a f ro le od Ca \ ) 'Scuttle Inquest wot Paes Bie ae ye ey om Convention "MacKENZIE : penile ar, N.J, (CP) © out ended, when, apparently, it|Barry Goldwater Nov, 3. John- was found out that the order|son also is expected to reveal had come from a 'southernerjimmediately who he wants as rather than the convention of-jhis vice-presidential candidate, ificers in charge, Ne blows were/with Minnesota Senator Hubert is-|struck but :thene was a lot of|/Humphrey favored. - @toups Tuesday but|Pushing and pressure, much' of}, Thursday, the convention con- : participant agreed to it.|it calised by television and ta-|¢iudes with the president atriv- >A but. three ryt the 68-man{/9 reporters crowding round.'/ing from Washington for a com- ':alwhite and official Mississippilgpay, IT OFF weirs Sw sacra party and "delegation be quit the' 'Late in the 'session, the ae Sue ere te ig a conventior rather than sign the|tial seating area for the' dele-|.. nt re ath gin I hice mandatory 1 oy alt y > pledges| gates was sealed aff for a time,|nemocratic: South wae the ma spurned @arlier by the Ala-jtrapping a lot of delegates and); earns pi ant fae sag b-bama delegation, other authorized people. While|?°" 'CUS O Mlerest so far, Promptly, many ot the|all,this was going on. the huge|/IMST VOTES rgely-Negro Mississippi Free-|hall empticd as the convention' There was no action in the liom Demiocratic Party--which|droned through the long andjAlabama delegation, wher e| j Sought to unseat the pro-segre-|comprehensive party po.icy|those who signed the requested| gationist old guard--infilitated| which was' rubber-stamped. All/toyalty pledge to" President!" the hiige convention hall on/o} it was made public earlier. Johnson and the majority of} 'borrowed credentiais and occu-| That was the main official/the 36 - man delegation who} pied the "empty chairs.. About|¢vent of the night, pointing to-|didn't sit side by side. Failure! 30 finally got there. ward the nomination tonight of|to sign stripped the delegates An attempt by convention of-| President Lyndon B. Johnson to! who refused of voting rights. ficials to throw/some of themitake on Republican Senator' Party leaders insisted a sub- a = z ~~ jstantial xictory for unity was; Conflict Issues scored in a compromise ham-} mered out with extreme diffi-| culty since Saturday. Under it,| the Mississippi 'officia) delega-| tion would sign the pledge or lelse | The compromise also gave} |delegate-at-large credentials to} two of the rebel Freedom dele-| gation--which protests the fact| that Negroes constitute more than 50 per cent of the Missis-| |sippi population and most can't at vote, But the men given. these} 2B gn on: te hospital's stat. credentials -- delegation chair- oe. "wor aioe on i }man Aaron Henry ae Rev. Ed- 7 4 "| wi ing--spurned them. ceased herself" for not arrang-|" Rar retried delegation ing through a family physician which stalked out- accused the} will: ay to hospital &S|pyeedom group of "misrepre-| = . sentation and slander . . .| s peso pany and hare CS), aed boomy he a - - Freedom group expresse S-) ee at least appointment at the cemprees- oner presiding. | ; ; ise, rejecting it, but the con-| Phe" t Was into the), A yea foe ng og ont poe yention as a whole gave it swift pli ! Mig Mapaiias ) approval by voice yote, of- ie Paes ingles: wa "death last July of Mrs, Mary| wins ; : 7 get a doctor for his mother]... ' ter. July 1, after she complained of ficially énding he tat we TAKEN ILL Ebbs suffered what is believed to be a slight stroke at Orillia late Tuesday night. It is be- lieved his right arm has been come back later home about eight leaving the hospital. Dr. Rotstein, wi did not mention during the Inquest that TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton Shulman, Metropolitan Toronto schief coroner, ordered an in- quest halted Tugsday night when he learned the coroner conducting the inquest was on the staff of a hospital involved in investigation. After the jury had returned 4o give its Verdict, Dr. Murray me : emerged from an of- _ fite: interview with Dr. Shul- 'man and announced that the inquest was adjourned and would be held with another cor- but died at) hours after! due to preside at Brechin court today. He was brought to Osh- awa this morning by car and admitted to Oshawa General Hospital by Dr. J. A. Patter- son. A hospital official said the magistrate was able to walk into the hospiial, assist- ed by police. At noon, Magis- trate Ebbs was _ reported undergoing tests. Magistrate Harry Jermyn took the Brechin cases while Justices of the Peace Harry Fayle and ©, G. Femia presided at Osh- | awa traffic court. Oshawa Magistrate Frank S. | affected, The magistrate was | Printers To Stage 'Members Meet TORONTO (CP) -- Striking printers from the three Toronto daily newspapers scheduled a membership meeting for to- night following a decision Tues- day by their union negotiating committee to reject the latest publishers' offer. David Lewis, counsel for Lo- cal 91 of the International Typo- graphical Union (CLC), said at a press conference Tuesay ut- ion members would be given an opportunity to express their views freely at the meeting. Publishers of the Globe and Mail; a morning paper, and The Star and The Telegram, eve- ning papers, presented the new proposals Monday and made them public in a statement fol- lowing the union decision Tues- day. The publishers, who have con- itinued to put out papers since |the. printers walked off their jobs July 9 by using super- visory and non-union 'workers in the composing room, de- scribed the new proposals as 'flexible."~They said the 'lan- guage with which they were re- jected, combined with other factors, was discouraging. The latest rownd of negotia- tions, under Louis Fine, the On- tario labor department's chief conciliation officer, collapsed. at noon Tuesday after the union decision. Wakar, 69, who. was turned being. abort af breath, and fe =) He' said he drove her to the! jemergency ward on the hospi-| tal's advice after a doctor who jhe thought was coming never) |showed up. His wife Marjorie said the doctor at the hospital said her mother-in-law was very ill andy. should be admitted to hospit or she might die. But 'she said the doctor ex- TORONTO (CP) --W. I. Has-|plained that he could not admit kett, Ontario. transport minis-|Mrs. Wakar through the emer- ter, said Tuesday his depart-jgemcy ward. She would have to ment is not prepared to incor-|be admitted by a doctor out- porate a recent. proposal by Dr.|side the hospital staff | Morton Shulman, chief Toronto) Mrs.' Wakar jcomplained of Ontario Shuns Compulsory Breathalizer To Settle Flag By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA (CP) -- Conserva- tive MPs are stepping up their new campaign in the Commons) to persuade the government to} iscite cial parliamentary commitiee|/tion Leader Diefenbaker. mer-lone deadlock agree unanimously on a flag de- sign, the issue should be taken to the people in a national pleb- a ss to a spe-/first aired last week by Op#osi- a ie Se eee He/should resort to the infamous lin an effort to break the sum-|suggested that a 15-man com-/closure rule if necessary to end é mittee should be abic to find/this sterile discussion." As the House plodded through) a solution to the flag impasse} PCs Want Committee Issue speaking twice, and 27 Liberal MPs -have spoken, The splinter parties have put up 16 speak- /ers. The committee proposal was| Jean-Louis Frenette (SC -- |}Portneuf) said the government Conservatives denied they are coroner, to curb traffic fatali-|feeling ill agaif/ the next morn-| its j4th sitting day on the maple/if itv-wefe given about two}conducting a filibuster. They ties through legalizing breath|ing. She died/while her daugh-jjear flag resolution Tuesday,| months analysis tests ter-in-law was again trying to'Conservative after Conservative WANT LIMIT Mr. Haskett said he would "each a doctor argued that a small ail-party| " piime Minister like to see the federal govern- cqmmittee would cool off the ment strengthen the Criminal MOST WANTED steaming debate. MAN CAUGHT Code by spelling out. what con- If the House agrees, stitutes an impaired or-a Reynold Rapp (PC -- Hum- drunken driver pn sidrecgpatek 94 a = r. S 8 ested in a eee : : |promise cou e reache Bi typ ig les Saturday _ MONTREAL (CP)-- Adolph {There could be set up a com- that drivers applying for lic- Krachesky, a lia 8 Maurice |mittee composed of representa-. 3 Deschamps, Canada's most wanted criminal, was cap tured today as he sipped a cup of tea in a midtown St Pearson and idea | debating limit should be tied ia to ensure a vote on the issue 56 of thes: on a Conservative agreement whereby police can The committee should) ask ers at any time to sub-/ be empowered to.recommentl 8179 speeches, many of leaders of the three small par- said ties generally agreed with the | but held that a definite) to sub-amendment for a plebiscite. The Conservatives have made them ject themselves to the tests. If flag and have it- approved by} drivers refused to comply their the House licences. should be cancelled If the committee failed to) Troops Ring. 'Township 'In Rhodesia ences be required to sign an jtives of all parties Hubert street apartment NO DECISION NEAR Khanh Fails In Bid To Have Junta Quit By ROY ESSOYAN SAIGON (AP) -- Maj. - Gen Nguyen Khanfi~failed today to convince fellow members of the ruling revolutionary military council that they should suit politics to prevent new riots We aré not even close {to a decision," said Lt.-Gen. Tran Thien Khiem, one of the most powerful officers of the 60-man junta state of emergency organizations. demonstrators -- was nol even|were Vietnamese 'soldiers. Daj, Police and troops ringed discussed Before the five-hour broke 'up, student meetingirioters for looting. Catholic |bury just before dawn as Goy- leaders! owned 'shops were sacked andjeror Sir Humphrey Gibbs de- threatened new mass demon-| burned clared the area in a staté of ua =, ibe BF ogg Demonstrations also flared : men returne 0 fighting Cl Sint Sree Some territorial Nationa] aga ' i ' war, opening the government gain in Hue, 50 miles forth vf Guard troops were called out to civilians pit Peg Aor ba ys of com anid all Africans in the district Khanh called the situation) ™unist ! let Nam § {P0N-iwere being scree % it Students + commandeered) "°"° being sertened serious "site He appeared tired and Tense,|the Hue radio station. Police, Highfield, about eight miles Speaking alternately in Vietna-|2%4 local officials' joined 4,009/from 'Salisbury, has been the mese and English, he said demonstrators in a street pa-|Scene of continued violence The situation 's very| "ade = . since early this year. Several serious. We men in the Vietna-| The 60 generals and colonels|Pe?sons have been killed in esident, junkicese army must take time to\of South Viet, Nam's U g,.|fights between the rival African "phtitution and|think about the problem. The| backed armed forces who make|M#tionalist factions pledge a new tr this) subject is so important we have|up the revolutionary military) Shortly after the emergency Communist-menaced \epublic. 'fo be very ¢areful so we meet|council met under heavy guard|Was declared the British col- A source close to thejunta|again tomorrow and then 'welat general staff headquartersiony's minister of law and or- said the question of electing-a| will see what results." near. the Saigon Airport der, Desmond Lardner-Burke, new national leader--part IDDHISTS ae As the junta haggled, fears;aonounced im a radio broadcast an arrangement with the lead- on Ht = rose that the Communist Viet|that Southern Rhodesia's two of student and Buddhist uddhist ri thror Cong may take advantage ofjtival nationalist parties "3 and around WD je alg, 380 miles the cHsia by stackin ugg |People's Caretaker Council and northeast ok "Saigon for thel.,, ages 8 the cap-} he Z i a 4 : third straight day and "South ital. iteett Intelligence reports|t rae te pag ua Vietnamese - troop intervencdynacate that the Communists/!si Union, had been banned for the first time to check their| WY have more than 20,000 ami - government, anti lic and. anti-American shed in. the North attended deeyening of the polit- i led Khanh to re-, a controversia 2°u ers u PHONE NUMBERS CITY EMERGENCY POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 US or some time," would last met un-|for three months : general He said the object of the dec Saigon|laration was to arrest "thugs and criminals " ' of South Viet Nam's hacked armed forces tollider 'heayy..Buard of the riots rose to 11 dead andistaff heaaquarters near 161 wolnded. Two of the deadiAirport, f the of the crowd The t t 4 jc:ared in a Southern Rhodesian} jcountry's two main nationalist! Nang -police arrested 40 of the|Highfield Township near Salis- Lardner-Burke said the state! Catho |thoops around Saigon of emergency in Highfield, "the| demon-|/ The 60 generals and colonels Ee of considerable lawless- ne. argued that any national flag must command wide public ac- ceptance and not be connected } with any political party in par- | ticular. ' | Terry Nugent (PC -- Edmon: n Strathcona) said few Cana- dians are impressed by this three-leaf monstrosity. . . this A total of 122 speeches have} pure political gimmick." |bees, made sofarin the wi ae NEVER SEEN TREE | Have you ever tried to ex Plain three maple leaves to an Eskimo who has never seen a tree?"" asked Gene Rheaume (PC -- Northwest Territories). What: in God's name, we in jthe Territories ask, is all this | about?" A. M. A. McLean (L--Char- lotte), the only government |speaker Tuesday, said he jfought under the Union Jack jin the First World War but | I have 12 grandchildrea- past." Earlier negotiations broke down Aug. 4 over publishers' demands that foremen and as- sistant. foremen be removed from the union bargaining unit; that newspapers have the right that practices which the pub- jlishers. call featherbedding be i¢timinated. In return, the publishers: of- fered a lifetime guarantee against automation layoffs to present composing room. em- ployees, The new offer Tuesday re- affirmed the pledge of this guarantee and offered to put it into a legal contract with 'each individual situation holder in our composing room." The publishers also conceded that only non-working foremen and a head machinist would be exempt from the union. They lalso. agreed to extend the "featherbedding" practice of having printers set type for ad- vertisements. received in mat- rix form' to the end of this year. The type is later thrown j away. |AGREE TO RETURN They agreed to take back all striking. employees,. But about to work. at the publishers' re- quest wov'd continie in- their jobs and would not need. te be members of the union. New em- plorces hired since July 9 would bereapired te pay union dues but would not have to join the union. The union represents about 795 persons in the newspaper field, of whom about 680 are regular employees. The bal- ance are known as substitutes, who fill in for union members when needed | Mr. Lewis said that' the posi- tion taken by the publishers would give preference to new employees over the union sub- stitutes He said that the publishers of- |fer would mean, in effect, that |10 per cent of the union's mem- bership would lose their oppor- tunity to: attain regular posi- tions or' work for the newspa- |pers at all, He said he had never seen "such a callous and cruel demiand from even the most anti-union employer." U.S. Printers Told Visas Neeessary OTTAWA (CP) -- Ten Amer- icans who entered Canada in connection with the Toronto newspaper strike were told~ by the i they must acquire the status of landed immigrants before they jean hold jobs in Canada, | This information was given in jthe Commons Tuesday by Im. SALISBURY (Reuters). -- A| would like a new flag to sym-|migration Minister Tremblay, was de-|b0lize Canada's future. |replying to questions from Op- ndjposition Leader Diefenbaker Negro township today and a|i do not want them to ive ifand James Ormiston (PC--Mel- government ban -placed on: the ville). OMA Urges Vacant Flat i vacancies ances subsidizing ment owners come from other! | taxpayers. ' Delegates to the 66th annual OMA convention here also jurged that' legislation permit- jting a hotel and motel room |tax and a sales tax exemption |for all municipal purchases be jinitiated. They defeated a pro- jposal to seek . taxable income the! deductions for municipal taxes.|ing The. really controversial is-|Pporters within municipal asso- sues -- education costs and ar-|Ciations. \ bitration to outlaw . municipal ic |hour: resolutions session Resolutions Chairman liam, Archer of Toronto nounced his committee will rec-/and his staff, that would aidy'aTs' all ommend approval of a form ofjhim in performing his duties|the plazas compulsory arbitration whereby! gave almost unanimous support/arbitration on munici Tuesday to a request seeking to} end tax rebates for apartment! because the allow-|144 to 138 votes a motion seek- the , apart-|ing to prohibit future discus- controversy jcharge levelled Monday by |Mayor Gordon Stronach of Lon- don that the provincial govern- | barrassing Scrapping Rebates LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The|the provincial cabinet will have|be home by 11 p.m. } Ontario Municipal Association|discretionary powers to impose} A wave of protests was pal labor. disputes. Earlier, delegates rejected by sions of resolutions with provin- cial government officials before OMA meetings. An apparent basis arose for the from a |ment attempted to forestall em- requests by plant« politically ambitious sup- During Tuesday's session Mr. Strikes -- did not reach the dis-| Archer said that, as resolutions| 4 ussion stage during the three-|chairman, he had an obligation|® Plan, said Mrs, Greta Allen, |to seek. information from any|executive director of the Onta- Wil-|source, including Municipal Af-|tio branch, which would' cost an-Nairs Minister Wilfred Spooner| 'hundreds of thousands of dol- more efficiently. to introduce new equipment and 20 strikers who have returned} immigration department DENIES STOCK CH Suspension Ov RoR. * JOHN H. CAMPBELL r Windfall Crash TORONTO (CP) -- John H. Campbell, suspended as direc-| itor of the Ontario Securities ~ Commission following disclos- ure of a possible conflict of in- terest involving a mining com- pany the OSC is investigating, said today he did nottiing il- legal, immoral 'or unethical." I think it) wil be cleared pup," he said. Mr. Campbell, 50, was sus- pended Tuesday by Attorney- General Arthur. Wishart who said he feels the evidence is pretty strong" that there' was a conflict of interest. Mr. Campbell said his sus- pension was based on 'eviilence he himself gave the commis- sion, He did not specify. what the information was, but safd it was about Windfall Cils and -NICOSIA (AP). -- Senior United Nations officials in Cy- prus ate weighing the idea of an 80-per-cent cut in the 6,300- Man peace-keeping force as. a calming gesture to this divided ac ; has been is surprising view forwarded to..UN Secretary. - General.U Thant. In New. York, # spokesman for Thant said the proposal had hot heen received. i It originated with Thant's -se- mor political representative 'on thp island, former Ecuadorian esident Galo Plaza. He feels the UN cease-fire. between the Turkish- and Greek - Cypriot communities can be maintained. Mines Ltd. The price of Windfall shares rose- to $5.60 from 56 cents in July on rumors of a rich find near Timmins,- then collapsed after it was announced no com- mercial ore was found on 'its property. Several investigations, includ- ing, a one-man royal commis- sion, are under way because of the stock's performance. Mr. Wishart said in annowne- ing the suspension that Mr. Campbell "may have been: in- pbell involved" events which caused the Wind- fall shares to skyrocket to $5.70 from 56 cents early in July and then plunge to 80 cents later in the month on the Toronto Stock Exchange. : When Mr. Campbell was ap- Metro Plaza TORONTO (CP) -- Aill-out war was declared Tuesday on teen-age shopping plaza hood. lums as irate shopkeepers tried to rid themselves of a problem some claim has been going on for years. Charles Bick, chairman of the Toronto Police Commission, ordered an investigation into the charges of shopping plaza hoodlumism. Five youths were given jail terms for thei rpart ir a camera store break-in and jthe theft of three cars: Magistrate Robert. Taylor who sentenced the youths -- te "plaza gangs with their pool- hall and street-corner associa- walk only half steal cars to get there." He gave Theodore Staniew- ski, 19, 18 months definite and six months indefinite; George J. Staniewski, 17, nine months ' inite; Philip R. Wilson, 17, six months definite and six months indefinite; Ronald J, Wells, 17, and William J. Newman, 17, 12 |months definite and six months jindefinite each, | A sixth youth, John T. R. |Coyle, jpended sentence, placed on a two-year probation and warned members of a "'plaza gang"'--|| said he intended to put a stop} tions, and car cowboys who will] a block and definite and six months indef-|* 16, was given a sus-|f Hoodlums Arouse Owners' Wrath chant, James Thompson, 64, meanwhile ar: himself with a baseball bat ands keeping a vigil at his cloth store where a plate-glass window Ig been broken three times this month. Alex Janusitis, 19, a steel- worker who associates with the plaza loiterers, defended his friends. "We're not as bad as they. make out," he said: pointed 10 months ago to thée- newly created post he was des- cribed as the 0 ragnenss of the Ontario f commu- nity. His duties included mak- ing initial decisions on investi- gations of individuals and com- panies in the securities business and drecting the work of the commission's staff of investiga- tors. The suspension is the first re- sult of an investigation ordered into the company by the attor- ney + general July 28, shortly after the market price of the shares fell: Mr. Wishart said the ° suspension would remain in ef- fect until "'this aspect of the in- vestigation has been com- pleted."" Mr. 'Campbell pad in an in- terview that his suspension was the only action the attorney-gen- eral could have taken under the circumstances, but added that he expects it to be lifted once the investigation ends. j REFUSES TO. COMMENT He 'declined to comment on whether he was trading in the company's shares. Mr. Campbell said he has seen George MacMillan, Wind- fall president, and his wife, con- stantly in. both\social- fi- cial; capacities \since~he' met them at the prospectors and de- velopers association convention early.in March. : Mr. Campbell said he had lefence| acted as mediator between the TSE and Mr. MacMillan after the Exchange demanded a statement on from Windfall an suspension of the shares if a statement were not forthcoming, "The MacMillans couldn't have cared less whether the company was suspended or not," he said. "I felt that sus- pension would have done a great deal of damage to the shareholders." Mr. Campbell, 50, said he was confident the public will learn that he has done nothing of which to be-ashamed. Mr. Wishart said news of Mr. Campbell's suspension had been forwarded to Mr. Justice Arthur Kelly, a one-man royal commis- sion appointed early this month by Premier. John Robarts to in- quire into the trading in Wind- fall and two other speculative mines with claims in the Tim- mins area where Texas Gulf Sulphur Company made a ma- jor base metal discovery this spring. -- jte stay away from plazas end |started by Mr. and Mrs. Leslie \Williams after windows were broken at their ladies' wear shop in suburban Scarborough Saturday night : |MANY COMPLAIN | A rash of complaints followed from other plaza shopkeepers who berated the youths' . be- havior "swearing, hanging around outside premises and bothering customers. The Urban Development In- stitute, a non-profit group of land. and property developers, \* also preparing action against jthe gangs. ) A committee was drawing up to clear the youths from | A suburban East: York mer- 4 PATH OF HURRICANE Cleo Sets Sights . On Florida Keys MIAMI, Fla, (AP). -- Hurri- cane Cleo, responsible for at least 64 deaths, pounded Cuba curing the night and appeared to be headed for Florida today. The storm, which killed at least 14 on Guadeloupe and an estimated 50 in Haiti, took an abrupt swing to the north Tues- day, hitting the southwestern Cuban province of Camaguey. Winds diminished to 75 miles an hour as the eye crossed over land but were expected to in- tensify-as the hurricane hits the Florida Straits. Residents of south Florida were warned by the weather bureau to be. ready to take quick action if.the storm inten- A "2 sified or appeared to pick up faster forward motion. The bureau said the storm was expected to hit' the Florida Straits this morning: A, businessman in Les Cayes or Haiti's southern: peninsula radioed to Port au Prince that a hospital had been destroyed bythe storm and 50 ybodies found, Les Cayes was still in the process of rebuilding from the effects of Hurricane Flora which devastated the island and took thousands of lives. .More than 10,000 persons were evacuated from exposed areas on Cuba's southwestern coast. There were no reports of casualties. < =