The most expensive swai- low Sambo ever took was retrieved Sunday when Dr. Howard Steel fished a $4,500 diamond necklace from. the Labrador's stomach. At AN INSIDE JOB ing at necklace with Sambo, right is x-fay of necklace in Sambo's stomach. At left is Dr. Steel's son, Tad, 6, look- who swallowed it around Christmas time. Johnson Unveils Details Of New "Killing Wallop' WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi- dent Johnson told Congress Monday about powerful weap- ons which can be added to what he said was the strongest peace-jspelled out in even greater de-| time military strength in U.S. history. These include Polaris missiles with warheads twice the size of present ones--and with eight times the killing wallop. He wrote this into his message on the state of U.S. defences, a forecast of programs to be tail in the military budget scheduled for later this month. That budget, he said, will propose a spending program in the coming fiscal year of $49,- OBITUARIES CARL JOSEPH LESLIE BOWMANVILLE- -- Carl Jo- seph Leslie a member of the Bowmanville Town Council, died suddenly at his home 114 Scugog street on Jan. 17. He was in his 50th year. A son of Charles Leslie and the late Mrs. Leslie the deceas- ed was born at Little Falls N.Y. in 1914 and came to Can- ada with his parents when two years of age, He moved from Toronto to Bowmanville 11 years ago. Mr. Leslie was a partner with his brother, Ed., in. the opera- tion: of Bowmanville Cleaners and Dyers Limited. He was a t chairman of the Lakeshore ion of the Dry Cleaners In- stitute, a 4 Beginnin is second year as a member' of the Bowmanville Town Council, Mr. Leslie was chairman of the Welfare and Civic Committee and a very active member of the industrial committee. He was also a mem- ber of the police committee. Mr. Leslie was a member of the Bowmanville Lions Club and of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church. He is survived by his wife the former Isobel Vaughan; three brothers Ed of Bowman- ville Al. of Whitby and Bill of Toronto and his father who lives at Maple Grove. The deceased was at the Mor- ris Funeral Home. The funeral mass was in St. Joseph's Rom- an Catholic Church at 10 a.m. today. Interment was in Bow- manville Cem~iery. ' WILLIAM EMMERSON HALL William Emmeérson Hall died at his 238 Gibb street residence Monday after a t-vo-year illness. He was in his 57th year. Mr. Hall was born in Mara Town- ship to the late William and! Mabel Hall in 1908. | He came to Oshawa as a Myrtle two years ago, at Brook- lin for 18 years. Mrs. Dawson, whose main in- jterests were her home and her 'family, was a-'member of Brook- jlin United Church Besides her husband she is survived by. a daughter, Mrs. Garry E. Weir (Helen Mary) of Whitby and two sons, Robert Jr. and Wayne, both of Myrtle. Also surviving are two sisters, four brothers and two grand- children, Carey Ann and Billy Weir. The funeral service will be held at the McEachnie Fu- neral Home, Pickering, at 2 p.m. Jan. 21, followed by in- terment in Erskine Cemetery, Pickering Township. Rev. Laird, pastor of Brooklin Unit- ed Church, will conduct the ser- vices. RALPH CLARK PEARSON Ralph Clark Pearson of 65 Townline road north, died sud- idenly Monday at home. He was his 29th year. Mr. Pearson is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pearson. He spent his whole. life in Oshawa, and was a member of St, Gertrude's Romdh Catholic Church. He is also survived by four sisters, all living in Oshawa; Mrs, E. Buzminski (Theresa); Mrs. Tony Lamers (Jacque- line); Miss Sylvia Pearson and Miss Ruth Pearson. Mr. Pearson is resting at the Armstrong Funeral) Parlor. A Requiem High Mass will be sung by Rev. John Myers at St. Gertrude's Wednesday at! 10 a.m. | Interment will be in Resur- rection Cemetery. The Knights of Columbus will have prayers at the funeral home tonight at = {be held at 8 p.m. MRS. WILLIAM A, LOVE In failing health 000,000,000 -- $2,300,000,000 less tional. or limited-warfare capa- than fiscait 1964 year and $300,-| bilities, he said the army's com- 000,000 less than is estimated|bat-ready divisions have been in- for the current year. creased by 45 per cent. (They The United States, the presi-|total 16 divisions now; special dent wrote, has "built a/forces, for fighting against guer- strength of arms greater thanjrillas, have been expanded ever assembled by any other na-|eight - fold; the tactical air tion and greater now than any/force fire power for support of combination of adversaries . . .;army ground divisions is up 100 an indisputable margin of su-;per cent. periority jor our defences," He outlined the foundation for this power: In Strategic systems, the |United -States currently has more than 850 land-based inter- continenta] ballistic missiles. (The present program calls for an eventua! total of 1,000) more than 309 nuclear missiles aré in Polaris submarines; more than 900 strategic bombers are on hand, half of them ready for takeoff at all times. He will ask Congress for more than $200,000,000 to continue and improve the capabilities of the B-52 heavy bombers--but he also announced officially the in- tended elimination of two squad- rons of B-52BS. In the category of conven- Johnson, referring to an ad- vanced series of the Polaris missile launched from subma- rines, called it the Poseidon. He said the missile will have "double the pay-load of the highly-successful Polaris A-3" missile used now by some of later submarines in operation. The current series carries a warhead with a yield of about 800 or 900 kilotons, slightly un- der the 1,000,000 tons of energy for a '"'megaton" weapon. One high government official told reporters that the doubled size of the warhead, combined with double the accuracy, would give the Poseidon a "kill ca- pacity" against hardened tar- gets eight times that of the present A-3 missile. TORONTO (CP) -- Flush toilets and household faucets may yet replace present rat- ings systems for television. Judy Garland's vintage movie The Wizard of Oz ended at 8:30 p.m, Sunday night and pointed up the pos- sibilities for a bathroom sur- vey on the relative' popularity of TV programs. When it ended, works de- partment pumping stations reported unprecedented de- mands on water as children's baths were turned on, toilets NIELSON DOWN THE DRAIN IN FAVOR OF WASHROOMS? were flushed and_ kitchen faucets became active. Pumping station operators use the term '"'TV draw" for the heavy use of water at the end of TV programs but had not previously experienced such a demand, even during om Stanley Cup hockey play- offs. One station reported a drop from 70 pounds pressure to 35. At another, the level in a reserve tank fell 30 feet at 8:30. had another stroke, although told this in the bulletins." Lord Moran, who is but eight) years younger than the 90-year-) SIR WINSTON (Continued from Page 1) "It could even be that he has|wé have had all the time.' A hushed and tense crowd of 7.30, and a church prayer willjone would have expected to be|more than 300 listened intently : jas the latest medical report was |given by the doctor. There were shouts of "keep for five oiq Churchill, stood on frosty/the cameras down" and "stop youth and completed his educa-|months, Mrs. William A. Lovejciqewalk to read his mid-day|Shoving" as pressmen surged bulletin, the 10th since Chur-/forward to surround Moran. tion here. A barber by trade, Mr. Hall worked for a period of time in the General Motors inspection department. Failing health forced his re- tirement in 1962. Shortly after coming to Oshawa he married| the former Dorothy Jean Wal- ker, who predeceased him in| 1954. Mr. Hall served in the) Ontario Regimental Tank Corps during the Second World War. He is survived by two daugh- ters, Mrs. Sam Montini (Max- ine Ann) of Toronto, and Mr.) Colin Cairns (June Elizabeth) of} Oshawa. | ér survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Frank Speirs (Hazel) of Lindsay, and Mrs. Harvey Deans (Rena) of To- ronto;and two brothers, Doug- las of Toronto and J. Earl of Oshawa. He left seven grand- children. The funeral will be held Wed- nesday from the Mclntosh-| Anderson Funeral Home at 3.30 .m. Services will be conducted Canon F. G. Ongley of St. George's Anglican Church. In- -- will be in Union Ceme- ry. MRS. ROBERT DAWSON A resident of Ontario County since 1939, Mrs. Robert Dawson of Myrtle died Jan. 19, at the Oshawa General Hospital follow- a lengthy illness. idied Jan. |Madoc, Ont. She was in her |76th year. Born in Rawdon Township she was the daughter of the) jlate Mr. and Mrs. Nickolas| Fleming, She had been a resi-| 5 at her home in| dent of the Madoc community|gasic near the heart of London.|? all her life where she was very well known and highly respect- ed by her fellow citizens. Mrs. Love was an ardent member of St. Peter's Presby- terian Church was very active in all phases of church work, when health per- mitted. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. C. (Alberta) Wilson and Mrs. F. (Annie) Twiddy, both of Belleville and three sons, Gordon W. of Oshawa, Donald F. of Madoc and Nickolas A. of Huntingdon. | She is also survived by three sisters, Mrs. W. (Ethel) Moore of Belleville, Mrs. K. (Pearl) Wright of Ottawa and Mrs. H. (Bessie) Holden of Moira. Also surviving are four brothers, Richard Fleming of Moira, John Fleming of Madoc, Donald Fleming of Ivanhoe, Arthur Fleming of Madoc Town- in Madoc and|" chill's' illness, Hyde Park Gate is not gate. It's a narrow dead en street leading off.a main thor- oughfare about 200 yards from Kensington Gardens, the leafy | Moran returned to the Churchill home at 11:19 a.m after a long vigil there lasting into the wee hours this morn-| ing. Moran had been called' to} Churchill's bedside at 2:10 a.m.| and spent five hours there, He; reported shortly after 7 a.m. that Churchill had spent 'a very restless night'? and his condi- tion had deteriorated. Moran then left hours and returned. HASN'T WORSENED An hour later he issued the bulletin that said Churchill's grave condition had not deteri- orated further. for four! t Medical Association had said) after the early morning bul- letin that he thought "for the next. two days things would de- teriorate rapidly.' | C dian cigarette manufacturers is short of telling the truth about the hazards A spokesman for the British|Canadian Medical Journal says.! of facturers June, 1964, by the four major ship; great-grandchildren. predeceased band, William A. Love, two sis- ters and a brother Moran's mid-day bulletin was the 10th issued since the 90 year-old statesman suffered a stroke last Friday. None has reported any improvement, and |most .have told of. a gradual 13 grandchildren and 17 She was by her hus- t The funeral service was held mans, "json and Hedges and Macdonald --is compared to a code of smugglers. As he was reading the bulle- a|tin, Mrs. Mary Soames, Sir Win- q)ston's youngest daughter, ap- }peared at the ground-floor win- dow near the black - painted double doors of No. 28 Hyde ark Gate. The wording of Moran's VICTORIA (CP)--A Progres- _|sive Conservative meeting at- tended by Provincial Leader E. Davie Fulton twice erupted into shouting Monday night over loy- to National Leader John Shouts of "Get, him off the platform" greeted Eric Char- man, Conservative candidate for Victoria in the last election, when he called on Mr. Fulton to provide "strong arguments" in favor of Mr. Diefenbaker. By THE CANADIAN PRESS A handful of English-speaking Conservative MPs joined with their Quebec colleagues Monday by mounting their own chal- lenge to John Diefenbaker's continued leadership of the arty. Conservative members repre- senting constituencies in Al- berta, Ontario and New Bruns- wick said a new leader is needed so the party can reach an accommodation with Quebec which is demandii constitu- tional and fiscal reforms. The anti-Diefenbaker criti- cism came from Gerald W. Baldwin (Peace River), Gordon Fairweather (Royal), Gordon Aiken (Parry .Sound-Muskoka) and Fréd Stenson (Peterbor- ough). Mr. Aiken named Heath Mac- Quarrie (Queens) and - Heber Smith (Simcoe North) as other Conservatives favoring the op- pusition leader's resignation as party chieftain, At the same time the former prime minister drew support from four Ontario. MPs and two from Alberta. But Diefenbaker Must Go, Say Other Tories Affirms PC Chief Mr. Charman said the pro- vincial leader should make clear support for Mr. Diefenbaker be- cause "it is rumored not only in the press but within the ranks of this party that (Mr. Fulton) holds other views." In his formal speech to 500 Victoria and Saanich party members, Mr. Fulton urged unity within the Conservative party but made no direct ref- erence to Mr. Diefenbaker. The 'second outburst came Mr. Diefenbaker, 69, brushed aside all questions about the challenge in his home riding of Prince Albert, Sask, Instead, smiling and well-tanned after his Caribbean holiday, he teed off on the federal government for failing to consider some form of acreage payments for farmers. FOLLOWS QUEBEC DEMAND | This first public back-bench icriticism of their leader by English-speaking members fol- lows the 10-member Quebec caucus' demand last week for a leadership convention. Led by Quebec Leader Leon Balcer, who a month ago said he was. considering bolting the party to sit as an independent, the caucus asked the national executive to fix a date for a leadership convention. Mr. Balcer, who became dis-; enchanted with Mr. Diefenbaker over party policies on federal- provincial relations and the flag debate, admitted a leadership convention while there is no vacanay would be "unprece- |dented." Peking | 'Soviet Policy PEKING (Reuters)--The Chi-) It said former Soviet premier|jjer, five had been reported nese Communists Monday in- tensified their attacks on Rus- sian policies. The attacks were mounted as the top Soviet and East Euro- pean Communist leaders gath- ered in Poland on the eve of a high-level Warsaw Pact meet- ng. The Warsaw meeting has not been mentioned in the press here. But the Communist. party's chief organ, The People's Daily, devoted two whole pages to a bitter attack on "the modern re- visionists' unprincipled policy of peaceful coexistence," printing a polemic originally published in November in the Japanese Com- munist party organ Akahata. The Japanese party is one of Peking's strongest supporters in the Sino-Soviet ideological feud. The article called for an "'ir- reconcilable struggle" against the 'modern revisionist line of capitulation to U.S. imperial- ism." Witchcraft Charge Laid TORONTO (CP) -- A city woman has been charged with "pretending to practise witch- craft," after a complaint by a nurse's aide that she had paid $200 ta solve a personal prob- lem. : Ruby (Butch) Williams, 45, is also charged with theft of about $200 and with obtaining the money by. fraud. The seldom - laid charge of pretending to practise witch- craft comes under Section 308 of the Criminal Code. The money was placed in envelopes, blessed and then the envelopes were supposedly placed against the woman to get rid of body odors, police said. {morning -bulletin--"Sir Winston had a very restless night and|Mitchell, 44, was charged with his condition has deteriorated"|witchcraft and fortune telling. Last year in Hamilton, Anne Fag Company Advertising Said 'Window Dressing' TORONTO (CP)--An_ adver- ising code adopted by Cana- 'window '- dressing' that falls the! of smoking, The cigarette advertising code Canadian tobacco manu- ---- promulgated in sigarette producers Roth- Imperial Tobacco, Ben- rading ethics established by Only a government - enforced Slams with a loyalty motion amend- ment from the floor. It pro- posed Mr, Diefenbaker remain party leader until the next elec- tion is won by the Conserva- tives, then accept a seat in the Senate to let a y , hand- picked man be prime minister. As the audience shouted Chairman W. A. McLennan, pro- vincial Conservative president, ruled the amendment out of or- May Jump TORONTO (CP) ~-- Bottled beer in Ontario beverage rooms will likely be raised to 38 cents from 29 cents next month, the president of the Ontario Hotel and Mote! Association said y. Eber J, Rice said he hopes that members, meeting here for a three-day conference, will try to follow an association sugges- tion that the price ceiling be raised to 32 cents--plus a one cent tax. The Liquor Licence Board of want water with their meals. "There might be an a tunity for you to meet de- sire for some other more likely to contribute to Ontario said two weeks ago that your overhead," he said. der. A resolution paraphrased to "a vote of loyalty to our leader" passed 2-to-1, The meeting unanimously ap- proved a resolution calling on Mr. Fulton to 'serio con- sider" running as candidate for Victoria in the next federal election. Mr, Fulton said he could give no immediate an- swer. The former federal justi ce minister represented Kamloops constituency from 1945 to 1961 before becoming provincial leader. He has been mentioned as a possible successor to Mr. Diefenbaker. ship Fire Kills Two LE HAVRE (AP)--The Amer- ican freighter Lucile Bloom- field put into this French port KINGSTON (CP) -- Wit- nesses at inquests should be al- lowed the protection of counsel, a Queen's University law pro- fessor said Monday. In a personal brief to the On- tario royal commission inquiry into civil rights, Prof. H. R. S. Ryan argued that persons in- volved in a coroner's inquest should be allowed to call and examine witnesses, to cross-ex- amine other witnesses and to object to questions. The commission, headed by J. C, McRuer, former chief justice of the Ontario Supreme Court, was holding a one-day public hearing here. Prof. Ryan said provision of counsel for witnesses in in- l-|charged with offences "Inquest Witnesses Must Be Protected" to be ted to the death. S Any witness at an inquest who is' not otherwise involved but who believes his answers may tend to incriminate him in respect to any national or pro- vincial offence should be en- titled to representation by a counsel who could object on his behalf of such questions, he said. Prof. Ryan also said magis- trates and not doctors should conduct coroners' inquests. ",, the usual practice in On- tario is to appoint as coroners physicians whose training and. professional experience do not prepare them for the conduct persons charged or li quests would give protection to of judicial investigations." today following a collision with a French coastal gasoline tanker in the foggy English Channel off Le Havre in which the tanker caught fire. An officer and the wife of a crew member aboard the tanker --the 2,062-ton Port Manech-- died in the inferno, The Port Manech went aground several miles offshore. The 2,600 tons of high test gaso- ____|line burned furiously. The 6,103-ton Lucile Bloom- field also caught fire after the collision but the flames were put out, and no injuries were reported among the crew. Twenty-two members of the tanker's crew were taken aboard the American ship. Six were reported in serious condi- tion in hospital. All the crew Nikita Khrushchev's policies lhad not been defeated simply by the downfall of the ousted premier, whom the Chinese blame for the rift with Moscow. Meanwhile, the Chinese Com- munist party has still not issued an official statement of its in- tentions toward the preparatory international Communist party meeting promoted by the Rus- slans and scheduled for March = But the Chinese have shown their disapproval by describing it last month as a "dividing con- ference." Peking newspapers have prominently reported the mass arrests last month of pro-Chi- nese members of the Indian Communist party. The People's Daily printed an account on a whole page de- voted to India, with long re- ports of a Congress last Novem- ber of the pro-Peking group of; the Indian Communist party, and of last month's congress of the pro-Soviet group. were accounted for today. Ear- missing. WARSAW (AP) -- The rulers of the Soviet Union and six East European satellites opened a summit conference today that may frame new policy on Eu- ropean questions. Western diplomats in Warsaw said major new overtures to the West could result. They said the Communist leaders may agree to expand East-West contacts, reduce pressure on West Ber- lin and withdraw some Soviet troops from Communist East Germany. The Warsaw pact's political Red Summit May Produce Policy advisory committee met in the Polish Counc of Ministers building, the former Radziwill Palace. It was attended by the Communist party chiefs, pre- miers, foreign ministers and defence ministers of the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Ro- mania and Bulgaria. It. was the first such full- dress meeting outside the So- viet Union for Soviet, Party Chief Leonid Brezhnev /and Pre mier Alexei Kosygin since they replaced Nikita Khrushchev three months ago. Jail Workers Get Pay Hike OTTAWA (CP) -- Salary in- creases were announced today for 1,600 custodial and teaching staffs of the Canadian peniten- tiary service. The increases range from 6.2 to 15.7 per cent of present sal- aries and amount to $270 to $570 a year in addition to normal an- nual increments. They are re- troactive to April 1, 1964. George Mcliraith, iof the treasury board, also an- nounced a new classification system for the custodial and teaching personnel is being in- troduced. The new classification of correctional officers will have starting salaries of $3,900 a year and can range as high as $5,880. Teachers salaries will start at $3,600 and range to $10,020. WEATHER FORECAST TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Light snow is fore- icasts to spread into southern Ontario this evening with fresh accumulations of one to two inches in most places. Tempera- tures should continue to show slight moderation in both north- ern and southern Ontario. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, southern Georgian Bay, Killaloe, Haliburton, Windsor, London, Toronto, Hamilton: Clouding over with light show beginning this afternoon or evening ending overnight. Wed- nesday mostly cloudy. A little milder. Winds becoming south- Light Snow, Little Milder Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Wednesday: | chairman! owners IN 50 SECONDS any longer to try it. PHOTOGRAPHY SEE THE NEW POLAROID COLOR Windsor ...s.000. 15 22 | St. Thomas... 15 Fae | London .... 12 20 Kitchener . 12 20 Mount Forest. 10 18 Wingham ..seoese 10 18 Hamilton ,... 15 22 Toronto .... 15 22 Kingston .. eo 12 20 Peterborough .... 10 18 Trenton ..rcccccce 12 20 Killaloe .. 5 15 Muskoka ... 10 15 North Bay.. 5 10 Sudbury . eos 10 Earlton ....+s+ee0 0 5 Sault Ste. Marie.. 5 10 Kapuskasing ..... -5 0 White River...... +5 0 men west 20 this afternoon north- erly 20 Wednesday. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Timagami, Southern Georgian White River, North romance, prominence, success or personal advancement. "No cigarette advertisement shall. be designed whose ma- jor appeal is to persons under! the age of 18 years." in italics. In reprinting the code's pas-| sages, the journal draws -atten- tion to the words "'essential"|day clear with a few cloudy in- and 'major' by putting them'tervals. A little milder. Winds becoming northerly 25 tonight and light Wednesday. | The journal poses the ques- tion: "Does the (tobacco) indus- try's longstanding failure to state essential and important facts about the hazards asso-' 'ciated with the consumption of| ithe industry's major product, | former Winnifred Robin-|Jan, 7 from the MacKenzie win oat Winkons eieeds can be effective,.the jour-|cigarettes, constitute dece p-| son, the deceased was a daugh-|Funeral Home, Madoc, to St.| Commenting on the earlier|4! Says in an editorial. tion? ter of the late Mr. and Mrs.jPeter's Presbyterian Church.|bulletin, the Medical Associa-| The journal, organ of the John Robinson. She was born}Interment was in Lakeview|tion spokesman said: Canadian Medical Association, Need at McKellar in the Parry Sound|Cemetery. Rev. T. Dodds con-| "I think one must view with|Says of the code: i Pegg and received her educa-|ducted the service. }a good deal of concern that it} "The skilled equivocality of Mortgage Money? ion t =e. : : _ | Pallbearers were: William was necessary for Lord Moran|this brief document is apparent CALL Following their marriage inj/Bateman, William McCoy,/to stay during the night. I thinklin the fo!lowing passages: Real Estate Oshawa in 1939, Mr. and Mrs.|Allan Franks, Orie Reid, Wood-|there must have been ex-| "No. cigarette advertisement Cc Broker Dawson lived in the Claremont area and, prior to moving to ford Blakely and Roy Wanna-|treme anxiety 'about his condi- maker. 'tion, This is even worse than! shall state or imply that cig- arette smoking is essential to Day or Night - 728-4285 || Bay, Sudbury: Light snow end- ing tonight. Mostly cloudy. Wed- nesday. A little milder. Winds south to southwest 20 becoming northerly 20 Wednesday. 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