THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some motorists know how to drive at. only two speeds -- lawful and awful. he Oshawa Sime erent a gee Le sessile WEATHER REPORT 'Cloudy and turning cooler Saturday. Scattered thunder- storms tonight, Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 92 -- NO. 274 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1963 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottowa and for payment of Postage. in Cash. TWENTY PAGES | Cambod May Get French Aid PARIS (AP) -- High yell dete say they would consider) officials said today they had no|his situation sympathetically-- knowledge of a request for aidjif he did ask. : | from Cambodia but said that if} 1t seemed likely the two coun-, such a request did come it'tries would reach agreement| 1d. ALLAS SNIPER'S BULLET | LLS PRESIDENT KENNEDY would be considered sympathet-|and that France would aid a - -- F ha li \former French colony ~The nee 2 p DEO RS he French official in a post-| elling a troubled neutralist roa "ora sam vad ae| LObOr Jumps On e Switch At BOAC en anew, ally forint re: Such French action would also fuest had been received. said: fit in well with President i ihere bas not been any aid Charles de Gaulle's desire to ex- asked by Cambodia to my know- tend French influence toward ledge. If a request were re- the position she once held in LONDON (CP) -- A sudden change in the high command of "|the debt-ridden BOAC was seen ;\today as a new source of polit- ical ammunition for the Labor siete however, i Pages Og international affairs and parti- etuied in s eympathetc spirit" lary in Southeast Asi, there in making it clear that a Sihanouk obviously welcomes call for help from Prince Noro-|2 Teappearance of French in dom Sihanouk would probably|fluence since, he says of Presi receive favorable reception "\dent de Gaulle, "no one could ge de thay accuse (him) of practising im-|'°4! | There have been reports that) erialist or neo - cotofiialist pol party. line with its sister, British Eu- ropean Airways. He said Guth- rie was to produce a financial] 'oe /formula for the airline within a} lyear He confirmed that A. H, Mil- Sihanouk already has addressed] iting here." This was a general reaction|ward, 58, a BEA chief execu-| a request for French aid in the : : te bilativ .'as Sir Giles Guthrie, the 47-/tive, will succeed Lord Douglas) form of teachers to train en-| His comments briefly pre- of Kirtleside, 70, as Bea chair- ».| year-old merchant banker who gineers and technicians to take,Ceded a Communist offer of sur is the new overlord of British the place of Americans now|Port. Peking radio announced it Overseas: Airways Corporation, leaving. In addition, he was re-|Would give full support to Cam-)_ ee ts nis new role with a ported to be interested in trucks|bOdia if she should become the FToRsenge aatament: part-time directorships on the and armored cars for the Cam-|SUbject of "armed invasion in-) i ae : me board of each airline bodian military stigated by the United States' 'I want to see BOAC run on|_~ _ : The reports came following, and its vassals." a commercial basis and I think) Sihanouk's renunciation of $30,- overseas air fares must come| : 31 Officers Baby Dies man, Aiming at closer co-oper- ation between BOAC and BEA,| Guthrie and Milward will hold 000,000 a year in American aid tf many more people which he cut off this week wi y : Aviation Minister Julian Am- ISN'T ASKING ery, presenting a government Following his action he was| Di Ms d B white paper on the pubticy| UJ d Wh I quoted by Cambodia's otfical| ISMISSe: y owned airline to the House of n er ee | news agency as saying he wou be happy to receive French aid in teachers, technicians and old military equipment, but that he |Commons Thursday, announced| | L ed |Guthrie will make £15,000 ($45,-) Viet Council 000) a year compared with inc Of Truck Lp) i £8,500 a year earned by Sir! was not soliciting. it. SAIGON (Reuters) -- The|Matthew Slattery, 61, who re- Sihanouk's published inter-/South Viet Nam military revo-|signed the BOAC chairmanship; A two-year-old boy was killed view and the official French at-|jytionary council today dis-/when he learned his successor|this morning on Parklane street, ti ude of receptiveness ex-/missed 31 high-ranking military/had been selected. j Oshawa. pressed today left both in some-lofficers from their posts and' Labor Leader Harold Wilson| He was Christopher Diederich- thing of a dilemma -- unless| gave them leave without pay for charged there is a "'real crisis|sen, of 842 Parklane, the son of Sihanouk makes formal appli-|an indefinite period. of confidence" between the gov-/Mr. and Mrs, Carl Diederich- cation for French help. Viet Nam press ernment and the airline lsen. He was run. over by. a de- : The official but/s At present Sihanouk says he|nows agency said actions of the Amery rejected his demand for|livery truck making a delivery would welcome French help but i to the house next to his home : officers during their period of| publication of a report on BOAC would not ask for it, and the!service are under investigation.|finances prepared earlier this|He is the fourth traffic victim The officers, including one| Year by London accountant John )in Oshawa this year |brigadier-general, were alt re- Corbett, Police said that the truck Red China May iver, 24-year - old Robert, garded as having been favored| Amery's white paper attacked] BOAC,|James, of Oshawa boulevard "Ses s ~ Offer Aid To body of 'murder victim Mr: by the late President Ngo Dinh|the management of Diem and several occupied ma-|Which is £80,000,000 in the red,/north, chased jor military or. administrative|for ineffective financial direc- f posts. The Diem regime was|tion and control but' rejected ousted by @ military coup Nov,|'al this time" proposals for} "1, backing in. jtoday of trying tO make | _._. REMOVE MURDER VICTIM Ss. | Evaristo Bembich from her _ tered, lying in a pool of blood. Soviets Reject Protest On Autobahn Delays th thildren| MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet)hours } away from the Fer) lt poe es Union accused the United States Apmesicnnt refused to dismountjonly if more than30 men were ; the/from He made the delivery then be-| ules for Soviet poacing of West- counted. jmerging of the world-wide air-|gan to drive off when he heard|@™ convoy traific on the Berlin 7 Shots Also Hit Texas Governor FLASH DALLAS -- President Kennedy died at 1 p.m. CST 2 p.m, EST. DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--Presi- dent Kennedy was given blood transfusions today at Parkland Hospital in an effort to save his life after he and Governor John Conally of Texas were shot in an assassination attempt. Hospital officials said they had given the president a trans- fusion of B positive blood from the bank and were calling for fresh blood of that type to have Piit ready if additional transfu- s/sions were needed. DALLAS (AP)--A sniper shot 2 President Kennedy and Gover- nor John Conally of Texas in downtown Dallas today. U.S. Representative Albert Thomas of Texas said both were still alive in a hospital emergency room. : The secret service said the in the back seat of his car. Blood was on his head. Mrs. Kennedy cried, 'Oh, no!" and tried to hold up his head. Conally, remained half-seated, slumped to the left. There was blood on his face and forehead. The president and the gover- nor were rushed to Parkland Hospital near the Dallas Trade - Mart, where Kennedy was to have made a speech. Associated Press photogra pher James W. Altgens said he saw blood on the president's head. Altgents said he heard two shots but thought someone was shooting fireworks until he saw the blood on the president. Altgens said he saw no one with a gun. Associated Press reporter president remained in the emer-|Jack Bell asked Kenneth O'Con- gency room and the governor|"ell, presidential assistant, was moved to the general oper-|Whether Kennedy was dead. ating room of Parkland Hospi-|O'Connell gave no answer. tal, a Bell said Kennedy was trans- One secret service man was|ferred to an ambulance. He lay overheard telling another that|0M @ seat of the car. there was no need to] Bell reported three shots were move the president because|fired as the motorcade entered emergency facilities were en-|the triple underpass which lads tirely adequate in the emer-|to th oe Freeway husband has been charged with the capital home Thursday night after Her 41-year-old she was found, her head bat- slaying. --CP Wirephoto gncy room, to P; Two Roman Catholic priests} Pan n were summoned to the emer- The rhe : and be!aboard, not counting drivers and tea Toom where the president coiceaie an Or tie . lcodrivers, They also refused to| #Y- a ; the hospital peed The Soviet repiy renewed the|lower their truck tailgates to| One priest was identified as a . Nov, 4-5 because the|mount for a Soviet head count their vehicies Even at high speech it took ~ Cambodians ", nomic austerity and - increased PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (Reuters)--The prospect of eco- overtures from Communist China loomed today for the tiny Southeast Asian kingdom of! Cambodia. Government officials were awaiting delivery of an ex- pected U.S. note formally agree- Leave without pay was a pun-, ishment often handed out by} Diem himself to officers whose loyalty he suspected. It pre- vents the officers from taking other work since they remain technically members of the Backbencher's Bill Killed By becca > : me aeinna qs . 3 ; ith! icount. |Father Huber. Mrs. Diederichse a _jautobahn. The Russians warnedjthreat of more interference with|permit a head T, : One wheel of the track had omitey would not permit this. Western troop convoys on the) The Western powers spelled) Malcolm Kilduff, acting White over her baby's head. A Russian note to the U.S,|110 - mile lifeline highway be-| out this procedure to the Soviet|House press secretary, said that | The child was taken to Osh- government rejected an Ameri-|tween West Berlin and West!Union Oct. 29. se priests had been "asked |awa General Hospital but was|can protest over the stalling of/Germany. The Western coun-| During the six-week period|{™ : ; dead on arrival. a U.S. Army convoy for 42/tties insist they have the right). Oct. 10 ber of other It was not immediately known = pis : to move on the autobaiin as they 'ince Oct. 1", a number of other) vino made the request for the like. Western convoys with less than] priests. nearly five minutes to: get the car to the ambulance entrance of the hospital. Reporters saw Kennedy lying flat on his face on the seat of his car, Bell said a man and a woman armed forces, but without pay. The Kremlin note said: Early-Risers | JAPANESE ELECTION 30 passengers have made the "The claims of the American|autobahn trip without interfer- _ Kennedy apparently was shot in the head. He fell face down scrambling on the upper level of a walkway overlooking the underpass, | Italian Banks Hit By Strike ing to the end of American economic, cultural and military aid which has amounted to $356 ,000,000 since 1955. The American agreement to OTTAWA (CP) -- Early-ris- jing Conservative MPs killed a |Liberal backbencher's bill in the Commons banking and com- Premier jauthorities to establish at their! ence | |discretion the range of duties) The Russian' note charged] and manner of action of Soviet/that the Americans '"artifically representatives at the check-| nrovoked" the delay Nov. 4-5 point in checking American! 5 Ikeda's Purchase By TCA poy jand that it was a result of '"'un- jServicemen are :n general ab-/fortunate actions" by U.S. offi solutely untenable cers in charge of the convoy Since Oct. 10, the Russians|It said "some merce committee today by an end aid came in response to a renunciation of aid by the head of state, Prince Norodom Siha- nouk. ROME (AP) -- Services in 8-to-2 vote, jcommercial and savings banks) The pill to amend the Bank- hog a Italy were oe male Act was sponsored by| : today by a strike of more than|}jygene Whalen (L Essex The American note also was 199,00 tellers, clerks and other| South). cos expected to reject charges by|employees, Unions ordered the} Margin Reduced 2) ir nein flue TOKYO (AP) -- Despite in-jheld at dissolution. Political ex-|Convoys and one British convoy|spark off dangerous incidents.' roads by moderate leftists and|perts had predicted they would|at Soviet checkpoints on the! Sihanouk that the United States Y | In a Surprise procedural independents, Premier Hayato!score sizable gains, autobahn because the Agere *\24-hour walkout to support de- : , Ikeda's conservatives main- commanders refused to was involved in the activities of a WG % i ; ye, Conservativ , : sE EYE 1S the anti-government Khmer Se-|™2N4S for a cost-of-living bonus, | Move, Con: EVESVE PLEMbers Of aired overwhelming control of RAISE EYEBROWS their men to be counted, i (F: rc bodi ve./pupervisory personne] main.|the committee caught the Lib- the Japanese parliament in fi-| The biggest surprise came rel eres Campodta) move. tained limited emergency serv-|¢'als short-handed. Terny Nu- election returns|{f9m the moderate Democratic ment, ae Do ee . lgent (PC -- Edmonton - Strath-| : Socialists, who split with the So- Communist China pledged "all, ' cona) moved that further con- nal unofficial ay. Though Ikeda appeared ninlicte 4 5 ay,|60 permit their troops to dis-|with the American side." st J 1 "a : jcc I to|Cialists in 1959 and, until today,|" av | brs a bp if gs Ae a unions have been He-| iteration of the bil be dropped) yo. wo andate to con-|4d appeared to go steadily! es De jmanding an annual bonus equallang the motion carried on a fave Won a ma downhill. gated by the U.S., South Viet)t, 195 per cent of monthly pay,|straight tw y tinue at the helm of the pro-)" When they broke from the So- . Nam or Thailand. But Cambo-|,., ..! " et eo maty ADEE Western government, the win- ; é Soci t but. not less than 140,000-lire] py, pill ' oe ; Ad ,|.|Clalists, the Democratic Social- ] dia has no intention of allow- soa) | ar al 7 e bill, given approval inining margin of his Liberal- ists had 40 members. This was! , ing bases to be set up on its|' woo msing '!vin8 principle in the Commons after|Democratic Party in Thurs: whittled to 17 in 1960 and fell to territory by Communist guer-| ©? one hour's second-reading de- day's election of a new lower 14 by dissolution. In Thursday's rilla Viet Cong forces fighting) Banking associations claim/bate last May, was designed toj}house fell below his expecta- balloting, the party won "93, ' the South Vietnamese govern- the present labor contract is|protect producers of primary | tions. sets. . : Oo Oup e ment, an of ficial! statement|valid until the end of 1964 and| products whose goods are in the : a The final unofficial returns) broadcast by the 'Cambodian'contains satisfactory sliding-/hands of a processor when the| gave the Liberal-Democrats 283) national radio said today. scale salary provisions. processor goes bankrupt. seats in the 467 - seat ruling ; ae x : : : aoe -- lower house. This was 33 less than the 296 won in eg and three short of the 286 the con-|. ; servatives held at dissolution SOU Me fe 'i i three weeks ago. The disparity in the 1960 elec- The other gains were by the Communists, whq upped. their! seats to five ro three, and the independents advanced from six in 1960, and two at dis- BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP) |was "dragged" across the liv- An elderly couple was boundjing room as the hoods escorted hand and foot and held prisoner|the couple to the upstairs por- in a clothes closet for more than/tion of the house. Once there, \three hours Thursday | night/Mrs. Gordon was bound with while four hooded gunmen ran-|neckties to a chair and placed |sacked their fashionable home.|in a closet off the master bed- Ikeda had asked for 300 seats|tion figures and those at the and confidently ex pected at|'issolution is due to deaths and) 4, estimated $6,000 in jew.|Toom. Mr. Gordon was bound "| |with neckties in another bed- least 290. resignations, Japan has no by | 50 in m Iekda's main opposition, the|€l¢ctions to fill such vacancies, anbltg siaveamane: beers gti room before being carried to the Socialists, who lean towards) The sag in conservatives'|rrom the home of Mr. and Mrs,|f0Ur-by-eight-foot cubicle. he Red China, won 144 seats, one|VOler appeal may spell trouble | isan) Gordon '|thieves then put the couple in 'less than the 145 chalked up in |for Eeipcts Ke hig ection 10.) The counle, belleved 10 be 'in the closet and placed a bed and | h a yi; den arty decides who | ji | gai 1960 and seven more than a eR, tee tad bemeet onitheir 70s, were released from other haan against the door. a heavy popular endorsement to|the closet by their son Donald strengthen his hand against|/when he returned home about other contenders. State Minister|1:30 a.m. after a business trip TURNS UP IN BRUSSELS Congolese Military Ousts Soviet Envoy LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo The Congolese government has --| | shirtsleeves and without a neck-,any new diplomats the Russians tie or shoes, was taken to the might want to 'send. But he Helicopter expelled the Soviet diplomatic plane by a Congolese military warned the Russians will not. be Eisaku Sato is his leading rival.|to Toronto. The couple had been mission from Leopoldville for escort. He was one of two $0-|allowed to again maintain such . The next party balloting >is in/in a small closet since 10:30 the second time in three years viet diplomats arrested and de-\a large staff. Crash Kills July p.m, Thursday, Hing Premier Cyrille Adoula says tained by the Congolese, Adoula indicated he was About 71 per cent of the elig-| Mr: Gordon, Sr., had freed - is not severing diplomatic relations with Moscow The premier charged the Rus- sians Thursday with subversive Voronin arrived unannounced|aware the Russians might re- in Brussels this morning and an|taliate by breaking diplomatic employee of the Soviet govern-| relations. ment Acroflot Airlines had to in-| Adoula said he did not have ible voters, a bit low for Ja-| himself and was knocking the pan, cast ballots. The vote to-|panels from the closet door 3 Officers talled 41,500,000. _|when his son. entered the house. NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- An ; : j 8 sl "I: felt things were not nor- dealings with anti-government form the Soviet embassy of his/ Sufficient proof to support z sa : 4 - ' 4 Solus BS | exiles across the Congo River presence. Embassy representa-| Charges by members of his ae pocorn PL lla 0) Anti-Polio Firm oe ' grove uP, e ela in neighboring Brazzaville ives hurried over and kept him/ermment that other Communist-|¢rashed in a | louse," Donald said, 'The |bloc nations and the United|ing five senior army and air! Arab Republic also were trying force officers, to subvert his government. Killed were Air Vice-Marshal The expulsion order came two|E. W. Pinto, air .officer com- He said that the Soviet mis- sion was persona non grata -- 10t acceptable--and ane Soviet jiplomat was placed aboard ar |drapes were drawn closed and |the car was gone from the ga- jtage."' After stepping over "a |pile of furs" valued by him at away from newspaper men un- til he took a Soviet airliner to Moscow several hours later Sued For $ Million PORTLAND, (AP)--Dr. Ore The other Soviet diplomat Western C d;|Paul 0. Ritcher, 53, head of the "4 - Brussels. Bel ; A é : '\days after Vorozin and Miakot-/manding estern _ Command; | ds eoteisy | $8,000 ; egg bound for Brussels, F press attache Yuri Miakotnykh,| oi), were manhandled and ar.|Lt.-Gen. Vikram Singh, corps entomology department at bad ey at pied ie The R : sibs ; vithi epecled to be expelled rested on. their return frem|commander Western Command;|gon State University, filed a diilevear Ake Gordon' aided ope _ The --- assy eee within' 24 hours Brazzaville, (@ capital of The Lt-Gen. Daulat Singh, general/$1,000,000 damage suit Thursday] (ie "and 'released bis mea iellor, Boris" Voronin, in .his Adoula' set no deadline for| Congo republic officer commanding West-/against a manufacturer and dis- os . PP : He said his father saw the Soviet Ambassador Sergei Nem- Officials said documents foundjern Command: Maj.-Gen. N. K./tributor of Sabin oral vaccine, i n tchina and his 100-member mis-jon them proved "'irrefutably"!D. Nanavati and Brig. S$, R. Ob-|Type Ill 3 men, wearing khaki balaclavas, sion to leave. He said this|that they had been in contact/eroi. Ritcher contends 'in the suit)with only their eyes visible, would be covered in orders] with anti-government exiles, led) The French-built Alouette hel-|that taking the vaccine caused|Standing in the living room of from the security police and|py Christophe Gbenye, head of|icopter crashed in the Poonch/him to contract polio, the house. 'Dad apparently CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 added he thought the Russians] a' Lumimbist group, and Andre! area of the state of Jammu and! The suit names Charles Pfizer|brushed one of them in some oka Rie boulsiiega probably would be given 48/Luybaya, a Kasai extremis t}Kashmir, killing all six persons;and Company as manufactirer|way later and they knocked him| a FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 OUTS jleader 'implicated in a recent/aboard, including the 'pilot, alof the vaccine. Northwest Drug|down and one of them pulled al ® \doula said his -government|plot to arrest or murder mem-idefence ministry spokesman|Company, a Washington state/gun."' HOSPITAL 723-2211 'will consider the credentials of!bers of Adoula's government. said. firm, was named distributor. 4 Mr. Gordon said his mother| . % It. warned that "'the entire re- CONVOY! sponsibility for possible unde- allow | sirable consequences of the vio- lation by American servicemen The Western powers said their|of control procedure at Soviet long-established procedure was|checkpoints will rest entirely +| OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson announced in the Commons today Trans-Canada Air Lines will buy six Douglas DC-9 jet aircraft, and touched joff a stormy shouting match |with Opposition Leader Diefen- |baker. | Mr. Pearson read a lengthy statement to the House about TCA's choice of the Douglas aircraft, the. prospective work load for the Canadair Limited plant in Montreal, and the re- tention of TCA turbo-prop over- haul facilities in Winni- peg. Parts of the DC-9 are to be made by de Havilland Air- 'craft Company in Toronto. The DC-9 has two rear- mounted jet engines and will carry 70 passengers at speeds of better than 500 miles an hour. | When Mr. Diefenbaker rose to |comment on the announcement, jan unidentified backbench Lib- eral shouted a remark abou: the former government's cancella- tion of the Avro Arrow super- sonic jet fighter progam. Mr. Diefenbaker said that his government had _ been con- |Stirs House Feud irresponsible could was only recently revealed that the previous Liberal govern- ment under prime minister St. Laurent had decided the Arrow program must be discontinued-- was afraid to make the an- nouncement before the 1957 election, Mr. Pearson jumped to his feet red-faced, and Mr. Diefen- baker waved him down while Speaker Alan Macnaughton called for order, ° Both men stood, facing each other, until Mr. Diefenbaker gave way. Mr. Pearson said the opposition leader was "entirely inaccurate." Mr, Diefenbaker said that was '"'simply an inter- ruption to cause a detour." Mr. Diefenbaker said the gov- ernment's support of TCA's de- cision to buy the DC-9 indicated a cabinet split on the subject "hag been resolved in favor of those who represent Ontario constituenices,"" "The ruddiness of the face of the prime minister is under- standable in all the circum- stances,"' he added. demned. for the decision, but it ARTIST'S MODEL SHOWS DOUGLAS DC-9