Thought For Today Caddy: A Jad who stands behind e@ golfer and.doesn't see the ball either. VOL. 93 -- NO. 221 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1964 Weather Report Fog patches and drizzle over- night. Warmer and partly cloudy Sunday, ' Authorized as Second Closs Mail Post Office Department Ottowa and for poyment of Postage in Cash, THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Seven Hopefuls Eyeing Liberal By BOB EXELL TORONTO (CP)--Seven run- ners go to the post today in the Ontario Liberal leadership race. Post time--the beginning of voting for a new provincial leader--is at 1 p.m, but it may be late afternoon or early even- ing before a winner is declared. The odds are short on two-- Robert Nixon and Andrew Thompson. Joe Greene and Charles Templeton command a better price. The longshots in the race are Eddie Sargent, Vic Copps an Joe Gould. The seven candiates deliv- ered their election speeches to the convention Friay night. Mr. Templeton, the ex-evan- gelist, said "no amount of con- vention enthusiasm, no demon- strations, no rallying cries" should deter Liberals from making a sober appraisal of their problems. Mr. Templeton, 48, who re- signed as executive news editor of the Toronto Star to enter poli- Ontario Throne tics, hammered away at the| Mr. Thompson, member of Conservatives and laid out ajthe legislature for Toronto Do- program for Liberal action. jvercourt said he has aided four The people of Ontario do not/cabinet ministers politically be- regard the Liberal party as an/sides working for Mr. Pearson alternative to the government,|before he became prime minis- jhe said, 'Surely, if they had,/ter. the Conservatives could never) "If any of these men has a have survived the unbelievable|soft spot towards me, believe series of shoddy scandals that|me I'm proud of it." have studded their years in| Earlier J. J. (Joe) Greene, power--and continue to this|the Ottawa Valley lawyer who day." |represents Renfrew South in the Mr. Templeton said the future|House of Commons, made a belongs to the Liberal party, but/veiled reference to Mr. Thomp- jthat first it must rediscover a|son's Ottawa backing by saying jsense of purpose. a new Ontario Liberal leader Mr, Thompson, 39 - year - old|could not be independent "'if he former assistant to Prime Min-| stands as the provincial appoin- ister Pearson, discarded a pre-|tee of the federal party." pared text to attack those he} By comparison, the 36-year- said were surreptitiously mak-|old Mr. Nixon gave a relatively ing charges against him and his|subdued speech followed by the organization. |flashiest of the candidates' floor| | Reports were being spread|lemonstrations. He ignored a) jthat the federal government|part of his prepared text in| was backing extensively the|which he said the Liberal party] Thompson organization, he said/had 'failed abysmally in- On- "What's wrong with that? /tario." | |Aren't they Liberals?" The son of the late Harry | | HAT TRICK AIM UAW Focusses On GM Table DETROIT (AP) -- With two fresh, look-alike contracts in their portfolios, United Auto| Workers union negotiators are) set to bargain Monday for aj mew pact with giant general motors corporation. Their ble main et:|man estimated.that 20,000 localjislature, promised to provide pr need em grievances still are unrésolved|solid leadershi: at various company plants ---- the. to demand contract ) UAW « rep- is i top the agreements ironed out with the Chrysler Corporation and Ford Motor Company. The Ford agreement-in-prin- ciple, mchieved less than an hour before a strike Friday, is similar to one reached with Chrysier in an- Chrysler's--would total 35 cents an hour during a three-year pe- riod. He said it would have to be bettered. - Ford, Nixon said he was convinced} the most important new govern-| mental responsibilities were in' the provincial arena. Mr. Nixon, St. George, Ont., farmer who formerly - taught science in high school, said On- tario must play a leading role| in national unity. | Mr, Gould, 52, the oldest of} This shadowgnraph of Beatle the candidates, called for sup-| drummer Ringo Stanr with his port from middle-of-the-road) hair standing vut irom shak':¢ delegates, hitting out at the left-| his head sent 15,000 screaming If Papers Parley, DOUBLE THE THRILL and shrieking teen-agers to The double image in the pic- vs dh-seorlind nods i ture was caused by two spot- rr quar wound up se a nationwide tour in Dallas, !shts. 'AP Wirephoto wingers among the candidates--/| Mr. Nixon and Mr. Thompson--| UAW. and those who had: "visions of| A national GM package, how-|grandeur" -- Mr. Greene an ever, appears to' be but one as-|Mr. Templeton. pect of the upcoming bargain-| The Toronto lawyer, who rep-| ing. A General Motors spokes-|resents Bracondale in «the leg- office and engineering person- nel--who also belong to the lie Sar ip. ent, mayor of ANGOLA, La: (AP)--A Negro' inom prison death cell and a woman in len have been pen pals for three yeats. But prison officials have cut off their letters because the two are not of the same race. "What a stupid idea," said wa "Aug. @4jon a ; Ge GM's original economic of- the low wage-earner and for tmilar to Ford's andjthe parts of Ontario not-as Metro Toronto. Vie Copps, mayor of Hamil- promised to establish a the party back in touch with the people again. it and was ~-- by Chrysler anc Company and union offi- cials have estimated that the Chrysler contract would be worth 54 cents an hour. é Ford's 130,000 production The Chrysler agreement,|workers also won a Christmas which set the pattern for fatter|/bonus which Reuther said could other dealine photo-finish Sept. 9 : STRIKE VOTE FOR PEDLAR pensions, covered its hourly- rated workers. It took last-min- ute accord Friday to avert a threatened walkout by 7,000 salaried Chrysler employees-- Sheet metal workers at Ped+ | lar People Limited, members range from $25 to $100 an em- ployee, Calling it "frosting on Mrs. Solveig Johansson, 39, of Stockholm, who learned English to write to Edgar Labat. abat, 41, has been on death tow 11 years--longer than any prisoner in the United States. If his case hangs on until next March, he will break Caryl Color Bar Cuts Off Death-Row Pen Pal soe border in east central ; 's death row ordeal 11 years 11 months: | An all-white male jury 'con Johnsson wrote: the victed Labat of rene otf in alprison she was Labat's "adop- white woman's rape in 1950. He|tive. mother." The prison said pleaded not guilty at his 1953)adoption of a Negro by a white trial. A chain of pleadings and/isn't legal in Louisiana, appeals have given him eight) In Sweden, which has no cap- stays of execution--four from) ita) punishment, Mrs. Johansson |said she first heard of Labat's "Please be advised that you|case in 1960 when she read a have been denied correspond-| newspaper. story. ence privileges," Raymond P.| Something inside myself told Leblanc, the prison's assistant] 4), courage," said Mrs. Johans- director of classification, told) son, who is childless. Mrs. Johnson in a letter,) She sald she sent him hun- Louisiana. Mrs. the U.S. Supreme Court. | of Local 2784, United Steel- come next) workers of America, will take a strike vote Monday after- the cake," Reuther said the first bonus may year. Bid To H "by of existing rules and| dreds of letters, $10 or more a in -|month, and picture post cards. gg algae sng ech |Labat decorated his cell with }eolor views of Sweden. fice of the warden in keeping Vietnamese -- Sea Battle A Mystery PEKING (Reuters). -- North| fabrication prearranged 'by the! In a statement broadcast by Viet Nam's army high com-| United States, jthe official oy woe valled for an im-| ine e P prs Ag of the "inter.| WASHING@ON -- (OP-AP) --|mmese 'uouhal nothing about national control commission on|The U.S. government, operat any of their units being in- Viet Nam to discuss U.S. re-|img behind a screen of secrecy,|yoived. The Communists denied ports of North Vietnamese at-/Sought today to determine|inoy provoked the incident and tacks on Ametican warships in| whether two United States de laccused the United States of |the Tonkin Gulf Friday night |stroyers patrolling the Gulf of/tmving to create an excuse for The official New China nows/Tonkin fired at phantoms or at) attacking North Viet Nam. agency reported that Co!. Ha-/Communist North Vietnamese U.S. sources said two Amenii- van Lau, head of the high com-|Patrol-torpedo boats, lean destroyens steaming in the ymand's Liaison mission, had| The North Vietnamese foreign|q..ened and overcast Gulf of jsent an urgent message to the|ministry claimed two U.S. de-|moniin had opened fire on what |ICC. chairman demanding thejstroyers were in action Friday|iiey thought were Communist | meeting, jnear a place called Nghe An, PT boats closing to attack The colonel denounced Amer-|that 'heavy explosions were re can reports that North Viet-|heard and flashes of light and/sAW NO BOATS |namese patrol boats attacked/aircraft circling over the spot) ne destroyers did not report American warships as __ pure were seen from the shore.' seeing any oraft, the informants said, but they observed what appeared to be hostile craft on radar several miles away. The sources said that in re ports to the Pentagon -- re- ports described as garbled-- the U.S. warships did not say they were fired on. In two clashes last month the U.S. said thier 'Printers Go Back TORONTO (CP)--The Inter- national Typographical | Union (CLC) said Friday * is pre pared to end a strike against Toronto's three daily newspa- pers and return to work if the publishers will resume contract negotiations, Local 91 said in a statement it considered a proposal by Tor- onto board of control that the papers rehire the printers pend- ing settlement of the dispute a "good one." strike and go to Sid Dunkley, union publicity of- Hficer, added in an * stipulating the union would do this only if the publishers were willing to negotiate, "We are not prepared to bar- gain within the framework ofa non-negotiable, take-it-or- leaye-it ultimatum," he said. "We're ready to end thel' Mr, Dunkley said union offi-| cials are willing to recommend that the membership accept an agreement reached July 29 when jurisdiction over comput- that led to the strike, was set- tled in the publishers'. favor. Settlement was forestalled at the time when the publishers introduced new work proposals were fired on in the gulf and they returned the fire. Those earlier clashes brought down swift U.S. retaliation on Nonth Vietnamese PT + boat bases and oil dumps. American carmier - launched air strikes were said to have destroyed about half of North Viet Nam's 50 PT boats, foremen statement Friday, the U.S. government ye teniel « Sean by Defence Sasad to Secretaty 'McNamara on the lat- Publishers were not available for comment. me to write and give him a lit-| _| Bears In Ungava , About 680 printers and mail- : ing oom emplovess walked, ft! Devour Worker }egram and The Globe and Mail July 9. The papers have con- tinued to publish, at first using supervisory personnel. Recently} they have started to employ; ;|Company" 'here, Friday found SCHEFFER VILLE, Que. (CP) --Companions searching for Sydney Smith, 26, an em- ployee of the Canadian Marconi QUESTION SKIPPERS ? Officials said full accdunts were being sought from the skippers of the destroyers, pi- lots of U.S. planes that had been in the air over the scene and from othens. Air support was only about 15 minutes away when the inci- '3 Lives Lost In Head-On noon. Negotiations with the com- pany have been going on since last April 1. The two-year con- tract expired April 30. There ate 216 in the local's bargain- ead Off with the laws of the state of Louisiana." "Under said laws,' Leblanc continued, 'correspondence is not permitted unless the corre- Why is she interested in La-|~ i's case? "To kill another person--it's |murder,"' she said. "Edgar has | paid the penalty with all these | bai utsid Si . | outsi le professional help. eae ebantar : and was quickly overhead. A U.S. carrier is said to be in the area. four large bears devouring his body 30 miles from this Un- gava mining centre. Merger May US. Rail Stoppage ing unit. Local President Lorne O'Neil said today the main issue is | Car Crash PICTON, Ont. (CP) -- Three WASHINGTON (AP) -- The| federal government tries this weekend to head off a country- wide United States railway strike set for 2 a.m. Tuesday morning. Chairman Howard Gamser of the national mediation board pledged intensive efforts to win settlement of the dispute be- tween six shop craft unions and negotiators for most of the U.S. railways. So far, no face-to-face meet- ing: between the two sides was in prospect. Federal mediator Francis A. O'Neill was shuttling between union and carrier rep- resentatives searching for a common ground to make such a session possible. "We would welcome an agreement," said union spokes- man Michael Fox, who an- nounced the strike call Friday. "We don't relish the idea of a strike but we have no alterna- tive." Chief railway negotiator J. E. Wolfe also expressed hope for a settlement, saying a strike would be "devastating." The only issue in the dispute is job security. This includes: wage protection for railway shop men' who lose their jods or suffér pay cuts because of} technological improvements and money. The company has offered three cents an hour increase from September_1 (eliminat- ing retroactivity) With an ad- ditional four cents on May 1 next year and five cents on emergency board. A_ board made job protection recommen- dations last month and both sides claimed they accepted them. They blamed each other for_the deadlock. November 1, 1965. A union spokesman said that Flat day nates now range management's latest offer did) from $1.95 an hour for work- not carry out the emergency ers after six months to a $2.60 board's recommendations. Thé) rate for railways denied this and said Increases in life insurance, they are ready to negotiate any-| accident and dismemberment time the unions are. insurance, sick benefits, shift skilled employees. | "I think pressures will be put on both parties to do every- thing possible to prevent a strike,"' said Wolfe. Fox, presi dent of the AFL-CLO Railway premiums and vacation period have also been offered. Mr. O'Neil said several non- monetary items have already been settled. persons were killed and one ichild was injured Friday night | when two cars collided head on jon a county road near this com- |munity, 20 miles south of Belle- ville. | Dead are Roger Sallans,' 25, \of mearby Demorestville, * his |wife Sandra, 19, and William |Douglas McDonald, 21, of Pic- |\ton. Police said the child, Cindy Sallans, 4, was taken to hospi- jtal with undetermined injuries 2 3, escaped injury. Both children were riding with their parents when their car collide with the second ve- spondents are of the same race." SEGREGATE PRISONERS | years in death cell. . .. I have |never known someone of his |people. But Edgar is my friend and nobody can change it. Prisoners are segregated by| Friendship don't come from the| ¢ race at Angola, the 18,000-acre| color in people's faces. It come State prison farm near the Mis-! from heart." but a second child Terrafice, Church May Cut Government Hold By BENNET M. BOLTON and instituting bishops 1s VATICAN. CITY (AP)--The|Proper, peculiar and. exclusive Roman: Catholic Church may|to competent ecclesiastical au- soon. ask certain governments] thority. to give up their control over) "For this reason, to conven- Sire Nation's J = Biggest Union WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) --A finst step was taken Friday to- ward a merger which would produce the largest union in Canada Some 400 delegates to the an- nual convention of the 35,000- member Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and Gen- enal Workers (CLC) approved a resolution cailing for closer liaison with the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CLC), second-largest union in Canada after the Unit@éd Steelworkers of America (CLL). But the brotherhood delegates t hicle. Police said McDonald Employees' Department, said: : oi i eneiatet ed 'was alone in the other car. "We stand prepared ta make!_ ides a fair and equitable settlement, | ma tne ee cis "| LADYBIRD -- LAND: SHACK Fox exempted from the strike! call the Pennsylvania Railroad,| hd ud with which he said an agree-! Paint. Job Fixes °,° Political Issue ment had. been reached, and} PRATTVILLE, Ala. (AP)-- the Southern Railway and the| Long Island Rail Road, where | The Republicans raised the roof--and Mrs. Lyndon B. he said agreements are being Johnson had it fixed. worked out. 3 The roof in question covers Play Pals Burn Y: 8, the heads of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Cifler, the elderly Ne- cans, the roof leaked, the porch was crumbling, and the house was about to disinte- grate on its shaky foundation Not so now. The house sports a new tin roof, a bolstered foundation appointment of bishops. Informed sources said today) Pope Paul is in favor of such a| move, It was said: the Pope iently protect the freedom of; the church and to promote more aptly and easily the good jof the faithful, it is the desire nefused to bring in a resolution calling for immediate merger. Such a merger would form a bangaining agency of more than other changes in rail 4 At Stake tions BLAME EACH OTHER | TORONTO (CP)--Gary Stan- procedures under the oulis, 8, of Toronto, the cowboy Labor Act to delay ajin a game of cowboys and in- expired, including dian was taken to hospital a ay .Tike Rave gro. sharecroppers whose small shanty became some- thing of a political ping-pong ball about the time President Johnson signed the anti-pov- erty bill into law. establishment of a presidential CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 'have been changed with assault 'causing bodily The Cutlers live on a 4,009- acre section of land near Prattville, Ala., owned | by Mrs. Johnson, and which the | president's wife is turning | into a tree farm. , When the "war on poverty" was begun, Republicans pro- duced a picture of the Cutler's h along with a clinically revort of 4 they with second degree burns Fri- day after being "burned at the stake." His "'captors," aged 8 and 11, fied him to a fence post and then set fire to the rope. Be- fore the boy could extinguish the fire Gary's pants had caught fire and he was badly ite burned ety The detailed | tion, which, | was terrible, According to the Repubili- its con boy's two playmates claimed, barm. and a new--blue--front porch. The couple has received a letter from Mrs. Johnson say- ing that the improvements won't result in a rent increase --they will still pay $5 a month. For ail the political whirl- wind that flew about . the shanty, the Cutlers aren't too politically-minded. Charlie is fond of the: John- sons but he's not planning to | vote this year. Doesn't yote, he says. He has little sympathy for. Republicans, "because: we it so hard under Mr the ri had Hoover." Herbert Hoover was |holy ecumenical -32, |negotiated with Hungety, | sented only a "point of begin-| Christ and 'pursues a asked for the insertion of alof the council fathers that clase covering the matter in a| henceforth no right or privilege Vatican ecumenical counci!!of election, appointment, pre-| schema which underwent its! sentation or designation for the first day of discussion Friday) office of the episcopacy will be wont the 2,500 council pre- granted, and that those (coun- lates. tries) which had b Church concordats which per-| hie GRA i 0 laa mit governmental acceptance or rejection of a newly named \them' up to now spontaneously | | give up such privileges." | countries. 120,000 members, about. 25,000 |moanre than the Steelworkers. The move followed a theme set throughout the week-- long convention, which stressed na- \tionalism for union members in |Canada and less dependence on policy decisions made in other bishop have existed for some) time between: the Vatican and| Spain, Portugal, Argentina and Paraguay. | The Vatican this week won tthe right to name bishops in| |Hungary, but the bishops are} required by Hungarian law to jtake oaths of allegiance to Hun- gary. This MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet, was reported Friday; Premier Khrushchey was) |night by the Vatican's officiat}quoted Friday as-saying the So-| «7 newspaper, L"Osservatore Ro-! viet Union's mysterious "terri- mano. ble weapon" is neither new nor IS A START a bomb of amy kind cipal tibiae ad the Re | Mag Laue --, _ Res _ His latest remarks onthe sub-| ere a he nae Jeet were reported by Indian .|Ournalists who interviewed him| Saying jat a Kremilin reception. It was} the agreement repr: his second "clarification" in 24} ning" for further negotiations. | hoarse The sources said the new) = : Hatise reads: The Soviet leader first talked| "Because the apostolic office) about the mystery weapon to a' of the bishops was instituted by, Japanese parliamentary delega- piriiual tion Tuesday. and supernatural end, the most) Thursday night, 'he denied council de.|saying the weapon had unlim-} that the right of naming|ited power. : I No 'Doomsday Machine' Red Leader Now Says Friday night, Indian report- ers quoted him as saying: 'have not been. talking) about bombs with the Japanese, | "Tt. was not about new weap-/ ons that I was talking. | "Tt was a general talk about) tactical weapons, for infantry,| rockets, tanks--not bombs." The Indian correspondents said they were not clear! whether Khrushchev meant the| "terrible weapon" was a tac-| tical weapon, such as a rocket. | Khrushchev was not accessi- ble. to western reporters to ex- plain the remarks attributed to him ahd Soviet officials were unable to elucidate, CUTAWA Kirstin Jonson, left, and In- grid Bjorklund display two creations from the Jer-Sea of 1965 swim and beachwear collection during a preview in London. Kirstin, Miss Sweden of 1963, wears a Sweden Y LOOK one-piece Vyrene spandex tur- quoise swim. suit with cut-out sides. Ingrid, one of Sweden's top photographic models, wears a black suit of the same material, but. with the front: cut low to the midriff. Two buttons keep the suit closed: