Home..Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ie, Ajax, Pickering and _neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. 106 wea VOL. 95 -- NO. 11° Rg hn She Os i ha OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 196 , ai 's 2 -- penne gy vd i in . urday, with some flurries, a Authorized es Second Ottewa end for 4 Weather Report -Mostiy cloudy today and Sat- light snow- Low tonight, 15. High tomorrow, 25. TWENTY PAGES: IT'S COLD, BUT IT'S HOME Prime Minister Pearson (left) is welcomed back to snow-clad Canada by Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Mar- tin at Ottawa's Uplands Airport Thursday night. The Prime Minister returned from a six-day trip to Lagos, Nigeria, where he attended a Commonwealth tederal| | pau scree ANN Hie st AANA HL i MULTIMILLIONAIRE SAVED BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)---Pistols raised, two men crashed into the home of Leon- ard K. Firestone Thursday night in an apparent attempt to kid- nap the wealthy industrialist. | Staked - out police killed both with shotgun blasts. : Cal Bailey, 40, was killed as | living room of the palatial jhome. George Scalla, 28, fell wounded on the threshold and | jdied three hours later in the prison ward of General Hospi- | tal. They held three guns, but never got a chance to fire a shot. | The deaths ended three weeks FE: he attempted to rush into the L. GEORGE SCALLA saves of police undercover work, dur- in "ara kidnap- g was Yippéed by an undis- 4 closed source. Firestone was warned to leave the city. - The 58-year-old president of F the Firestone Tire and Rubber » Co. of California complimented the police for a "'thorough, in- telligent, masterful job." Bailey's wallet contained a $100 bill and a cryptic note that + may have indicated the' high stakes the two gunmen were i aiming for. On a fragment of blue paper were written the cal- culations: 200,000 times 10 equals 2,000,000 and 20 times 400000 equals 8,000,000. meeting on the Rhodesian | question. Mr. Martin was | acting prime minister dur- ing Mr. Pearson's absence. (CP) the} transit system back on Johnson as inflationary, the public interest. NEW YORK (AP)--The wage Quill was released from the hos- package that got New York's|pital Thursday night. Within minutes after the pro- track is described by President] posals were accepted, the first but) buses were rolling. By. noon Mayor, John V. Lindsay says|near normal service had been|mitted the correction of salary settlement of the strike was in| restored New York's Settlement 'Inflationary' Says LJB ' ingqquities within en organiza- Cost of the settlement is es-itiun. timated at between 962,000,000 }and $70,000,000 over two years. Feinsinger said the guide- posts 'were flexible and per- FROM ARMED ABDUCTORS Police Shotguns End Kidnap Plot Police theorized that Bailey and Scalla may have been aim- ing for ransom in the millions. Firestone, who lived alone since his wife died a year ago, was one of five sons born to Harvey S. Krestone, pioneer of the rubber industry. Other sons were Harvey S&S. Firestone Jr., chairman of the board of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. of Akron, Ohio; Raymond, president of the cor- poration; Hxoger, president of Firestone Plastics Co. and Fire- stone Synthetic Fibers Co. of Pottstown, Pa.; and Russell, who died in 1951 bs CAL BAILEY By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)--A bid to at- tract more unemployed adults into vocational schools with highr weekly "wages' was announced Thursday at a fed- éral.» provincial conference on ) Manpower. A new scale of training al. lowances, financed mainly by Ottawa, will pay a maximum of $75 weekly in place of the Johnson Thursday criticized the settlement as exceeding the) .2 per cent voluntary national) Wage-price guidelines recom-| mended by government eco-| nomic advisers to prevent an) e OTTAWA (CP).-- The Cana-; dian National Railways will take-over completely the oper- ation of passenger services be- jtween Montreal and Toronto and Otatwa and Toronto, the board) of transport commissioners an 'nounced today jing and afternoon trains be- tween Ottawa and Toronto within 10 days and an overnight passenger train between. these use 7 WAGNER'S RCMP ATTACK Counter-Slam UJ OTTAWA (CP) = Three fed-jhecause the RCMP had done eral ministers charged Thurs-| everything it could to. kill his @ay night that Quebec Justice| proposal for a Canadian Inter- Minister Claude Wagner has) pol. committed "'a grave injustice'; He also criticized' to the RCMP. jministers for avoiding any Justice Minister Cardin,| commitments on his proposals Privy Council President Fav-|for stiffer laws against organ- reau and Solicitor-General Pen-|ized crime and for ppovincial nell issued a joint press release) lotteries. } defending the RCMP and re-) 'The federal ministers replied| bting criticism voiced by Mr-.|that the proposed amendments| Wagner Wednesday. | to the Criminal Code were put! In one of the strongest) forward orally and without doc | attacks on a provincial minister) ymentation. "A large number! by the Pearson government, were under serious study prior the three ministers stated: to the conference being called." "We consider it a grave in-| The provincial minister said justice in the circumstances to) the Quebec provincial police} deprecate the value and effec-) has done more in one year to tive role of the RCMP in the) combat organized crime than war on organized crime." the RCMP has done since 1951 They referred to Mr. Was The federal ministers replied ner's comments in Quebec that Thursday night that the major federal ministers and RCMP! jty of the delegates wanted the leaders. at last week's federal-/ RCMP to handle national crim: provincial conference on Crime ina] intelligence. They: had en- frustrated his attempts to step dorsed federal proposals to ex- up the battle against crime syn- pand tt RCMP intelligence dicates. machinery a five-year, $15,-| SAID 'SPINELESS' 000,000 program The outpoken Quebec mini : ter said in an interview that most of the participants at the two-day closed meeting in Ot tawa were "spineless and more interested in playing petty pol- itics and being careful not to tread on toes." The federal ministers said the 'RCMP, particularly rFe- cently,, has played a critical and often essential role in gath ering information and helping provincial and city police to arrest criminals. "Organized crime in Canada can only be effectively dealt wigh through the fullest co-op- } eration by all law enforcement The move, part of a plan to! agencies -- federal, provincial !Mprove passenger services be- and municipal--and not on the|tween Ottawa and Toronto, in- basis of competition among) volves the complete withdrawal them," the statement added. of the Canadian Pacific Rail- Mr. Wagner said he was, dis-|Way's presént Moritreal-Toronto appointed after the conference|and Ottawa-Toronto trains . Bombing Lull- R b ild Ti . [two cities within 30 days e ul ime An arrangement @eiween the WASHINGTON (AP) -- The|'¥° railways will allow the CNR North Vietnamese are using the '9 CPR tracks between bombing luli to rebuild railway, Smiths Falls and Brockville for lines and bridges over which|its Ottawa-Toronto service war, gear has fiowed from| Abandonment of the CPR's China, it was learned today. service from the capital to Tor- Aerial reconnaissance_ indi- onto will retire the re-estab. daily 'train Toronto cates that the north is giving/lisiment ofa CPR priority. in reconstruction to rail'service between links northwest and Peterborough r *é é 0 inte ar sai Hanoi into ove ADEQUATE SERVICE These'rail lines and bridges; "'It is the opinion of.the board were pounded heavily by U.S.\that this arrangement will give] fighter bombers for about three an adequate and suitable serv- or four months 'before the|ice to the majority of railway} strikes were halted three weeks'Patrons in the areas between! ago 's Montreal and Toronto and Ot Another area where tawa and Toronto," the board's nication lines are being rebuilt, announcement said lies above the demar« der arating North South Viet Nam. and reaching from commu ation bor rhe only CPR passenger ser from.ices remaining in the Montreal-| 'Toronto-Ottawa triangle -will be| : ty © so ; * Toronto, Montreal Ottawa Runs CN's The CNR will introduce morn-|! had been in the middle during the 12-day bus and subway! strike that ended Thursday--| saw things differently, how-| ever "T suppose people will argue; land debate as to whether the settlement was too high or too low," Lindsay said even before| Johnson spoke. 'The agreement! was best for the workers, the} |transit authority, the city and | the country." Then, sponse te son's denunciation of t tract terms, Lindsay said "The chairman of the media |tion panel, Dr. Nathan Fein- jsinger, prepared a memo-| ¢randum at the time the panel | recommended the settlement to the parties. The. memorandum stated the settlement was |within the guideposts.' A NEGRO FIRST i | Ww Dr. Robert @ was named today to head the new. Departmeént of Housing and Urban Develop- ment, President, Johnson, with Weaver standing beside him, told orters at the White House. he is nom ing a Negro to the Cabinet for the first time in history, Weaver, 58, has been ad ministrator of the Housing and Home Agency and Home Finance Agency since 1961 Weaver r John con- in re ) r (AP) to normal after' the painful and 7\ costly tieup. The full toll ma never be assessed, but it is es-| | timated at $500,000,000 to $800,-| | 000,000. if With the settlement agreed} 7 upon, the transit authority went between! into court and asked for the re- lease from custody of Michael i J. Quill, president of the AFL- from meetings with CNR and/cro Transit Workers Union, and CPR officials ordered by the coat eae union leaders who board two months ago after it had been jailed received a storm of protest about the reduction of passen-| ARRESTED JAN. 4 ger service between Ottawa and| They were arrested Jan. 4 for Toronto. \ |defying a Supreme Court in-| This reduction occurred after|junction prohibiting the strike. | the two railways agreed to|Shortly after his arrest Quill scrap their 30 - year - old pool|collapsed and was admitted to train agreement and the CPR! Bellevue Hospital took over Ottawa-Toronto sery-| The eight men were released | ce. } from the civil jail Thursday and} pple i Och 2 6 a | Canterbury,. Pope Meeting On Unity VATICAN CITY (CP) -- Rev, Michael] Ramsey, 5 those now operating Montreal and Ottawa The new arrangement stems ose Most| Bishop Dean, who has tra' Arch-| yelled 140,000 miles in the last] bishop of Canterkury and world/14 months, goes in his role as/| Anglican leader, will meet with! executive officer of the Anglican Pope Paul in the Vatican March} communion 23 in a hew initiative for Chris-| Archbishop Ramsey, the spir tian unity itual leader of Britain's 27,000 The ual m n/ 000 Anglicans, said in London he the primate of the of| will see Pope Paul 'in the spirit England and the Roman Cath-| of renewed lowship between olic pontiff--the second in 400jall Christiaf churches," After| years of Catholic-Anglican, sep-| the Vatican visit the Archbishop| aration--was announced jointlyjof Canterbury will pay a visit! Thursday at the Vatican and in|/to the Geneva headquarters of} London the World Council of Churches.} Archbishop Ramsey. and. six "It is my hope," Archbishop hurchmen, including) Ramsey said,"'that my meeting Ralph Dean Bishop! with the Pope will afford oppor of Cariboo in-Canada, will spend|tunity 'for speaking o! some of Rome -Marth,|the matters which emerge from three days. in \the Vatican Council." unu. ting betwee Church can 5. 22-24, i Brazilian tory st tain RIO DE JANCIRO (AP)--|. Most of the dead came from the Favela shantytowns on Rio's hillsides. They were The death toll.in the Rio de| Janeiro disaster climbed to 355 more bodies the} the} wake of the worst rains in this} 400-year his- day vere nud and many believed buried and debris left in in city's A total of 185 ther 170 in Rio de Janei ate incluc resort of Petropolis, niles north of the city, Meanwhile, the city returned) ? rains made the goin ough for low-slung dogs like this young fellow. He found refuge in a rubber Recent deaths' were confirmed inthe city and an- Death Toll Climbs To 355 never Tidearine man vio! 1. Brazil Floods Disaster brought in by the truckload. e| and another 10,000 in the state The rains, which started Mon ro| during the night but new land ling 100 in the moun-| Slides threatened to delay. Te-| Resignation | 26| pairs to a pipeline which sup- | plies 40 per cent of the city's) Many more were feared dead| water. A 150 - pound boulder in isolated areas, | | broke it Wednesday. boot where for a Kanipo photg,grapher i3/Gazette. "was posed John for (AP) Authorities estimated at least 40,000 were homeless in the-city} | day, tapered off to a drizzle) present $55 to jobless or un- skilled adults who attend pro- vinclal training courses to learn new trades. Immigration Minister Jean Marchand, the cabinet new- comer destined to take over the manpower department when it is formally established, also reported at a press con- ference that all provinces ex- cept Quebec had agreed to join with Ottawa in a pilot program of new job-training schools in | areas of high unemployment. Quebec had expressed - "res- ervations" about the pilot pro- gram, he said. Last year about 6,000 adults enrolled in vocational training courses across the country and about 36,000 completed them, ending up in skilled jobs, _ Education Minister Paul Gerin-Lajoie of Quebec said his province feels adult education is the sole responsibility of the provinces. It wanted to take a close look at the pilot projects before agreeing to take part. | PROGRAM SIMILAR In addition, Quebec already had a similar program in oper- ation' in some regions. Thus there were practical as well as JAN MARCHAND India: First Over Treaty NEW DELHI (AP)--A mem- ber of caretaker, prime minis- ter Gulzari Lal. Nanda's cabi- net resigned today over re- ported objections to Nanda's support of the Tashkent agree- ment between India and Paki- Sian, be Mahavir Tyagi, minister of 'rehabilitation and a veteran In- | EONARD FIRESTONE OTTAWA RAISES. INCENTIVE FOR ADULT EDUCATION $20 New Job-Training Schools In Low-Employment Areas. constitutional reasons for its attitude. Mr. Marchand said it will be up to each province to initiate pilot schools and ask Ottaw pay for them. They cos estimated $500,000 a y and the minister ficient test few job-training ent to test new jo a og envisaged. It was. Outlining the plan for in- creased allowances, he said they will cost the federal gov- ernment about $27,000,000 a year compared to the $7,000,000 it paid out last year under the former scale. Because legislation is needed, the new rates likely would not go into effect until July 1. The present allowance sys- tem provides up to $55 a week, the top rate covering married men with two or more children who take training away from their home town. Ottawa: pays 90 per cent of the allowances and 75 per cent of the cost of facilities for the course. Under the new plan, the top payment will be $75 weekly for a married man with two or more children who trains in his home town, Another $10 or $15 might be addéd for persons training away from home, but this is not yet certain. Ottawa will pay all of the first $35 which will become a basic rate applying to single men training at home. It. will pay 90 per cent of additional allowances up to the $75 top and continue to cover 75 per cent of facilities. dian politician, gave no reason for quitting. But it has been reported Tyagi differed with Nanda be- cause the prime*minister an- nounced immediately after suc- ceeding the late Lal. Bahadur Shastri Tuesday that India will honor the Tashkent declaration. Shastri signed the declaration at Tashkent Monday with Presi- dent Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakistan, pledging the two countries to work for peace in south Asia. The next day Shastri died in the: Soviet city and, Nanda succeeded him tem- porarily, India's ruling Cong- ress party will pick the next prime minister formally Wed- nesday. | Six Crew Lost | In Ship-Smash | BOULOGNE (Reuters) -- Six! men were missing and pre-| sumed drowned and one survi- yor was picked up after the 225. ton French coaster Le Tregor sank five miles off Cape Gris Nez near here early today,/| French maritime. authorities said, The coaster sank aftera col-| jlision with the 6,998-ton Dun-|-- kerque motor Si-kiang Survivor Raymond Colin, 32,) |said in hospital Le Tregor sank| in about a minute .and all the)= crew jumped into the sea. {dawson vate member's bills in the Association his bill would a lengthy desertion, cruelty and. non-support. Two More Bodies I BLOXWICH, England (R horror is sweeping Britain as continuing series of child m small body in the same ditch body found since the sensatio case TR LLL im me Ann Landers----12 City News--11 Classified--1 6, Comics--! 5 Editorial---4 Finoncial--19 17, 18 insanity, In THE TIMES today Master Plan Next Step Te Parkway--P. 11 NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Legal Abortion, Easier Divorce Bill TORONTO (CP) -- Ian Wahn, federal Liberal member for Toronto St. Paul's, said Thursday he will sponsor pri- coming session which would liberalize divorce. laws and. make possible lega}) abortions. Mr. Wahn told the annual meeting of St Paul's Liberal llow divorces on grounds of extended imprisonment, h Murders of Moors euters) -- A new grave of the result of an apparently urders. Police who found-a girl's body, believed to be that of a missing five-year- old, in a ditch near here Wednesday, came upon another Thursday. It was the fourth nal 'Murders on the Moors" o> Pickering Twp. Council Vetoes Ajax Auditorium--P. 3 Leafs Break Slump; Pummel Habs--P. 9 Obits---19 Sports--8, 9 Theatre----7 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--12, 13 Weather--2