. ) 'on-s9) aa a gana naan ine ae an aoe ae +> " taxation and initiative." The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitb y, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 93 -- NO. 229 The Oshawa Cimes Authorized s Second Class Mail Post Office Department and for poyment of Postage in Cash, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1964 Ottawa it Weather Report Variably cloudy overnight and Wednes- day. Turning low-45. a little cooler. High-58, TWENTY PAGES OPP OFFICERS CON FER DURING H fA UNT Taxes Gag Initiative Chamber Study Says By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Business Editor| WINNIPEG (CP) The Ca- nadian Chamber of Commerce, continuing its assault on gov- ernment fiscal policies, has drawn up a policy statement criticizing Ottawa for not rec- i the way heavy taxa- tion can throttle private initia- tive. The Chamber's national pol- committee approved:a reso- bd its, 35th lution Monday at its aN ocal nual meeting saying the gov- ernment has based its tax poli- ches on revenue returns, ignor. "the stultifying effects of The statement will go before the 800 delegates Wednesday, along with other police propos- ais, for approval or rejection. 2,000 Protest Flood Damage NEW DELHI (AP) -- About 2,000 ragged villagers streamed into New Delhi today and staged a screaming protest egainst ernment failure to cope with floods that have rav- aged vast regions of North In- dia. Grizzied old men with canes, women caifrying babies, chil- dren running to keep up, they swarmed through the capitail's main business district, clogging traffic and sweeping aside pe- destriains. NEW YORK (AP) -- A Finn Kaarlo R. Tuomi has been identified as the mysteri- ous Soviet spy who worked for the United States as a double agent and helped break up @| Woncpiring to pass U.S. defence!and other Roman Catholic pre-|Showing that the Vatican coun-| spy ring. He will be the government's key witness in the espionage trial of a Soviet couple that be- gan Monday in Brooklyn. The government had cloaked Tuomi's identity, disclosing| Washington, At the same time,|/upon to vote on the more con- ute to the Jews of our time only *.at a top Russian spy had been caught by U.S. agents here and had agreed to act as a On trial are lov, 40, and his Alexandre Soko- 34. To wife, Finn Was Counterspy, Helped Break Red Ring The statement was approved shortly. after Chamber Presi- dent Howard T. Mitchell of Vancouver attacked the federal | government for its heavy wel- \fare programs. He told the | opening session of the three-day meeting that the government and voters should ask not only what welfare measures are |wanted but also 'what the in- evitable bill will be." Other: proposals from the 850 1 chamb of the problems dealing with Can ada's water resources are be- coming a source of major worry, and it is time an effec- tive national policy is. de- veloped. NEED CO-OPERATION | The Sarnia proposal says it is apparent all levels of govern- ment and industry must co-op- erate in assuring an adequate) present and future water sup-} ply. SUPERINTENDENT BAIN cor ce and boards of trade making up the national organization that were passed by the policy com- stopping the so- called "brain drain" to the United States, water resources and pensions. A policy statement said in- dustry and government must co - operate in helping Can- ada's manufacturing grow) through development. of new or limproved products or other \technological advances to pro- ivide near-full employment op- portunities and to use resources |most effectively. | On the brain drain, the com- |mittee approved a_ resolution demanding a detailed study of why trained Canadian profes- lsional people and technicians |move to other countries. The Sarnia Chamber of Com- merce won support for its call for a study of Canada's water situation and efforts to use the resource properly. J. S. Mallow of Sarnia told the committee mittee included the need for|government - supervised plan. F. Kg Ik on a@ pay-as-you-go basis, the! MOSCOW (AP) -- President!® "ons, council sources said. On pensions, the c ittee| . passed a resolution reiterating the chamber's, sland agains i K Meets Sukarno resolution says. Trade Minister Sharpl told a) luncheon meeting Canada should renew efforts to develop|met him at the airport. and diversify trade in non-stra-| The prospects of further So- tegic goods with Communist|viet arms aid for Indonesia for countries. He also warnedjuse in its "confrontation" with against any serious disruption| Malaysia was expected by diip- of the flow of goods and serv-|lomaitic observers to figure ices across provincial oedienss Hires in the talks. 'Council Awards Nod To Married Deacons VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The; cil directorate of cardinals, said Vatican ecumenical council to-| the il co-ordinating com- day approved a measure allow-| mission planned when it met ing mature Roman Catholic/during the summer to retain) married men to become dea-/the original reference to Jew-| jish non-culpability for deicide But they added that the coun-| (god-killing). cil voted down a proposal that! 'But a theologian pointed out} young single men becoming | a potential hidden danger in the} deacons be allowed to marry. |seven-word phrase: 'The Jews) The council voted 1,598 to 629)aTe not guilty of deicide,' and) Sukarno of Indonesia arrived heme today for talks with So- forver their identities, both used \the names of two Americans, names had been purloined. The Sokolovs are accused of secrets to Russia over a period of six yéars. If convicted, they face a possible death penalty. They were arrested July 2, 1963, at their apartment in ja Russian personnel officer at ithe United Nations and his | wife were arrested in New York \City, but they were later swapped for two Americans held by the Russians. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS London Council Supports UAW Move LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- / members marched on city ha About 1,200 local trade union il Monday night in support of a strike by United Auto workers at Wolverine Tube and won a city council committee recommendation that manage- |deacons |marry. A two-thirds vote of| plained to the commission that| for mamried Jeacons and 1,364| the neference was stricken out,"| to 839 against allowing young|the sounce said. to be permitted to) 'The theological expert ex- \1,485 was required for ap-|that single statement, while | 'provat. ~-Clear..in.meaniny...today, could | Council fathers -- cardinais,|POSsibly be seen out of context janchbishops, bishops, patriarchs | 4 hundred years from now a, llates from around. the wonld-- cil declared that Christ was not lvoted approval Monday for. a God, |penmanent diaconate of dea-| The new version now before lcons to assist priests. the council says instead: "One Today the council was called) should be careful not to attrib- troversial issue on whether the x : ldeacons might be married. what was committed during the In the two ballots, the coun-| Passion of Christ." cil voted that mature men who| By referring to the Jews of were married before deciding to|'oday rather than the Jewish enter the diaconate would be|People as a whole at the time allowed to become deacons, 'but|f the crucifixion, the co-ordin- that young single men would|ation commission in effect put viet Premier Khrushchev, who NEARE GUARD BEATEN 3 Escapees Recaptured, Fourth Four inmates of the Ontario 'Training School in Bowmanville| last night slugged a guard with a bottle, stole his car and were chaised at speeds up to 95 mph) by police along Highway 401. | Three 15-year-clds were cap-| tured shortly after the pursuing | cnuiser rammed the fleeing auto] and warning shots were fired) aver the youths' heads es they scrambled away from the) wreckage. | Police are still searching for al . 16-year-old youth, Two of the youths appeared Sought would have caused more serious injuries. Half an hour efter the escape, the speeding car was spotted travelling west on Highway 401 by 'Constable Doug Jordan of the Whitby Ontario Pnovincial Police de#achment, Ailone in his cruiser, Constable Jordan gave chase, "I picked them up near th Livenpool road junction," he said late last night. "'We were doing speeds of up to 95 miles per hour at points. And traffic was very heavy too." The chase lasted some seven or eight miles with the fleeing car constantly weaving in and out of traffic. CARS COLLIDE Finally, on the 401 by-pass, the | ; War Two, only one other guard has ever been aiitacked." Mr. Bain said the four youths were confined to quartens Mon- day after supper for breaking rules and regulations. The rest of the prisoners, 196 of them, were outside practicing for a track and field meet. The superintendent said there ame 45 guards at the school. He does not think a floor polisher in the room where Mr. Mundy was. attacked was used as it Strike Marks DeGaulle Visit BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- The powenful General Confederation of Labor decided Monday to} call a %4-hour general strike| Oct. 5 during the visit to Ar-| gentina of president de Giaulle| of France, The press secretary of the confederation, Luis Angeleri, told reporters the executive council] decided to call the strike to protest govennment prosecution of 119 confederation leaders for instigating disorders in May and June. The confederation of 2,500,000 members is dominated by fol- lowers of ex-dictator Juan D. have to remain celibate after|aside the question of deicide, entering the diaconate. it he source said. The deacons will be able to baptize, marry couples, give jcommunion, administer last) Peron, now in exile in Spain. The fourth youth was neport- ed to have shouted, "Kill him, kill him'? while a companion slugged the policeman with the piece of pipe. MEE 2 iif SEN. 'DIRKSEN Leader's TAXMAN'S TRIP NETS 3 CENTS WORKING TON, England (AP) Storekeeper Eleanor Marshall complained today that an official with a chauf- feur drove 66 miles to collect two pence--three cents -- she owed on her taxes. "T sent a cheque for exactly | £200 ($600) and didn't add the two pence," she said. "Then the taxman phoned to say he must have it to bal- ance his books. T-had-e-whole series of letters and cails about it so I told them to see my accountant." At the tax office,an official said: '"'We had to see the ac- countant anyway to collect some forms. So we collected the twopence at the same time." "Now they've got the two pence but I still haven't got a receipt," Mrs. Marshall com- plained. The taxman said her re- ceipt is in the mail, The post- age for the receipt cost three pence. OTTAWA EXPERT PREDICTS: |rites and preach. But they wiil| not be able to say mass or hear confessions. With the institute of -the body of deacons left to national epis- Takeovers To ment at the plant refrain from hiring new employees until |copall conferences, it is likely | HALIFAX (CP) -- 'Economist a settlement of the strike is i Mother, 6 Children TROY, Mich. (AP) -- A were found hacked to death suburb today. Space-Heater Blast Kills 3 Children ATHOL, Mass. (AP) -- Th and a brother -- died Monda exploded in the living room of their two-family home. Spumed Negroes, Charged Contempt ».. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) Maddox has been ordered int proceeding .after he opened service to Negroes Monday. ) Police took the husband into custody: |that permament deacons willl| jnot become widely established jin areas where there are suf- lfickent priests, such as Europe. In a third ballot today, the jcouncil fathens agreed that na- tional conferences of. bishops would have the option of |whether to institute the diacon- ate in their areas. The vote was 1,523 to 702 n sight. Hacked To Death mother and her six children in their home in this Detroit iree children -- two little girls y night when a space heater i\that the original Vatican ecu- |menical council declaration on |the Jews might have led to a future interpretation that Christ was not God caused it to be re- vised, an .informed source said today. The source, close to the coun- Restaurant owner Lester G. o federal court in a contempt a new cafeteria and refused O. J. Fimestone of Ottawa today predicted a future increase 'in |foreign control of Canadian. in- dustry He listed three this tmend 1. American investors were "very discriminating," prefer- ling to put their money directly into manufacturing or resource industries which they can con- reasons for VATICAN CITY (AP)--Fearjtrol. A larger proportion of in: jvestment funds coming into |Camada would take this direct iform, bringing with it increds- ing control and take-overs of Canadian businesses. 2. Foreign-controlied compa- nies in Canada are generating jlarge retained earings. This money likely would be: used to expand existing operations or to branch out into new fields, including. control or purchase of enterprises now in Canadian funds. | 3. Only a few companies un- j\der foreign control had been "repatriated" or brought under Canadian control "and in the absence of specific efforts to achieve such results, this state of affairs is likely to continue." Dr, Firestone, a former eco- nomic adviser to the trade de- partment who now is vice-dean of social sciences at the Uni- versity of Ottawa, was address- \ing the convention of the Cana- -- Association of Real Estate Boards, ) Soar He said in part: 4 "The outlook, therefore, is that in 1971, as in the past few years, Canadians will continue to complain about growing con- trol by foreign~investors over Canadian industry and re- sources, and do little about it. "The moral of the story is;|2M4 Talking about wanting to change things is not enough. If Canadians really want to in- crease their stake in the eco- nomic development of their own country, they have got to do jsomething about it. Words do not bring results. Only action does ."' He did not advocate a specific "Gets Priority Tag WASHINGTON (AP) Con- gressional leaders plan to give legislation on presidential se- curity top priority when Con- gress reconvenes in January. Senator Everett. Dirksen of Illinois, the Republican leader in the Senate, agreed with Dem- ocratic Leader Senator Mike Mansfield of Montana that such legislation is needed. But Dirksen said in an inter- view Monday that quick action in the waning days of this con- gressional session on a single bill to make it a federal crime to assassinate a president (or vice-president 'might mean. we would have to do our work all over again" next year. A White' House committee on presidential safety--set up Mon- day to consider the broad rec- ommendations of the Warren commission plans to get started soon on drafting pro- posals for congressional action early in the new session, '| world's No. 1 automaker BOTH SIDES INCH R GM PACT Plant Demands Key To Solution * DETROIT (AP) -- Hopes for an early settlement of a U.S.- wide strike by the United Auto Workers Union against General Motors hinged today on resolv- ing some aa local at-the- portant to ending the walkout as an agreement on a national contract fi The UAW walked out at the els has been hailted by the walk- out of about 250,000 workers. ve, longer va- cations, extra holidays and other improvements. A similar economic e has been of- fered by GM, but the UAW in- sisted it wanted welll. improvements as UAW President Reu- Louis Seaton, who heads the gress was made in Monday. oonge + observed that he had Safety vide secret service protection for the Republican presidential nominee, Senator Barry Gold- water, and for the Republican and Democratic vice-presiden- tial candidates, Representative William E. Miller and Senator Hubert H. Humphrey. The leg- islation, if enacted, would ex- tend such protection to all fu- ture candidates for. those of- fices. The Warren commission said that legislation making the murder of a president or vice- president a federal crime is needed to avoid the "confu- sion" it said- surrounded the en- try of various government agen- cies into the Dallas investiga- tion. : The Warren report is selling "phenomenally" atcording to the. government printing office. It said that 25 to 27 further vol- umes, containing the full testi- mony and exhibits on which the 888-page report was based, may In its report thé commissi said there were deficiencies in secret service preparedness for President John F. Kennedy's visit to Dallas. sion called for 'complete over- haul" of the service's advance detection practices and closer liaison with the FBI and other agencies, Mansfield called Sunday for consideration' by Congress of new security 'méasures before adjournment. But he told 're- porters Monday it is "perhaps too late' to act on any meas- ures at this session. and broad| j legislative action to strengthen governmental agencies should be put off House committee reports. Several bills to make it a fed- eral crime to kill a president or vice-president are pending before the Senate judiciary committee, which meets today. The committee may act on another bill -- introduced. by Mansfield and Dirksen--to pro- Minor Drinking OK'd At Home TORONTO (CP)--H. D. Arch- i , director of the Ontario Alcoholism and Drug Addiction Research Foundation, said Mion- day parents should be allowed to serve alcoholic drinks at home to their children who are under 21, He 'old the legislature's se- lect committee on youth that! present laws banning home drinking by youths under 21 are in Saigon prepared new trouble as students and re- sects threatened ligious < strations today to protest the killing of three rioters Sunday in Qui Nhon, 270° miles' north- east of the South Vietnamese capital, Government troops shot the three demonstrators' and wounded 17 others to end a of the former Ngo Dinh Diem regime, : Saigon police kept special watch on the Hoa Hao and Cao Dai, two religious-military sects reported to be angered over the composition of the 17-member high national council set up last week to pave the way for a new civil government. A Hoa Hao group was reported plan- ning to march on Saigon from the Meking delta. ' Meanwhile, U.S. Army offi- cers in central South Viet Nam were critical of the U.S, role in the ending of the rebellion of some 2,000 mountain tribesmen United- trained. be-ready-in--six-to-eight--weeks,|the- They will be sold in sets only, at $75 to $100 a set. ~ States...had- - aes the Viet Cong guerril- The commis-| x. Hanpo .Marx (above), 75, the wigged, non-speaking member of the Marx broth- course of action. being broken by most parents and should be be ers, died in Hollywood iast night following surgery. His n MARX DIES specialties were a harp and a horn, which he usually played in Marx brother appearances. --(AP Wirephoto)