The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centrés; _ VOL. 93 -- NO. 235 The Oshaton Simes Price Net Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, oct OBER 6, 1964 Ottewa Weather Report Cloudy and cold today and Wednesday. Scattered showers. High-48, low-34, gen 3 as Second Class ge ig? Office Department for payment Cash, in Postage TWENTY-TWO PAGES ROYAL YACHT ARRIVES GM - UAW LBJ Praises GM And UAW DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Corporation and _ the United Auto Workers sought to- day to settle 117 remaining local-level working agreements and end a strike against the automaker. The local agreements. supple- ment the national contract on which the UAW and GM agreed Monday. Hope was expressed on both sides everything could be wrapped up in a week, bu t neither predicted it would be. Final settlement would send back to their jobs 280,000 of General Motors' 350,000 UAW- represented workers who were called out on strike 12 days ago to support the union's national- They remain to out back at-the-plant unit goals, ; was pleased UAW have reached agreement nationally. and also was pleased with previous announcements by the big three auto makers-- GM, Ford and Chrysler--they planned generally to maintain 1964 prices for 1965 models. At the same time the presi- dent cautioned others against following what he called a gen- erous settlement by an indus- try which has been racking up Liberals-Banks Close Says Dief OTTAWA (CP) -- A Liberal government decision to give Hal Banks landed immigrant status thwarted later Conserva- tive government efforts to get rid of him, Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Monday night. He told 200 representatives from Eastern Ontario Women's Conservative Associations there is a close relationship between the Liberals and Banks, former head of the Canadian SIU now living in the U.S. after jump- ing bail of $25,000 in a conspir- acy case in Montreal. The Liberal government of the day, Ne kad, Tailed to tote Banks' criminal record on his application to enter the coun- wy, gave him landed immi- frant status rather than a de- portation order when he was convicted of smuggling, and finally charged him with an of- fence for which he couldn't be | fitted --coat--and matching hat: record profits for the last year| and a half. The GM national agreement lifted a damper from the U.S. economy and motors led a strong stock market rally. GM stock hit a new high of $102.12 Monday before closing at $100.- 50, up $1.25 for the day. Ford) advanced $1 to $58.62. GM made $1,100,000,000 in this year's first half, compared with $1,590,000,000 in all of 1963 the largest profit ever made by a manufacturing corpora- tion. U.K. Headlines Warm Welcome LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ish newspapers t report loday Queen Ejizabeth's arrival on Prince Edward Island with headlines about cheering crowds and gun - carrying guards. general election con' Canadian - Connected Candidates Run In U.K. LONDON (CP) -- Sufficient Canadian - general election to form a pint- sized legislature of their own. About 20 such candidates, in- cluding at least three born in Canada, were among the rec- oni 1,755 hopefuls in the field) when nominations closed Mon-| day for the Oct. 15 contest. Mrs. Shirley Vivien Williams, 34-year-old daughter of Prof. George Catlin of McGill Univer- sity, Montreal, is a Labor can- didate in Hitchin, Hertford- shire, where her Liberal oppon- ent is Mrs. Elma Dangerfield, 57, who went to school in Oak} Bay, Victoria, briefly as a girl. "We're great friends and peo- ple think it strange we're fight- img," said Mrs, Dangerfield a lecturer in international affairs. "But it's great fun." be Tonies, who held the seat RAN IN 1959 Mrs. Dangerfield in the 1959 tested Aber: Correspondents were united in cabling that the Queen ap- peared unworried at the start of an eight-day visit, despite fears of others for her safety. The Queen, says The Daily Express, looked "as cool and composed as if she were at the Chelsea Flower Show." Some headlines focus on her reception. The Times says: "Warm wel- come for the Queen. in Can- ada."' "Union Jacks waved as Queen arrives,' is The Daily Telegraph headline. The Daily Sketch has just two words in its banner: 'Happy landing."" Vivid Royal Blue Chosen By Queen SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP) The Queen chose' vivid royal blue for her anrival here by plane Monday afternoon, The Queen wore a_ gently- The hat. with a graceful high| crown, was made of velvet pet-| als. Her gloves were a deeper | WINS SEAT Claude Wagner, Quebec's solicitor - general, who won election to the provincial Legislative Assembly with a 'byelection victory "for Preni- ier Lesage's Liberal party in Montreal - Verdun. (CP Wirephoto) | shade of blue and she carried| a black handbag. On her shoulder, a diamond brooch glittered under the | bright television lighting in the} extradited if he fled to the' U.S. airport hanger. RC 'Contract' connected -candi-|smuir, Conservative daughter- dates are running in Britain's|in-law of a former Canadian | don't deen South against Lady Tweed- Governor-General, who retained the seat and now is defending it again. Among other candidates of special Canadian interest are: Conservative: E. S. T. John- \son, rancher in British Colum- bia in 1923-30;-Cmdr. C, E, M. Donaldson, raised in British Co- lumbia, served in the Canadian navy in the Second World War; Neil Jamieson, former editor of the Rouyn-Noranda Press in Quebec; Tom Stacey, former reporter with the Montreal Star; Ian Percival, son of a Ca- jnadian who was formerly assis- tant to the agent-general for Ontario in London; :and Peter A, R. Blaker, educated at the University of Toronto. Labor: Malcolm Macpherson, former lecturer at the Univer- sity of New Brunswick who served as a major in the Ca nadian Army during the Second World War; Bruce Douglas- Mann, educated at Upper Can- ada College, Toronto; Miss Joan Lestor, born in Vancou- ver but left at an early age; Raphael Herman Tuck, former professor at McGill amd the University of. Saskatchewan; Brian Walden, toured Canada for the International Institute of Education in 1958. DICKSHONARY IS FENOMINAL LONDON (AP)--A dickshon- ary for peepul hoo kant spel kaim out here Monday. It is called -- the awful spellers' dictionary. By arranging several thou- sand commonly mispelled words according to their wrong spelling, the new dic- tionary claims it has elimi- nated a big stumbling block from the path of poor speil- ers. It goes on the theory if you know how to spell a word, it's doubly difficult to look it up in a regular dic- tionary. So, look it up the way it sounds, and there will be pthe-correct-spetting=------ For instance: If you think its rinocerus, look it up under that spelling and you'll find correct spell- ing--rhinoceros, Here are some other exam- | ples: Fenominal--phenomenat, Spanyed--spaniard, Cookoo--cuckoo. jmen Monday, -- jury HILDA MAY GRO S PATH OF ROYALTY Hurricane Backlash May Spoil Ceremony Security Tightens SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP) Security was tight Monday as official greeters gathered at the Summerside RCAF station ] to welcome Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip to Canada. The general public was not allowed into the air station, sit- uated just outside this western Prince Edward Island town. All newspaper, radio and television reporters and technicians were checked carefully by RCMP. Press buses were searched by two Mounties in uniform, a plainclothesman and an RCAF officer. Security was strict when the Queen passed through in a motorcade Monday night on her way from the airport to the royal yacht Britannia. Complaints were heard from some local visitors that, the Queen's jimousine travelled so fast in certain areas that the crowds almost missed seeing her. In other places, however, the procession moved slowly. Officially, Royal Tour arran- gers billed the trip as.a slow drive, which normally calls for a speed of 10 miles an hour, All buildings in the vicinity were checked before the Queen's arrival. One boarding house operator said police searched ail the rooms in his house and told him not to let anyone enter the building. Demolition Expert Held For Inquiry MCCOMB, Miss. (AP) -- A Mississippi grand jury today continued its inquiry into the rask of racial bombings in this railway hub on the heels of ad- ditional arrests by the FBI- FBI agents arrested seven including a for- mer anmy demolition expert. The seven, like the four ar- rested earlier, face state charges on iillegal use of ex- plosives. The Pike County grand jury will be asked to indict the 11 white ™en on the state change, which carries the death penalty. The law was passed 15 years ago when the state was gripped by a violent bus strike. Federal, state and local of- ficers began a _ concentrated crackdown last week after Gov- ernor Paul Johnson pledged that "law and order will pre- vail in Mississippi." The county grand jury opefied its investigation into the 16 ex- plosions which have wrecked and damaged Negro homes and churches in the area this sum- mer. No one has been seriously injured, Judge W. H. Watkins told the 'CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- If threatening weather and tight security precautions per- mit, this may well turn. out to be the most personal of the Queen's four visits to Canada. Her program today calls for a noon-hour arrival lottetown from Summerside, P.E.L, aboard the royal yacht |' Britannia, official dedication of the new $5,600,000 Fathers of Confederation Memorial Build- ings here, and attendance at a royal command performance in the new Confederation Theatre tonight. On her arrival by air in Sum- merside Monday she showed a vivacity and ease of manner not seen at the outset of her Cana- dian visits in 1951, 1957 and 1959. Canada and this island province -- which claims to be the most loyal of all the Com- monwealth -- have obviously become familiar ground. The weather could cramp the royal style for today's events. Early Monday night forecasters warned of a backlash from hur- Prime Minister Pearson and Mrs. Pearson, Premier and in Char- | showing good wishes, changes between hosts guests, "ANTHEM NOW A PRAYER" OTTAWA (CP) -- 'Tonight; God Save the Queen ts not an anthem -- it is a prayer," Op- poskion Lée der Uistecbekse ricane Hilda that might bring} women drenching rains and high winds oO ee eee ing the new cultural centre Later, however, they were more optimistic. Rain and bt | warnings were cancelled and Ike Is In Middle Weapons Dispute WASHINGTON (AP)--Former president Dwight D. Eisen- hower is in the middle--between Democrats and Republicans each claiming he is on their side in a dispute over nuclear weapons control. It all began Monday when the Republican party unveiled a task force report claiming tion of nuclear weapons to hea Burch has complained in the. past: about Democratic cam- paign material he charged was designed to frighten people into believing Senator Barry Gold- water, the Republican presiden- tial nominee, is "trigger-happy" strike fear and horror into their |the President Johnson has overex- tended his control of field-type nuclear weapons. This, the Re- publican group. contended, has damaged U.S. security. Eisenhower appeared at the New York press conference,. but wouldn't endorse or reject the report. He deplored the injection of the nuclear weapons issue into the presidential campaign, and added: "T don't think these are things that ought to be talked out in detail. . . . I don't think we should reach conclusions telling the president what he should do or what he should say." The White House prompnty d--a_stat things--art Mississippi that "are foreign = our way of life as we have al- ways known it." "Things are in fact happen- ing that are repulsive to us and |tempt us to revolt--to give way |to our emotions--to lose our sense of values and to take |things into our own hands," he isaid or President ven agreed with Eisenhower that 'it is not in the best interest of the coun- try to take our defence plans and make them public." Dean Burch, Republican na- tional chairman, said Johnson's comment was "a patent attempt to get off the hook of an issue | which is embarrassing him and and might bring on a nuclear war. Although he hasn't mentioned it since he began formal cam- paigning for the White House, Goldwater proposed last Oct, 24 in Hartford, Conn., that the NATO commander be given more authority over the use of tactical nuclear weapons. 'Never Better' Claims Gordon OTTAWA (CP) -- Said Fi- nance Minister Gordon on Mon- day: 'Canadians as a whole have. never been as well off be-| fore." He gave this reply to ques- tions in the Commons about an Ontario Labor Federation re- port saying Canada has 2,500,- 000 destitute people. Raymond Langlois (Credi- tiste-Megantic) asked whether Mr. Gordon would be willing to make the same statement be- only a few showers were pre- dicted, Heavy black clouds began to "lower just before the Queen's ---- ee "So we should offer a prayer on thks occasion," ficlaldom, were nevertheless complete, No one was per: mitted inside RCAF station Summerside without security clearance. ROMP guards in khaki drill coveralls jurked in ne background, complete with a police dog on a tight chain, when the Queen and Prince Philip arrived at Summerside dockside to go aboard the Bri- tannia. But despite the glowering security personnel, the Queen appeared completely at ease greeting those who now have become old friends in Canadian officialdom. It was a personal greeting she brought to the reception when she stepped off the silver- and-blue BOAC Boeing 707 jet. The crowd in Summerside's main street, as she drove by in her new closed black Cadillac limousine, returned a genuinely personal greeting. In the airport hangar, where the official welcoming ceremon- ies took place, it was also a genuinely personal greeting the Queen brought to Governor- General and Madame Vanier,|her weather and the sensitivity of|i The Queen frst vist Can SS ee ee. ne bey 0 a ae Ca pti 'and Wi strict observance of per 'tocols, her unbending id to formality, and her ob- vious 'was none Some, who have followed her royal visits to Canada closely, detected more of Prince ip's manner in the bearing--though, with the Queen Mary's training, it still altogether queeniy. Coronation Trumpets reverber- ated through the hangar. The Queen inspected a _penfectiy- drawn - up guard of honor, She signed the guest book and re- ceived from a child a bouquet of pink and red o to set off the royal. blue ensemble. "Distressing 'Says Ramsey | LONDON . (Reuters) Michael Ramsey, Archbishop atl Canterbur¥, said Monday an alteration of: the Roman Catho-| lic attitude toward marriage with Protestants is urgently necessary for. better relations "And there are those outside|his administration because the our state who hope that we will| American people realize the }do just that. 'Democrats have used the ques-! fore a public rally next Sunday in Thetford Mines, Que. "I'd be willing to say it be- fore anybody," snapped Mr. Gordon. Then he added that, natur- ally, some parts of the coun- try are "behind'"' others. Among them, he said as he looked at the Oreditiste benches are those of "'my honorable friends." Paul Martineau (PC --Pon- tiac - Temiscamingue) asked whether Mr. Gordon intended to do anything about those 2,500,- 000 destitute people, The government already has done a great deal, Mr. Gordon said. If the Commons could get on with public business, more would be done. | MPP Boycotting CPR Facilities TORONTO (CP) -- Thomas Wells, Progressive Conserva- tive' member of the legislature for Scarborough North has ad- vised President N. R. Crump of Canadian Pacific Railway that he intends to boycott all"CPR facilities because the railway plans to stop its Toronto-Peter: ut passenger service Oct. i. A Grewsum--gruesome, " AUTOMATION' S DARK CLOUD. |between the two churches. Labor Is Conc erned The' spiritual head of the) NORTH BAY Church of England told the For-) mation's NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Dion Appeal Hearing Starts QUEBEC (CP) -- The Quebec Court of appeal has begun hearing an appeal of the death sentence imposed on Leo- pold Dion for the sex slaying of four young boys here in 1963, Dion, 44, has been sentenced to die in December for one of the four slayings. Banks' Associate Arrested MONTREAL (CP) -- The RCMP said today that Eldon Jack Richardson of Montreal, charged with conspiring to as- sault along with Hal Bank deposed president of the Seafar- ers' International Union of Canada Ind., was arrested Mon- day night at Blackpool, Que., as he was returning to Canada from the United States ¢ Blinding Snowstorm In North TIMMINS (CP) -- A blinding snowstorm swept the area between Cochrane and Kapuskasing, 45 miles north of here, early today, reducing highway traffic to a crawl. Some motorists were forced to spend the night in Cochrane. The storm lasted five hours. Temperatures this morning were in the low 20s and more snow is forecast. Johnson Seen Top Choice NEW YORK (AP) -- The Times says that exactly four weeks before election day, Nov. 3, President Johnson is the most overwhelming choice to win the U.S. presidency since Thomas E. Dewey at the same stage of the 1948 campaign. | (CP) ~Auto- | mated production processes| 'But what good is consulta- "dark cloud" was | throwi aside thousands of| tion if you have an agreement, }eign Press Association here in-| permost in the thoughts of dele-| semi - skilled and non - skilled} and during the term of. the tense pressure on the consci-' gates Monday as the Ontario workers agreement management calls jence of the non-Roman Catho-| Federation of Labor endorsed: One of the convention's reso-| you in to tell you hundreds of lic, required to sign a declara-|a call for a new field of strike} lutions calls on trade unions. to |Jobs have been eliminated be- ltion that the children of the} jaction and adopted a policy| unite in a demand for contracts | |cause of new machinery or a jmarriage would be brought up! statement seeking a drive) that will give them the right to|new speed-up process?" as Roman Catholics, causes | against poverty. strike during the life of the' Mr. Archer warned that the "very great distress," About 1,000 delegates and| agreement. automated age "'hangs over us 'We do not expect from the| guests roared approval when) Under present provincial law,| like a dark cloud." Vatican (ecumenical) council. & President David Archer of Tor-|unions cannot call a_ strike t .. )onto said labor's strike weapon| while a contract is in force and) PREMIER SPEAKS j radical alteration of Roman Ca-| must be unleashed against the! the employer lives up to it. Premier John Robarts. was |tholic doctrines," said Dr. |irresponsible use of automation) Mr, Archer, due for re-elec-| one of the lead-off speakers on |Ramsey, "but we hope for a| by bag yin : ong today at the second day of|the opening day. He. empha- | The 2,000-word statement on/the three-day annual confer-/sized the mounting affluence of aslhghagd ara rag -- poverty said nearly 2,000,000|ence, said Labor Minister Les-| Ontario residents. and the need |non-farm persons in Ontario, or|lie Rowntree has already been|for more informal consultation Church places .relativély more|32 per cent of the population | asked to change this legislation. | between segments of society in stress on the great doctrines it|in Canada's richest province,| 'It is all very well for the] helping to shape new social leg- shares with all other Christians | live in varying degrees my "de-| politicians to assure us that be-|islation. ate ia privation, poverty or destitu-| fore automated machinery is| Mr. Robarts' speech was in and relatively less stress tion." moved into a plant there must | sharp contrast to the' conven- jmodern doctrines peculiar t0/ Much of it was the result of|be commliation with the union,"'|tion's theme of a. campaign itselt" |the job-slashing march of auto- |e las ainst poverty. WHAT NO MILK ? Kon-Tiki-Tika-Tu, a Seal ber of The Manitoba Cat Club point Siamese owned by D. H. at the MCC's first interna- Evans of Winnipeg, examines : tional triple championship trophy he won Saturday night as best cat bred by a mem- show, «CE Wirephoto) \ on the