Parlia-|ment provide a firm assurance|basic $75 within 10 years when that it will proceed at this ses-|the plan would be in full swing. Sabotage Trial | PRETORIA, South Africa (Reuters) -- Transvaal Judge Quartus de Wet today ordered the quashing of all indictments against all those accused in the current sabotage trial. Eleven defendants were origi- nally accused of plotting t he 'overthrow of Premier Hendrick' One other feature of the 1966|/Verwoere's Nationalist govern-| Under the federal proposal nitial extra $10 per individual a choice olution, guerrilla warfare and intro- own pension plan and Ontario-- open to persons aged 65 to start an armed invasion of the coun-| undecided about what y debate-- | after consultation at a. Septem- | receiving pensions smaller than|try. All had faced the death] wear for her first Hallowe'en. ber federal = provincial confer-'those available at age 70. suis penalty. MAN FROM MARS American actor Orson Welles and his wife, Paola Mori, leave their London hotel last night -- 25 years after his famous dramatiza- tion on a radio program of an adaptation of H. G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds", The broadcast on Oct. 30, 1936, described an invasion from Mars and caused a mass scare in the eastern United States. (AP Wirephoto) Federal Electio: Imminent -- Fulton VAN » ER (CP) -- E. vie Futon, British Columbia provincial Conservative party leader, said Tuesday that a fed- eral election is imminent. Public faith in the Liberal party has eroded since they took office six months ago, Mr. Fulton told a Vancouver-Quadra meeting. "They have made ea bigger mess of our financial affairs and of our foreign relations in thsee six months they've been in office than any other party , sons were arrested Tuesday CHICAGO (AP)--Twelve. per- night, cracking what federal in- vestigators said was a $10,000,- 000-a-year narcotics mng which controlled 80 per cent of the dope traffic in Chicago. Most of the narcotics were smuggled through Canada. Among those arrested was a reputed henchman of the Chi- cago Nostra "family," Americo (Pete) DePietto. Charles G. Ward, chief of the Chicago office of the Federal Narcotics Bureau, said 35 ounces of heroin estimated at. $17,500 was seized. Ward said the arrests, which he described as the most im- portant narcotics seizures. in Chicago history, came after a federal grand jury returned two suppressed indictments naming 41 persons with narcotics viola- tions. The ring, which Ward said was controlled by Cosa Nostra, had raked in more than $30,- 000,000 in narcotics sales since 1960. REPORTS ONLY TO BOSS Ward said DePietto, a resi- dent of suburban Lombard, is the "narcotics officer". of the Chicago Cosa Nostra "family,'* and @mswers only to reputed| crime boss Momo. Salvatore (Moe) Giancana. Mobster Joseph Valachi has toki a senate rackets subcom- mittee that Giancana is head of the Chicago "family." DePietto and 10 others were arrested in Chicago. Thirteen named in the indictents are in prison or are free on bond for other offences. The remaining 17 are being sought in Chicago, St. Louis and Cleveland. DePietto is free on $40,000 has ever made in six years." CHICAGO POLICE BRE $10 MILLION DOPE RING Believe Nostra Henchman Netted Ward said the drugs: were ob- tained from sources in France and Italy and smuggled into the United States through Canada. Ward said the arrests, which would affect seven major dope rings in the city, came at this time because federal agents had shot down dope pedlar Nolan Mack Friday. He said a longer delay would have given other narcotics henchmen a chance to go underground, Guerrilla Raid Smashes Crack Viet Force SAIGON (AP) -- Communist guerrillas smashed an experi- enced South Vietnamese force Tuesday and probably captured the three U.S. Army advisers with the 120-man group. The three Americans, listed The operation cost namese special forces mated 20 killed, 30 wounded 12: missing presumed tured. Heavy weapons lost ine cluded a large mortar. Viet bond. Cong losses were unknown. zone would have to include as-| surance that.the step would not} | WHERE IS MY PRINCE CHARMING? . With the night of hobgoblins Since the July 18 debate, Que-|inauguration--if it works out|ment by planning an armed rev-| and ghosts just one day away, to|lengthy pension plan statement/bec has chosen to operate itsithat way--would be a little Miss April Jones is still she'll It vou should see a little eirl in a hamster-drawn pumpkin chariot Thursday night, you'll know April decided to dress up as Cinderella. While she considered the pros and cons of playing this role, she was } ame photographed by her father, Oshawa Times photographer Bruce Jones, and by Brian McCall of the Oshawa Times, Whitby Bureau, '