CLC Mulling Asking SIU Back: Paper TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and Mail says the Canadian La- bor Congress is considering re- admitting the Seafarers' Inter- national Union of Canada. The story says the issue will be at the top of the agenda in a meeting of the CLC executive council in Ottawa next week. There is no support for a membership raid by the 600- member rival Canadian Mari- time Union against the SIU, the newspaper says. It says Jack Staples, presi- dent of the CMU, which is a CLC affiliate, had sought sup- port for a raid against the Sea- farers union at a meeting of an eight-man executive committee of the congress at Mont Ga- briel, Que., last week. The SIU was expelled from the CLC in 1959 for raiding an- other CLC affiliated union. Since 1963 the SIU and other maritime transpurt unions have pera under government trustee- ship. Divers Search For 8 Victims Horsburgh Case - New Evidence? TORONTO (CP) -- Provin- cial police are investigating new. evidence in the case of Russell Horsburgh, the former United Church minister who was convicted in Chatham last year of contributing to juvenile delinquency. Insp. A. T. Eady of the OPP criminal investigations bureau spent four days in Chatham last week and reported back to the department Monday. The inspector was following tling late today in the Phu Cu of Saigon, a U.S. military THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, September 28, 1965 3 Bloody Encounter In Pass Between Souih Vieis, Cong SAIGON : (AP)--Hundreds of army's 325th Division. U.S. ad- South Vietnamese rangers and visers agreed, Viet Cong guerrillas were bat- Intelligence reports some time ago said the 325th had en- tered the central highlands of South Viet Nam, but there were later reports that it had dropped from sight. The government losses in the action last week were described as moderate. A U.S. spokesman reported the death of three Americans in the crash of a chartered plane Monday about 25 miles west of About 600 men are in a gov- ernment ranger battalion and 500 to 600 in a Viet Cong bat- talion. Since the Phu Cu action last week, 260 Viet Cong bodies have been counted by U.S. officers, and both South Vietnamese and U.S. military men think the ber killed exceeded 700. High South Vietnamese. mili- tary authorities at the scene said Sunday that the Viet Cong dead were from the 18th Regi- ment of the North Vietnamese pass area 295 miles northeast spokesman reported, The Viet Cong suffered heavy losses last week in the a rea, A South Vietnamese army ranger unit reported that it was engaged with a large Viet Cong element, possibly one or two battalions. up affidavits given in the last few months by a youth and a girl who were witnesses at the trial. Mr. Horsburgh, 45, former minister of Chatham's Park St. United Church, was convicted) on five of eight counts of ¢on-| tributing to juvenile delin-| quency and sentenced to one year in jail. Several members of a church} youth group testified at the trial that they had sexual re-| lations with the knowledge and) encouragement of the minister.| Mr. Horsburgh, appealing the convictions, is free on $2,500 bail. Last week, the United Church) of Canada gave the minister) |$5,000 toward his living expen-| Saigon. He said seven South Vietnamese policemen guarding the wreckage were killed dur- ing the nignt by Viet Cong small arms fire. : Early today 150 to 200 Viet Cong with mortars and auto- matic weapons attacked and overran a government outpost 90 miles southwest of Saigon. Election If He's Thwarted, Wilson Tells Tories, Grits By GEOFFREY WHITEHEAD the measures which we are put- BLACKPOOL, England (Reu- ting forward, we shall welcome ters) -- Prime Minister Wilson| their support--but if they can-| today bluntly warned the Con-|not, we shall have to go on| servative and Liberal parties| without them. roca - will oo a new gen- ng others find they are un- eral election is year-old La-|able to support our measures i bor administration finds it can-| this must be a metter for them, representatives, of. Uie "central not govern effectively in Parlia-| and if that leads to a situation |Sovernment and two women. ment, in which effective government! ,. : : : In a major speech at his cannot be carried on, then Jet | tied behind him and his body party's annual conference here,| this be understood: [mumpey ay he Hagpole, he rejected any idea of a for-| "This will not then be an is- U.S. spokesman sald. mal or unofficial agreement|sue to be settled in the back with the Liberals, whose 10|\corridors of Westminster -- it wire around the post, the Viet Cong entered the compound and murdered the village chief, two The government platoon at After blowing up the barbed |The village chief's hands were) ne the} RCMP Lays Z. Charges Of Murder PEACE RIVER, Alta. (CP)-- George Tamarac Laboucan, 38, was charged Monday with two counts of capital murder in the fatal shooting of a man and woman in the isolated northern Alberta community of Red Earth. Magistrate L. A. Levecque re- manded Laboucan without plea to Oct. 5. RCMP said the bodies of Ju- lianne Whitehead, 35, and Julian Marier, 45, were found Sunday by a visitor to Laboucan's one- room abode and frame house in the Metis community 100 miles northeast of here. The body of Laboucan's two- year-old son Clayton also was found in the cabin, but cause of death has not been estab- lished. The RCMP spokesman said Miss Whitehead, the woman | with whom Laboucan had been \living, and Marier, a visitor to house, apparently were killed the previous day. A .303 | calibre army rifle was found on the premises. ithe post suffered heavy casual-| lties, the spokesman said, | When a Child In Hanoi, the newspaper of| Has Diarrhea |the North Vietnamese Commu-! RIVERTON, Man. (CP) -- A diver was expected to begin searching below the surface of Lake Winnipeg today for clues ses while awaiting the outcome) members of Parliament hold ajwill be an issue to be settled jof the appeal. He now is living|near balance of power position| by the sovereign and independ- in Toronto. jin the House of Commons. |ent decision of the British peo-| Wilson declared his party) ple." as to the fate of eight persons missing since the fish freighter Suzanne-E sank Friday night. The search by Sandy Lock- hart of Winnipez will centre around a life preserver found) anchored in the aiea where the) stands beside a For Sale sign at her. Good Shepherd Animal Shelter she has re- DEFIANT NUN -- DOWN, NOT NEARLY OUT and change to another order within the Catholic Church. (CP) fused to give up despite church orders. She _ said Monday her order will sell the property, move north Mother Cecilia Mary 75-ton wooden ship, with 10 per- sons board, capsized and sank. Soundings indicated Sunday a BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE large object was on the bottom of the lake, in about 45 feet of water. Clifford Everett, 24, of Ber ons River, Man., is the lone known survivor of the sinking. Mr, Everett, the ship's mate, and Skipper Richard Charles Johnson, 32, of Stonewall, Man., rode through the night on a Speeding On A Motorbike Leads To 14 Days In Jail piece of the ship's wreckage and reached nearby Black Is- land Saturday morning. The skipper died before they reached shore. Missing were Richard Zill- man, 63, of, Hudson, Man.; Bjorgvin August Holm, 58, Winnipeg; William Petoski, Hnausa, Man.; Allan Clemons, 20, Selkirk, Man.; Christine Set- tee, 58, Rivertoa; Charles Don- ovan Cook, 20, Selkirk; Tache Everett, Berens River and Pe- | | | Speeding on his motorcycle was instrumental in Alfred Wayne Wallace, 446 Sim- coe st. s., to jail for 14 days at Oshawa Magistrate's Court yesterday. pleaded guilty to two charges, speeding at 55 miles per hour on King st. e., and driving while under suspension. He was given a 14-day jail sentence for driving while under suspension and a $25 fine, costs sending | Seventeen - year - old Wallace) tence allowed under the law. Kahgee was found on Con- cession three in Brock Town- ship by officers of the Brechin OPP detachment. Two youths appeared before the court on minor consuming charges. They were Donald Campbell, of Oshawa; and Paul Baker, also of Oshawa. Both were fined $50 and costs or 10 days in jail. Lane, of 91 William st., before) the court. | Lane pleaded guilty charge of possessing weapons. | He was fined $50 and costs) and put on probation for one year with the . understanding that he stay away from liquor and refrain from molesting his brother-in-law. Outlining the evidence Mr. | Affleck said that Lane had got) jinto money trouble with a to al the| | For having liquor as a minor John Allain, of Oshawa, was fined $50 and costs or 10 days in jail. or five days in jail on the speeding charge. Magistrate Harry Jermyn also ordered the impounding of the motorcycle for three) months. | Pope Keen T ee The court was told that Wal- gg gy ee oy lace was seen speeding on King|0' rince ert, Ont., a $50) Visit Poland | st. e. He was also weaving on|fine with costs or 10 days in)p the road. \jail. | VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope| When stopped he admitted he} I Paul has told Stefan Cardinal|was driving under suspension, Wyszynski of Warsaw that he) The court was told further|wit ter Goosehead, Jackhead Har- bor, Man. t h being drunk in a_publicjo finance brother-in-law had apparently refused to back A second youth to be charged|When searched he had a pair} company loan. His| Arthur Pollard} he loan. | On two occasions, he said,| Being drunk in a public place|Lane came to his house and|peals ,|threatened him with scissors. | On the second occasion the! olice were called. When they arrived they found! vane hiding in the garden. /and international levels. Vatican Agency For RC Laymen VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The} Vatican ecumenical council ac- cepted Monday a new course of activity for Roman Catholic laymen and agreed to set up a junique Vatican agency for them. At the same time the coun- cil heard pleas for a worldwide campaign headed by the Pope to reach people outside the church who believe in neither church nor God. In a series of votes on a document titled The Apostolate of the Laity, the 2,200 bishops agreed that laymen must have a greater voice in church af- fairs and ordered a new laity secretariat at the Vatican. Only minor textual changes remain before the document can be promulgated by bishops and Pope as a council decree. The document outlines ways of closer co-operation between laymen and priests, proposing councils of laymen and priests on the parish, diocesan, national | | | The council also heard ap-| for a new approach to atheism, an approach based not| on flat condemnation but on) understanding of the causes and| sympathy for the individual! atheist himself. f scissors and a small knife in! would like to visit Poland, Vat\that Wallace was banned for|place was John Bergsma, 19, of his possession. ican sources said Monday|three months in July this year|Oshawa, who was also fined $50] night, "when the opportunitylon a careless driving charge. jand costs or 10 days in jail. best presents itself." | | There has been speculation) ee gg the last six eens pas bond of $500 to keep the peace|place Donald Fluery, of Wind-| whether the Roman Catholicjand not to molest his wife in|sor st., Ajax, was fined $50 and pontiff might travel to the Com-|any way. 'costs or 30 days. The court was| munist-ruled country in 1966 for Walter Lesniewski, 330 Celinajtold that this was _ celebrations marking the 1,000th|st., was brought before the|fourth liquor offence since Au-| ¢ anniversary of Polish Christian-|court for inquiry into a threat-jgust this year. ity. ening Fg laid by _ his) ve ave: ts ; | : estranged wife. , supplying liquor to a Bit gh eh ae Mlle In the witness box his wife|minor Arnold Johnson, of Osh-|| hinge on a formal favitation Ha claimed that he had threaten-|@wa, was fined $25 and costs or}| the pontiff trom the Polish gov.|¢4 '® harm her and her family|10 days. t on-two--occasions. | ; a ae Lesniewski denied the threat-| Being drunk in a public place | land. lening and agreed to his being\cost John McClellan, of Osh-|| pone) ks eleced oh © pond. jawa, a $50 fine, costs or 10 | days in jail. Girl Students s . Strike School costs with a choice' of 15 days in|Parry a $50 fine and costs with | jail. He pleaded guilty to the| 40. alternative of one month in|} HULL, Que. (CP)--Some 50|offence. " |jali at Oshawa Friday. | girl students of St. Bernardin) | Parry, of Central Park blvd | School in Hull, Que., went on| Judgment was adjourned sine|".» Pleaded guilty to the charge | strike Monday in protest over|die (without either conviction or|°f, theft over $50. | an alleged lack of proper facil-|acquittal) when Ann Issa, of 321) The discs, said Crown Attor- ities. |Marland ave., appeared before) "CY Bruce: A ttle k, mh | The Grade 10 girls, who av-|the court on a theft charge. esa at $119. bee were | erage about 15 years old, say|She was accused of. stealing en vig yesh oe they are being taught in the|property valued at $2.38 from he hs i ' thal se A tile | school's main hall which serves|the Loblaws store in the Osh-|(/" Comer 0 ~~ ae as a canteen and recreation awa Shopping Centre. pig toe as ked aft room and without ha!f of the re- Af whl Oeubel a ens Siam aati stata! quired numer of books ailing to stop when ordered * iis to do so by a policeman who The strikers met with Omer 585 stepped out in front of his car. || Plouffe, an official Of the re-|""" A chase ensued. When Parry gional school commission, who} was finally 'stopped after five promised the students a new lo- For driving while impaired, nye theft of a set of expen- | John McLaughlin, of 242 Green-| sive wheel discs from a parked | wood ave., was fined $100 and] car cost Reginald Norma n|| An cost impaired driving charge James Albert Mackey, of Athol. st. e., a $100 fine, costs or 15 days in jail. He pleaded guilty to the charge He had apparently been drink-| |ing at the time and was obvi-| | zs 5 _ jously under stress, An Oshawa man was put on a, For being drunk in a public Affleck. added Mr.) For having beer in his pos-| ession Everett Stratton, of 114) Fluery's|Wayne st., was fined $25 and| osts or 10 days in jail. He) | pleaded guilty to the charge. | | Individuals or Groups for St. John Ambulance Junior and Senior First Aid end Home Nursing Courses | Phone 668-4666 Evenings 725-4197 } ) was ready to stay in office de-| Wilson emphasized that the|nist party defended the execu- | spite its slender three-vote over-| decision to restrict work vouch-|tion of two American soldiers all majority. ers to 8,500 Commonwealth im-|by the Viet Cong Sunday He defended its record in its| migrants a year was made col-|"fully justified." first year in office, and fore-|lectively by the whole cabinet. | The Nhan Dan daily warned cast more popular legislation in the months ahead. as |tions were imposed only be-|may be executed if South Viet- _ Wilson, dealing with domestic| cause of problems of assimilat-|namese forces carry out any issues, vigorously defended the|/ing immigrants already here|more executions -- "Either| government's decision to im-|and declared: "We cannot take/openly or stealthily. .. ." pose new curbs on Common-|the risk of seeing democracy in - He stressed that the restric-|that more captured Americans When annoying Diarrhea upsets some- one in the family, all is well again when Mother remembers Dr. Fowler's Extract |of Wild Strawberry. it brings quick, soothing relief. Effective for children -- Dr. Fowler's Extract has been m Simple Diarrhea is one of the most prevalent ailments, often striking sud- denly with nausea, cramps and intestinal upsets. Always keep Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry on hand to give fast relief, restore intestinal balance. 68-8 wealth immigration--in a bid|this country become stained to prevent a revolt on this is-| and tarnished with racial prej-| sue when the conference de-|udice." | bates it Wednesday. | He said senior ministers were) In his reference to hints by| working on the problem caused| the Liberal party that it would|by the sudden large inflow of be ready in some circumstances|immigrants before restrictions| to co-operate with the govern-| were first introduced two years} ment, Wilson declared: '"Wejago, and said the government have not been approached by|was determined to avoid a "so- any other party with a view to| cial explosion in this country of a pact ... if they can support'the kind we have seen abroad." ] AY2% 29 GREAT WHISKIES 54% G.1.0's *Guaranteed Investment Certificates SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Interest Calculated and Paid Quarterly IN ONE BRAND... MONDAY -- THURS. 9 TO 6 FRIDAY SAVINGS HOURS SATURDAY 9 TO 5 9TO9 HEAD OFFICE 19 Simcoe St. N. Oshewe Tel. 723-5221 Private Stock CUSTOM BLENDED CANADIAN RYE WHISKY CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST What Your COMMU THE CANADIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR THE BLIND OSHAWA ADVISORY BOARD Eligibility for CNIB services is based on on eye specialist's report which indicotes that the individual is legally blind. In Canada a person is considered to be legally blind if he dises in the trunk of the car. | In a_ Statement to police | Parry admitted the theft saying he intended to re-sell them. blocks police found the wheel cation by Thursday or Friday ARF tee eB Driving while impaired: cost Austin Mills, RR 2, Port Perry, a $100 fine, costs or 15 jdays in jail. He admitted the charge. A further charge of |having was dropped at the re- anes of the Acting Crown torney Japan Prince Visits Canada OTTAWA kasa of Japan wiil spend six! The offensive possession of a | pair of scisso.s and a small | (CP)--Prince -- Mi-| A 75 - mile - an - hour chase RAISE CASH FOR GUNS | ending althrough the streets of Oshawa; REGINA (CP) --Saskatch- || Emile Tyo, of 331 Anna-| ewan's wildlife branch received || ica, the Japanese embassy an-|polis st., a $200 fine, costs or|more than $3,000 from the sale of | nounced Monday. " --- |two months in jail | 101 confiscated firearms. The] q es " of Em- Tyo pleaded guilty to danger-| number _ of confiscations has |} rar iirohito, an nncier sh ous driving. Magistrate Jermyn! doubled in the last 10 years. his wife and 21-year-old daugh-|Neard that during the chase by| 3 || ter Princess Yasuko, will arrive|@" Oshawa Police cruiser two | in Montreal Sep:. 28 and visit/"@"S were forced Off the road Toronto, Niagara Falls (on|, 1"¢ car finally pulled into a Sept. 29), Ottawa and Vancou- driveway on Rossland rd. w.| ver before returning to Japan Tyo was found lying across the) Oct. 3. front seat. days in Canada, month-long tour of North Amer-jcost CALL... DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL Oll AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT~ ST. OSHAWA 723-4663 | | : oI A Clarkston man . -- vn S.. 2 was found DOG NURSES TIGER asleep in his crashed car which) COLOGNE, Germany (CP)--j;was lying in a roadside ditch,| A German shepherd bitch is|Magistrate Jermyn was told. | nursing tigers instead of mind-| Before the court was Aphraim| ing sheep. Her owner responded|Kahgee, of 1577 Halls rd., to a broadcast call for a substi-|Clarkston. He pleaded guilty to tute when a mother tiger at thela charge of drunk driving Cologne zoo rejected three * He was sentenced to seven her litter of five cubs. days. in jail, the minimum sen-! the better eye with the best possible correction. sees ot 20 feet or less (after correction) what is normally seen at 200 feet. This applies to All CNIB services are provided free of charge to the sightless. When a person loses his sight he usually loses confidence in himself os well. A specially trained CNIB Home Teacher, visually handicapped herself, begins rehabilitation, Lessons are isually given in the home but may be arranged ot the district centre. Instruction often begins with latherwork to develop the sense of touch and to give confidence, Lessons in typewriting are popular and many younger adults learn to read ond write Braille. Crafts such as knitting, trocheting, rug making, basketry, choir caning, rubber mat making or weaving ore taught the blind. Women receive special guidance on the handling of household duties. For recrea- tion, card games ore taught using embossed playing cards. The Home Teacher encourages renewed interest by patient, friendly direction. The Ontario Division of CNIB has established a specially designed Adjustment Training Programme for newly blind persons. Under the new programme the blind persons move in to CNIB's residence for the blind in Toronto for 12 weeks intensive training with @ closely drawn Jaily schedule Home Teaching is just one of the mony services which are available to Canada's 25,000 blind men, women and children. GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST 11 ONTARIO STREET Robert J. Branch, Executive Secretary Herold E. Pierson, Pres. PHONE 728-0203 23 King S. W. Bowmenville Tel. 623-2527 SIs FOUNTAINHEAD OF SERVICE & SAVINGS CORPORATION Bowmanville Office Closed on Wednesdays