Thought For Today Dad may lay down the law -- but it's usually Mom who's the speaker of the house. Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 72 Che Oshawa Gunes -- OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1964 Weather tment Authorized os Second Class Mall Pést Office Depa Cash, Ottowa ond for payment of Postoge in amen ap an iy Report Rain tapering off to occasional light snow tonight and ending Thursday morning. THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES Slim Vote Blow To UK Tories LONDON (CP) -- Parliamen-|vote been reversed. But some; tary trouble-shooters sought to-|Conservatives aware. of the] day to stifle an embarrassing|strength of moral pressure in) rank - and - file revolt on re- British politics, felt resignation) tail price-fixing. would have been unavoidable if Outwardly, the Sa, geebctmes bag government had lost the and-see"' attitude after a- sen-| government maintained a "wait! vote. Sir Frank Markham, a Con-! sationa! Commons vote Tues-|servative backbencher, warned day night in committee relat-\that the government will be ing to a bill to prohibit manu- forced out of office unless it facturers from requiring retail-|drops the price-fixing bill. ers to sell their goods at a fixed. "Many of us who wanted to! price. vote for this clause abstained With probably at least 20 Con-|out of loyalty to the govern- servatives rebelling against the ment," Markham said, "but administration, the division) this bill is dead." went in the government's favor; 'The Conservative rebellion by only one vote--204 to 203. demonstrated the unrest the Normally the Tory majority is! price-fixing bill has stirred in 86. the ruling party of Prime Min- ister Sir Alec Douglas-Home The bill would prohibit ma- nufacturers dictating retail { Liberals and Laborites,| though favoring the principle of abolishing price fixing, joined ARRESTS MO Que. Judge Urges Judge Be Charged | iccsowniz, mm. am |Flames and gunfire crackled in sections of this tense seaport for| jthe second. night Tuesd y, |harshly punctuating racial - vio- {lence which has killed one per-} son and injured a dozen others.| . Fires broke out in several Ne-| gro areas. Shotgun charges) splattered a school building and) a police car. Rocks and bottles struck sev-| ral au'os, injured at least one MONTREAL (CP) -- Charges|this dossier at a time before the 'of perjury, conspiracy to obs-|trial had been heard and more truct justice and conspiracy to| precisely. on the eve of the trial lfacilitate the commission of|of Hilaire Paquette and Andre |public mischief should be laid) Poupart," Judg. Wagner said. | against Mr. Justice Adrien Meu-| Mr. Justice Meunier had tele-| inier of the Superior Court, Ses-|/phoned Capt. Andre Poulin of |sions Judge Claude Wagner rec-|the Montreal police on the day ommended Tuesday, of the trial and told him, "in | The recommendation to the fairly coarse terms," to notify} Quebec attorney - general, con-|Det. - Lt. Roland Brunet that! © toriat tained in a 23-page judgment|"'this dossier would never be paviodcnae | | ifollowing a lengthy in camera/found because it had been dis- Mayor Haydon Bums, ca- UNT IN JACKSONVILLE Flames, Guntire Rip Florida Coastal Town Motorists reported they ran into a hail of bricks and other missiles at several intersections in predominantly-Negro: areas. At least seven persons were injured during the day and night in various incidents. Shortly after. midnight police reported 74 cases on the court docket. Charges included van- dalism, damage to private pro- perty, disorderly conduct, pos- session of firearms and fire bombs, vagraney and prowling. The collection .of weapons. the rebels in voting for prices, jseized. included several pistols amendment that would have re- tained fixed prices for goods sold by druggists. Defeat would not have forced the government to resign. Nev- ertheless. the narrow squeak wiki be a blow to party strateg- ists and will almost certainly upset the Tory parliamentary timetable. Originally the gevern- ment hoped to complete de- tailed examination of the con- troversial bill by Easter. Now some backbenchers are doubt- ful whether the legislation can be forced through before the election, generally forecast for June. MAY POSTPONE ELECTION The vote has certainly drama- tized the intensity of Tory feel- ings. It may encourage rebels to a further show of intransi- gence, perhaps creating a par- liamentary climate that could postpone the election until Oc- an established way of British business life. With Brit- ain's general election to be held some time before Nov. 5, many {Conservatives fear they will jlose the votes: of the country's 300,000 small shopkeepers. These merchants see supermar- kets and other large chains driving them out of business once prices are free to fluctu- jate competitively. However, the government ex-| pects to offset loss of shopkeep-| rs' votes by increased support! from consumers, who will ben- efit from the abolition of fixed) prices on everything from auto- mobiles and television. sets to children's toys and cigarettes. 3rd Rush Into Fire Kills Elderly Man | BEAVER LAKE, Ont. (CP)--| A 62-year-old man died Tuesday |Pute. § Bests | Bleeding from a head injury, a student of Seoul National University is taken into cus- tody by a policeman in Seoul BLOODIED RIOTER SEIZED IN SEOUL Tuesday during ° anti-Japan- South Korea normalization talks demonstration. Police- man wears protective mask | over his face, --AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo preliminary investigation of a|Posed of in an incinerator . . ."|celling a visit to Tampa in his} $64,705 bankruptcy, has no prec-|Judge Wagner said. jcampaign for governor, told his! edent in Quebec legal history. Mr. Justice Meunier was not|SUpPporters there in a telephone Judge Wagner also suggested|a judge at the time mentioned.|/SPeech that things were under a total of 28 criminal charges|A Liberal member of Parlia-| control in Jacksonville. be laid against seven other in-/ment for Montreal Papineau! : Heavily reinforced police de- dividuals. |from 1953 to 1963, he did not tails rounded up more than 100 Miateis: safe seek re-election in 1963 and was|Negroes during the 'night, rais- satiety "ar Pres Bonn appointed to the bench by the |ing the total arrests to nearly chant Constant Brodeur and the| Pearson government October 16/350 since Monday's outbreak of acquittal of two- men, Hilaire) violence climaxed 'several Paquette and Andre Poupart, in| Later that day, Lieut. Brunet|Weeks of anti-segregation dem- U Thant Names Finn |volved in the bankruptcy. it | Judge Wagner, dealing w: | evidence given by Mr. Justice Meunier, referred to the disap-} pearance of the large dossier in| ith|Cnce of other officers and the B i jtranscription was heard at the Police Chief H, V. Branch. |preliminary investigation. | April; 1963 on charges resulting)made arrangements to call Mr. onstrations. from possession of furniture in-| Justice Meunier and_ record} heir conversation in phe pres-| "The conversation un- More tlran 20 Negroes and two white youths were charged with carrying firearms, said Assist- '0 Negroes had firebombs, he said, | At least three blazes were at- As Cyprus Mediator GENEVA (CP-AP) -- UN|communities -- as "a thrilling|sia. They have been making Secretary-General U Thant to-|challenge."' But he stressed that|practice patrols to show the UN day appointed former premierjhe was aware of the great dif-/flag. Sakari S. Tuomioja of Finland|ficulties facing him. The Security Council's March! as mediator in the Cyprus dis-| 4 resolution uthorized appoint-| He said' the Finnish govern-'seek a solution of the three-| |HAS SIX MONTHS ment of a neuttal negotiator to| 'a Trade Minister Edward/night when he rushed into his| _Tuomioja, a 52-year-old _poli-| Heath, principal advocate of the/hlazing home in a- third at-|tician and diplomat, i bill to foster competition among|tempt to save some of his be-/WoUuld take up his work in the 3 , dismissed the Labor/iongings from the flames. |strife-torn east Mediterranean | demands. "One is enough," he! Urho 'Rauhanen twice stag-|island by the middie of next said, quoting Sir Winston Chur-|gered from the. burning build-| Week. said he|ment had given him -a 'six-|month conflict over the Cyprus! months leave of absence, but|constitution; The council also "nobody can tell how long itlapproved sending a peace force! will take," The mediator's man-|to Cyprus for three months! jdate from the Security Council) while th' mediator seeks a per- .|is for only three months, but it}manent accord. the Paquette-Poupart case from/|derlines,"" said Judge Wagner, |, Room 206 of police headquar-|in terms that the court has ters between Sept. 24 and 25,,not a decent right to describe 1962, the elimination of efforts by "Strange circumstances sur-|lice to bring guilty parties to rounded the disappearance of| justice." | | Mr, Justicé Meunier denied] w | th Professor Now | the recordi | ng and, according to} the transcript, Judge Wagner commented that "the court 'was jastounded Berring the witness 'Meunier deny categorically) Lawyer For that everyone had heard so con-| *\the air for two hours. Firemen janswered about 50 calls--40 of |them false alarms. |that he had called Capt. -Pou-|School, a block from police jlin or that it was his voice on|headq ibuted to firebombs. The screams of sirens filled A shotgun blast shattered two indows of Central Adult and rifles and a wide variety of knives. The trouble started Tuesday after a false bomb threat at a Negro high school, Negroes overturned and burned a report- er's car and beat a Life Mag- azie photographer. PULLED FROM CAR Later a white woman re- ported she was pulled from her car and kicked by a Negro, She was treated in hospital and re- . leased. White persons stayed out of Negro areas even during day- light hours. The Jacksonville Coach Company discontinued bus service to Negro -séctions. Indonesia OKs Peace Formula warters. Ten persons in # second + storey classroom e caped ng Police Sgt. James Miller said buckshot from a shotgun charge hit his car as he was driving through a Negro section. He dae ' chill after his government had/ing, but did not return after his) His appointment was ap-| survived by a muetiy only|thira attempt. His body was|Proved Tuesday by Greece, By aah pre Pangea be ye pe three votes. later found on a bed. Police be-|key, Britain and the island piled shes a eens Technically the issue was not|lieve the fire started when Rau-|two feuding communities. pane Oca ge 'og ascon ae a major vote of confidence, and|hanen attempted to light a kit-| Tuomioja, who has been Hin} Tuomioja's appointment, the government would not have|chen stove in his five - room'land's ambassador to Sweden,|'" United Nations was almost heen obliged to resign had the home. \said he would go to Stockholm |Teady to begin its two-fold task ' Hater today to clear up his af-j0f enforcing a peace between the Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots | Thant needed the assent of the Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots as well as Britain, Greece and \Turkey, co-guarantors of Cyp- rus' 1960 independence from |Britai, before naming Tuom- 'ioja as mediator. Cyprus Foreign Minister Spy- | Jack Ruby | vincingly."" DALLAS (AP) -- Dr. Hubert!| Winston Smith, a college pro-| fessor, is Jack Ruby's new head legal counsel, | Smith, 56-year-old director of the University of Texas law jschool's Law-Science Institute, |was not hurt. Stop Crying 'Imperialism' Labor Critic Wins Bout Speaker Ousts Tory MP \fairs there and would fly to New York Sunday for further con- sultations with Thant. The sec- jretary-general came to Geneva for the opening of the UN trade jand development conference jand was to return to New York later today. and trying to mediate their bloody, communal dispute, Lt.-Gen. Prem Singh Gyani, Indian commander of the UN peacekeeping force for the is- land, arrived back in Cyprus and said thé international army ros Kypriaou, a Greek - Cyp-|was introduced Tuesday night riot; said at UN headquarters|as chief defence lawyer _ by. a Sie ss in New York Tuesday he had/Mrs. Eva Grant, Ruby's sister.) GENEVA (AP)--The United notified the UN secretariat that) Ruby was convicted March 14/States today urged the world's President Markarios of Cyprus,|of slaying Lee Harvey Oswald, Poor nations to forget tradi- who heads the island's Greek|President Kennedy's accused| tonal fears of investment by maiority, had approved Tuom-|assassin, and sentenced to foreign capitalists and get to al.|work reorganizing their . back- U.S. Tells Poor Nations to a new world trading body, preferring to use existing ma- chinery to aid developing na- tions, External Affairs Minister Paul Martin said that abolition may be operational by the end of the week. LONDON (CP) Dour -|of privilege and he quoted Hogg) Tuomioja described his mis- He had been- in|- faced George Wigg won the first round over peppery Quin- tin Hogg in a legal bout in the House of Commons Tuesday. The Speaker of the House as saying in a speech at Cha- tham last Thursday: "Our elbows have been jarred in almost every part of the world by individual Labor) sion--to try to bring a perman- ent peace between the feuding Geneva for two days of talks with Thant. Canadians of the Royal 22nd Regiment--the Van Doos--are ioja. HUNT BOOKIE death after a month-long tri 1 --__--___________--_--_----|ward economies. | George C. Ball, under-secre- jtary of state, told the 122-nation |UN trade and development con- ference that the rich nations, of tariffs and other restrictions on tropical foodstuffs and indus- trial. materials would be one of the ways in which richer coun- tries could help the poorer ones. Greek- and Turkish Cypriot the only contingent so far to ar- can help with technical advice He said the poor nations members' partisanship of sub-| versive activities. This is the party which now is seeking power." After Tuesday's debate, the Commons approved without al division a motion moved by House Leader Selwyn Lloyd} that the issue should be re-} caused a sensation when he ba- nished Hogg temporarily from the chamber after ruling that a recent public speech by the Tory minister. raised a prima facie (at first sight) case of} breach of privilege. | Hogg maintains his address} was simply an exercise in free Rain Floods rive on the island Ithough Ire- jland, Sweden and Finland have Tents Of |promised troops, The Canadians U.N. Troops | | fare confined to their camp on jthe western. outskirts of Nico- Metro Budget Tops | Police Dig For i zrain sere Mafia Victim NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) A renewed search for a Nia- and close co-operation through|should form their own regional economic groups to broaden their markets and their developing industries. He said the United States would support changes in GATT's rules to provide more flexibility in or- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Ball's speech, virtually a do- jit - yourself improvement pro- jgram for the have-not nations . | . "ith M 7 wysia BANGKOK (Reuters) -- In- \donesian Foreign Minister Sub- andrio said today his govern- ment has. accepted 'with cer- tain conditions" a formula by The Philippines to settle the Malaysian dispute. Subandrio, who spoke to newspaper men during a stop- over in Bangkok, Thailand, on the way to The Netherlands, de- clined to disclose the conditions Indonesia had set. A He said the Indonesian reply to the peace formula was come municated to The Philippine government and it was up to them to publish it. The original formula called for the phased withdrawal of In- donesian guerrillas from Malay- sian Borneo, the simultaneous opening of political discussions at the ministerial level, and a heads - of - government summit meeting among Mailaysia, Ihdo- nesia and The Philippines. Subandrio's disclosure came after Filipino Vice - President Emmanuel Pelaez appealed to Indonesia Monday to agree to a Malaysian demand that it withdraw its troops from Ma- |hour, then a bulldozer was used when contrasted with what they|sanizing such groups. laysian Borneo, in an unsuccessful hunt for the| want, was not likely to go down speech. But Wigg, a tenacious) Labor critic, charged it amounted to gross calumny and contempt against the House "In accordance with our prac- tice I should ask the right hon- orable and learned gentleman to withdraw." said the Speaker, Sir Harry Hylton-Foster, after delivering-his ruling. Hogg, the former Viscount Hail'ham, then rose from. his place on the government -front the "te ; 7 ' ferred to the council of privil-| NICOSIA (CP)--This was a gara Falls bookmaker, whose| body before the inspector halted) well with the majority of the eges. This, in effect, defeated al motion that Hogg he sus- pended from the service of the house. Th Speaker explained, in an- swer to a question by Deputy Labor. Leader George Brown, that Hogg had been asked to withdraw only while the House discussed his '"'words and con- duct." Wigg, 62, has been chiefly known as a critic of Conservative defence policies miserable and_ disappointing $100 Million Mark day for Canadian soldiers wait- ing to become. operational as) TORONTO (CP) -- Metropol- part of the United Nationsjitan Toronto' council voted force in Cyprus. Tuesday night for a budget Lt..Gen, Prem Singh Gyani of which exceeds $100,000,000. for India, force commander, was|the first time in its history. apparently in no hurry to see! The council approved a total Canadian officers after his ar- budget for metro of $103.559.- rival early today. 836, an increase of $14,198,403 He was met by Col. Edward over last year's budget. Amy, commander of the Cana-| The increase will boost the dian contingent, and a guard of average tax on a home by $10 {disappearance five years ago|the search. has been blamed on gambling) ! : interests, was called off today|minently in last week's report a few hours after it began. jon organized crime by the On- |, Insp. J. H. Marsland, head of|tario police commission. the provincial police in this dis-|. The police commission report, | realistic and said: "It shows trict, called off the search for|i" dealing with the crime situa-/that we cannot expect anything } tion in Niagara Falls, said Mit-|in-the way of aid." the body of Peter (Scrip) Mit-/"#0n in Ni 2 | chell, 48) because he said a tip chell's disappearance in Octo-| whch started it had proved ber, 1959, "'is illustrative of Ma-', delegates from the underdevel- Mitchell's name figured pro- oped nations. Initial reaction, however, was 1ot as: stiff as expected. An Arab source called the speech Canada told the conference Tuesday that it is opposed also groundless. ada A ag ay a 7, oe Police hired four men during (NY) arate pias 4 'bench and , left crowded honor and band of the Ist Bat-'a year, but taxpayers won't chamber, passing through the door behind the Speaker's chair ASKS RULING Wigg asked the Speaker Mon and just a year ago asked the first Commons question in.what eventually led to the resigna- tion of war minister John Pro- fumo in the celebrated Chris- talion, Royal 22nd Regiment. Gyani told Amy he would see him in the next few days Canada was the first country the to for know their total tax bill until councils and school boards in the municipalities w hich com- prise Metro have set their lo- supply troops UN/cal tax rates and added them day to rule upon the complaint: tine Keeler scandal. iforce, to the Metro bill. the night when a woman, whose identity was not disclosed, told police she knew where Mitchell was buried and took them to a} Boy Scout camp on the lower] Niagara River. The four men dug with shovels. for about an EXAMINATIONS WOULD CUT TOLL -- MD X-Rays Urged For Women Over 40 PALM BEACH SHORES, Fla.|pleas in addressing the annual Describing a survey: of of unsuspected breast cancer (AP)--Periodic x-ray examina- seminar for science writers his icine said the testing technique g Mitchell, a native of Niagara} Senate Asked | Falls and of Italian descent, had a criminal record starting in 1926 and was a well-known gambler and bookie. The report said he allegedly had connections with Niagara |Falls police and made '"'pay- offs" for Canadian and Amer-| OTTAWA (CP)--Health Min- ican gamblers in the area. ister LaMarsh has invited the) He was cut out of all opera- Senate--whose role is to give jtions of the Ramsey Club, a\Commons bills a sober second) |gambling operation there injthought--to sit in on the Com- | which he had held an interest,;mons committee investigation jafter a successful police raid on of. the controversial Canada the club. Pension Plan, bineilvetentdeitld The committee, which will hold public hearings, is to be} # | To Sit In On Pension Study tions of all women more than 40 were urged today as the only means cutting the "grievous" toll from breast canecr Dr. Jacob G the Xlbert Einstein Medical Centre, Philadelphia; -made the of rshon-Cohen CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 of t sponsored by the Cancer Society American He said that at present about 95 per cent of all breast canc- 'rs are first detected by the pa- ents themselves, and that at he time they are spotted 60 per cent of them already have spread beyond the breast to the armpits, Thus, he said, available. cur- ative methods--such as surgery --are forfeited in approximately 0 per cent of all cases belief h ay women over 40 ve age can alter this... + situation," "It is' my a riodic x-1 ex f ars, of grievou ions 0 was shown in only eight cases. "In our own survery project," he said, 'thad we limited. our studies to a single observation, we would also have achieved no better results. Only by repeated linations at six-month ins can the detection of un- ed cancers reach a per- centage approaching the nor- armpits had) mal expected incidence." occurred in only 10 cases--far) : fewer than would have been en- TEST. Ball HOPES In another report, a. top re- countered among a comparable searcher said an ingenious new group of women who had not!«moleculs fingerprinting" test been x-rayed regularly, he said, should make it possible within «a inic year to determine whether at ¥,000 least one family of viruses can womer more than 35 cause human cancers of age who had but a| Dr. Maurice Green: of St Single x-ray exam, the presence!Louis University school of med- own, he said that among some 1,150 women having breast X-ray exams at six-month in- tervals, 31 cancers were discov- ered among 29 patients, includ- ing women who had canc- ers of both breasts two cancer- and the small, In: all growths were spreading to the instances, ous He studs ha 10" healt} years --which involves. use of radio-| active tritium, one of the ingre-| dients of the H-bomb--should! make it possible to determine whether any human malignan- cies are due to widely Preva-icotnam lent "adenoviruses," a com hts mon Cause certain respira- tory ills in man ( Find No Blame In Patient's Death Ontario's supérvising ie coroner, heard a coroner's jury « : father, Dr, I, B, Cotnam, 81, in't Some of these viruses, Of|the death of a patient. which there are at Jeast 28) 'The jury ruled that Elvin Bi- types, are known to be capa-jesenthal 38 ble of causing cancers in ham- ser sters, mice and various other|tario Hospital at. Kingston Jan animals. They are on the sus-|5, was the victim of a combina-'j pect list as possibly related to tion of internal disorders some ;forms of human r,, -Lhe supervising coroner did t although none of these. viruses/not participate at the hearing any other virus for that/but sat beside Coroner Gordon \« matter-- ered from a human cancer cance --or 'ducted the inquest. Senators, repr fe PEMBROKE (CP)--Dr. H. B selec mons, In other joint committee) |hearings who died in a po-\has been taken by lice cruiser en routé to the On-|house, Senate rules apply. of 24 MPs and 12 with joint chairmen esenting the two houses. So the personnel has not been ted The. joint committee will op-| erate under Commons commit-} -omposed Monday attach no blame to his|tee rules since the proposal for} he study stems from the Com- the initiative the upper) where It is standard procedure for) oint committees to have the Senate contribute: half the num- xer of Commons members. Miss LaMarsh's motion to 'stablish the committee was. to | L. Cpl. Daniel Bourdages of Shawinigan, Que., holds a Cypriot child in his arms dur- has ever been recoy-|Hermitte of Pembroke who con-|appear on the Commons order) ing a rest stop on a Van Doos 'paper today, reconnaissance patrol of CYPRIOT MEETS UN SOLDIER northern Cyprus recently, This photo was taken for The Canadian Press by Paul Tail- lefer of The Montreal Star CP Wirephoto