#| Canadian Highway Safety Coun- Toll Sets By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 191 persons died in accidents across Canada during the Labor Day weekend, with 79 persons dying in traffic ac- cidents--four more than the 75 road deaths predicted by the cil and six more than last year's record 73. A survey by The Canadian Press from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Monday, local times, showed there were also 16 drownings, two deaths in fires, a hunting death and three deaths in other kinds of acci- dents. In Quebec 39 persons died, 30 of them highway deaths, seven drownings, one person in a fire and one in a fall. In On- tario 34 were killed." Traffic mishaps claimed 26 lives, drownings six, fire one and an infant suffocated in its bed. British Columba had eight deaths, including seven on the highways, and one in a hunting accident. New Bruriswick's total) of five fatalities included four in traffic and one drowning, Nova Scotia and Saskatche- wan each had three highway deaths and drowning and Man- itoba had three traffic deaths | } and one in a train accident. Weekend Traffic | Quebec Police Seek Vehicle Record For Riot Use Delhi, Ont, when hit by @ C8"! sonTREAL (CP) -- Provin- John Beasley McFarlane, 47,\¢!al police have ordered an Aurora, Ont., when fice de-\anti-riot vehicle from Pierre- stroyed his summer cottage at|Ville, Que., truck body manu- Port Perry. facturer, it was learned Sunday Gordon Michael Caldwell, 16, night. Prescott, when his car left the| A QPP source said the ve- road near Prescott. jhicle "'likely" wil be available SUNDAY for the Queen's visit to Quebec 'Maty Lou Howden, 16, Anten City Oct. 10-11. Mills, Ont., in a Barrie hospi-| However, the source said the tal from injuries suffered Fri-royal visit was "not necessar- day night when hit by a carjily" connected with the order- near her home. jing of the vehicle. Stephen Aktzi, 45, Oshawa, 'The vehicle -- it's not an drowned when his boat over-armored car--will be equipped turned in Big Four Lake. with normal anti - riot equip- Edmund Adolf Deemering, 29,|ment,"" the source added. This Oshawa, when-his car left the|would include tear gas, ma- road and hit a tree near Osh-\chine-guns and bomb disposal awa. |equipment, 5 John James Lots, 35, Niagara) Dimanche-Matin, a Montreai Falls, N.Y., when his car left/French-language Sunday news- the road near Port Colborne. |paper, published a photograph Mary Ann Rawlins, 4, Cum-|it said was taken at the Pierre- berland, Ont., when struck byjville plant of Pierre Thibeault a car on Highway.17 near her Limitee, truck body builders. home. The photograph shows a steel- Ann Vagan, 51, Madison plated body on a truck frame. Heights, Mich., in a two - catThere are two slot-like open- collision near Winona, ings. in the roof of the vehicle. Donald Bailey, about 46, sev-\One of the openings faces to the eral hours after a two-car col-\rear and. the other forward. lision in, Stratford. both are steel-plated on three Richard Baker, 18, Toronto, sides. There are doors on each from injuries suffered Saturday ide of the cab and doors on Alberta had two road deaths)when he was thrown from 4/each side of the main body of | jand Newfoundland one.. Prince| motorcycle. | the vehicle. The windshield ap- |Edward Island was the only} Mrs. Myrtle Rush, 22, Galt, pears to be the only glass on JAILED stormed the police station, set numerous fires and threw rocks and garbage over the resort area, Several arrests were made, --~(AP Wirephoto) River Collision Inquiry Planned ST. JOSEPH de la RIVE,| Jean-Louis Que. (CP) -- A probe probably|Que,, standing watch at 5:30 will begin Wednesday into a|p.m. Saturday on the Leecliffe collision on the St. River that left one seamen/ship's horn had sounded at dead, two others missing and|least 30 seconds before the col- presumed drowned and one of/lision. the two ships involved lying at| The carrier, owned by the the river's bottom. |Montreal-based Hall Corpora- Details of the inquiry, to be|tion of Canada, was bound up- held in Montreal, have yet to be|river for Lackawana, N.Y..,. with worked out. |24,000 tons of iron ore. Under Sunk was the ore carrier|charter to United Operator of Leecliffe Halla - 12,000-ton ves-|New York, the Apollonia had sel. The other ship, the 6,640-\left Trois Rivieres, Que., with ton Greek freighter Apollonia,ja cargo of grain and was now is in Levis, Que., where|headed down-stream. repairs will be made on her; The dead man and those now badly-damaged bow. j missing were among a group The collision took place in|of crew members who boarded heavy fog off this bleak, north-| shore community, 65 miles/being towed by the tug Foun- northeast of Quebec City. dation Viper in the salvage at- The 33. crew members \and|tempt. The two lines between! eight passengers got off the Ca-| the vessels broke, however, and| nadian ore carrier after the col-|thescarrier haeded for the bot-| lision. But the three men were tom. | YOUNG RIOTER Police haul an unidentified youth off-to jail as between 5,000 and 10,000 teen-agers rioted at Hampton Beach, New Hampshire Sunday night. The crowd completely out of hand Dotre | of AMOS)! «owned in the Bay of Quinte} Lawrence/Hall, said in Quebec City the! the Leecliffe Hall while it was! |province to report no fatal ac- of injuries suffered in a tW0-|\the po | | cidents. The survey does not include | known suicides, slayings, indus- trial or natural deaths. The Ontario dead: MONDAY | James Simpson, 18, Kitch- }ener, and Paulette Jacob, 16, of New Dundee, Ont., when their) jear crashed into a tree near|1, months, in a two-car colli-/small garages were blown lsion on Highway 400 near Tor- down. Waves on Great Slave! Dundee, Betty McEvoy, 21, Ottawa, in |Kingston hospital of injuries suffered when the car in which she was riding left Highway 401 Saturday night about 20 miles east of Kingston. Richard C. Warman, 23, Mor-| ganstown, W.Va., when a jeep in which he was riding wen: off the Queen Elizabeth Way near | Oakville. Charles Walt, 15, Picton, |near Picton, Brian Finnesael, 5, RR 1, Congo Leader Asks For Aid Not Criticism | ADDIS ABABA (CP-Reuters) |Premier Moise Tshombe of the jrebellion-torn Congo told for- eign ministers of the Organiza- ition for African Unity Monday jthat he wants help rather than leriticism, Conference sources said Tshombe, who earlier proposed that troops and police from 'friendly" African countries be | dy. ear crash on Highway 8 near -- ee Galt Saturday. Mrs, Lorraine Atwood Halv- erson, °22, and her son Bradley, 4, both of Beardmore, Ont., when the car in which they were riding left the road near Port Arthur. Vincenzo Vasile, 38, Toronto, and his daughter, Fredericka, STORM HITS TOWN HAY RIVER, N.W.T. (CP)-- Winds of more than 70 miles an hour and freezing rain lashed the small town of Hay River, N.W.T, Friday night. Don Tay- paper in the town, said several onto. Lake were estimated at 20 feet SATURDAY . i John Denofrio, 11, Ottawa, miles north of Edmonton, when struck by a car on a city street. John D. Jackson, 71, of Clif- \ford, Ont., when.struck by a lear at Harriston. Emanual Quirion, 32, St. Vin- cent de Paul, Que., when his) car left the road about seven) miles northeast of Woodstock. Mrs. Lydia Pierburg, 28, Kitchener, when the car in which she was riding rolled over on Highway 400, 12 miles south of Barrie. Mrs, Mabel Ranta, 44, Fort William, when her car piled Into another auto backing up on Highway 17, 100 miles northeast of the Lakehead. Arthur Bale, 35, Toronto, drowned when his boat over- turned in Pigeon Lake. FRIDAY Bruce Elliott, 1, of the Nap- anee district, when his parent's car went out of control near Napanee. Brian Harvey, 11 weeks, when) he suffocated on a feather pil-| low at his home in Capreol. Howard McGonegal, 76 Flower Station, Ont., drowned stationed in calm areas of The Congo, had to defend himself; Monday against charges made} when he fell into the Tay River at Perth, Robert Hill, 35, and Ruth 36, both of Warren, lor,. editor of a weekly news- high. Hay River is about 500 BETTER THAN GIRLS? By COLIN FROST DENBY DALE, England (AP)--The great pie of Denby Dale, largest ever seen in this home of monster pic, | emerged in triumph from its oven Saturday and was promptly devoured by waiting throngs. i For 36 hours its six tons of beef, potatoes, spices and crust, had baked and bubbled in Hector Buckley's barn, overlooked by a herd of cows, including the mothers of some of its ingredients. As eating time drew near, the pie, on its 16 - wheeled trailer, started @ ceremonial journey to the field in which Denby Dale has eaten pie for at least two centuries. Pipe, brass and jazz bands heralded its progress. Behind came a dozen floats devoted to the theme that the next most ap- petizing thing to a pie is a pretty girl. After blessing from the vil- lage parson, and a hymn in | memory of four Denby Pie | organizers killed in a car) | crash, the crust was cut, | From the interior of the | massive pie dish rose a mag- | | -nificent aroma. Thousands | ____| lined up for a morsel. IS PEERLESS | It proved a peerless pie, rich and spicy with enough | salt to generate an ade- NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? PERRY Day or night 723-3443 Crowd Devours Spicy 6-Ton Pie quate thirst, and a crust exactly the right shade of brown. Its culinary success was in- disputable. Commercial success, how- ever, was in some doubt. The crowd of 40,000 to 50,- 000 fell below the vast as- semblage for which the vil- lage pie committee had pre- pared, Enough people were there, however, to demolish the pie, which was divided into 30,000 portions and sold at 10s ($1.50) a piece, including the price of a commemorative plate. Denby Dale, a Yorkshire village otherwise known for its fine worsted cloth, has been making great pies since the 18th century. FIRST WAS IN 1788 The. first, in 1788, cele- brated a temporary bout of sanity on the part of King any seen before. It celebrates the four royal births of 1064, among them Queen Eliza- beth's third son, Prince Ed- ward, The pie survived reported threats of sabotage, which Denby suspects originated in the neighboring village of Clayton West, where they spe- cialize in giant puddings. It surGived, too, the hazardous descent of a hill called Romb Pickle, a hill so steep that one previous pie overturned and was trampled to death by the pie-crazed crowd, The steel dish holding the latest pie measured 18 feet long and six feet wide and 18 inches deep. Now that the pie is eaten, the pie committee hopes to sail the dish across | the English Channel, TO LAUNCH CAMPAIGN OTTAWA (CP) -- The Uni- tarian Service Committee of Canada announced today a campaign to raise $330,000 for overseas relief and rehabilita- tion will be launched Tuesday. This year marks the 20th an- |niversary of the voluntary, non- \denominational. agency, which | will use the money to carry on more than 60 projects in nine jcountries of Asia and Europe. George Ill. The second, 27 | years later, greeted Britain's | victory over Napoleon. The 1887 pie for Queen Vic- toria's Jubilee went bad and is recalled with a shudder by the village elders as the "huge pie." This year's pie wag the éighth, and was larger than PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 728-9474 jgiant bluefin tuna were landed jin Nova Scotia, the majority of them. off Halifax, Cape St. Mary and Wedgeport. Rain Blamed For Ex. Drop TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana- nadian Nationa Exhibition, plagued by rain in its first few days. and by cool weather throughout,-closed Monday. night with its attendance down 81,500 from last year. Attendance this year was 2,944,000 compared with 3,075,- 500 last year. Labor Day at- tendance was 258,000 compared with 260,000 on the same day last year, Grandstand attendance also dropped. The take in 1963 was about $360,000 while this year's dropped to $260,000. In addition to the weather, exhibition: officials blamed the New York world's fair for the attendance . drop. WANTED OIL BURNER SERVICEMAN All Replies Kept Confidential Apply: BOX D-1 OSHAWA TIMES { 1 q 187 King St. Eost i Re-Opening 'Soon at New, Larger Location watch for SPECIALS ar niet - What is a Volkswagen 1500 ? miss t 'by other speakers. He explained| Alice Jones, ssing following an attempt to| Those aboard were forced to by other speakers Peel Ohio, drowned when their boat save the stricken ship. ENGINEER DEAD scramble into life boats as the big vessel sank in 80 feet of Dead is Guy Descheneaux, water, one-quarter mile from 33, of Montreal, the ship's en-| shore. gineer, whose body was recov-- The accident occurred in the ered twa miles from the accil-- same area where another ore| dent scene. carrier, the Tritonica, sank Presumed drowned are Jean-|with a loss of 34 lives after a Louis Desjardins, 28, of Levis,|collision July 20, 1963. { the wheelsman, and chief cook! Senator Maurice Bourget, Michael Modrak, 42, of Mont-'Speaker of Canada's upper real, house and a passenger on the Romeo Rail, 40, of Pointe-|Leecliffe Hall, said there was aux-Trembles, a Montreal su-ino panic among the 33 crew burb, was in satisfactory con:|members and eight passengers dition in a Quebec City hospi-| aboard, tal where he was taken from) He said one lifeboat and two the crash scene for treatment/rafts were lowered successfully of arm fractures and other in-|and there were no. difficulties juries. getting everyone ashore safely. WEATHER FORECAST Cool Northern | Air Is Blocked Forecasts issued by the Tor-jern Georgian Bay: Winds south onto weather office at 5:30 a.m.|to southwest 15 to 20 knots: Synopsis: A series .of weather|partly cloudy. : disturbances moving through) Northern Lake Huron, north- central Ontario will preventjern Georgian Bay: Winds east cooler air in the north country to northeast 15 to 20 knots with from spreading further south-|higher gusts in thunderstorms; ward and the prospects for to-/showers and scattered thunder: day and Wednesday across'storms: considerable fog. southern Ontario are for warm,| Lake Superior: Winds north- sunny weather and increasing!east 15 to 20 knots: cloudy with humidity. The north country|showers; considerable fog will have mostly sunny weather : today and Wednesday with Forecast Temperatures afternoon temperatures near Low tonight, high Wednesday: seasonable normals Windsor .. 68 88 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|St. Thomas. 6588 Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-| London tario, Haliburton, southern Kitchener ., Georgian Bay regions, Wind-|Mount Forest...... sor, London, Hamilton, Tor-|Wingham .. onto, Killaloe: Mainly sunny|Hamilton . and warm today and Wednes- St. Catharines day. Becoming more humid/Toronto Wednesday. Winds southerly 15,| Peterborough Northem Georgian Bay, Tim-/Trenton agami, Algoma, southern White Kingston «......0s River regions, North Bay, Sud-|Killaloe «+s+eesses bury: Cloudy with a few show-|/Muskoka ers and thundershowers today,|North Bay.. Mainly cloudy Wednesday. Sea-|/Sudbury .. sonable temperatures. |Earlton Northern White River, Coch.|Sault Ste. Marie... rane regions: Sunny with a few|Kapuskasing ..... cloudy periods today and Wed.-|White River....... nesday. Seasonable tempera-|Moosonee tures. Winds light. Timmins ....... ° TORONTO (CP) Marine a forecasts issued by the weather| Just a Minute... office at 8 a.m. today, valid un-| A ti] 11 am. EDT Wednesday: |+. ; did you know that DONALD «foe VEL. can book passage for you Lake Ontario: Lake Erie: | ; 2 4 on any Girline or passenger liner pg dee ta southwest 15 tO in the world? Call today for the finest ice, 668-3304, Southern Lake Huron, south-| sone colic ae | seeeeeeee that there were 150 political movements in The Congo, which was a vast country and) difficult to. control, After the evening session, a conference spokesman said 13 delegates had reviewed the Congo situation and all con- demned foreign intervention and the use of mercenaries by Tshombe's government. Time To Tame Machine Age TORONTO (CP)--Labor Min- ister MacEachen told a Labor Day luncheon at the Canadian} National Exhibition Monday that automation -- like nuclear) | | power--is not good or bad in it- \self, dependng omly on how it is used. | "Fortunately, we in Canada} have been concerned about the} effects of automation for some| time and are not in danger of} being taken unawares by _ its} problems," he said. 'We: still) |have time to tame this monster) before it grows too big and to) make it do our bidding." | Mr. MacEachen said automa-| tion is affecting many of the is-! sues that are regularly involved in collective bargaining and it is posing an array of new prob- \lems that in the past did not) enter labor-management rela- tions, There is a need for genuine co-operation between labor and) |management who,' faced with isituations for which no cut-and- dried solutions exist, need to join forces in a real working |relationship--even if it means giving up some short-term ad- jvantages, he said, COSENS & MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728-7515 All Lines ef Insurance Res: 725-2802 of 725-7413 joverturned in Rock Lake. Andrew William Britton, 7,) Fort William, when his bicycle} was struck by a car near his) home. | Joyce McNulty, 30, in a two-car collision way 400, seven miles Barrie. Sudbury, | on High-; north of Union Busting Charge Made TORONTO (CP) -- Stan Bul- lock, publicity chairman' of striking Local 91 of the Inter- national Typographical. Union (CLC), accused publishers of Toronto's three daily newspa- pers Sunday of attempting to break the union in Canada, Speaking during a regular morning service at Donlands United Church, Mr. Bullock said the publishers of The Globe and Mail, The Star and The Telegram had been plan-| ; ning for two years in prepara-| * tion for a strike. | 3 He said the three newspapers, : are receiving $50,000 a week) from the American Newspaper | Publishers Association "to! : break the -strike of the typo- graphical union." | : Mr, Bullock had been invited) : by Rev. I. G. Perkins to speak) ; to the Donlands congregation in| F a Labor Day service. About 200 persons heard his talk. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST, 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS THEY GROW FAST ! 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