Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 133 10¢ Single -- Hhe Oshawa Cimes BSc Per Week eh tnares OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1966 Authorized 0s Second Close Malt 9) Oitice Dgpertment Ottewa end tor poyment Weather Report Very hot weather to continue over the weekend, Light winds forecast. Low tonight, , 68; high Saturday, 90, ' THIRTY-SIX PAGES Farmers To Follow OPP Instructions TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial police were ordered Thursday to be firm but use discretion in dealing with farmers staging tractor parades to protest what) they say are low milk prices, and the Ontario Farmers' Union| responded with orders to mem- bers to obey police, Mine Fire Kills Four Attorney - General Arthur Wishart of Ontario said in an in-| d terview officers have been ad-| vised not to lay charges unless! the number and spacing of trac-| tors appears to be a deliberate and continuing attempt to dis- rupt traffic. - John Dolmer of Corbetton,| Ont., OFU president, said the demonstrations will continue with the farmers obeying police) 7 requests, "If we are told to take to the shoulder of the road, we'll take to the shoulder,' Mr, Dolmer said in an interview, Meanwhile, Ellard Powers of ELSA, Y¥.T. (CP) -- Four Pembroke, OFU first vice-pres- miners were killed and' eight|ident, said representatives from were rescued after fire swept|union locals in Lanark, Leeds, | through support timbers in a|Renfrew, Frontenac and Carle-| hiliside silver mine Thursday night and early today after be- ing trapped 500 feet below the} surface when-fire broke out} blocking their exit, The body) of one man was removed,| Three other miners remain un-| accounted for. | Don DeLaporte of Yellow-| knife, N.W.T., general manager) of United Keno Hill Mines,) owners of the project, an- nounced the progress of the op- eration at 12:33 a.m, YDT as} rescue crews continued to fight their way into the smoke-filled mine in search of the remain- ing men, 75 cents, president An earlier report said 10 or 11\said Mr, ton counties will meet in Rich- mond, Ont., 15 miles south of Ottawa, to discuss the advisa- bility of farmers cutting off pro- duce shipments to markets to supplement their milk price de- mands, Mr, Powers said it wouid take at least six months to prepare such action, The farmers are seeking = b2- sic price of $4 a hundredweight of milk, The price now is set at $3.25 with federal subsidy of PREMIER DUFF ROB- LIN and his wife smile during an early break in the tight Manitoba election PREDICTS REACTION William Langdom of Medina, | of O! Local 341,| Wishart's announce: Thursday night. Mr, Rob- lin"s Progressive Conserva- tive party retained a siim majority in the general men were unaccounted for after|ment w.!l probably bring more two had been found but Mr. De-|demonstrators on the highways. Laporte issued the revised fig-| ures following further checks, He said members of the gov- ernment had made misleading Names of the men involved|statements and threats would were not released, - jonly bring out the farmers in Mr. DeLaporte said one of the| stronger numbers. rescued is in hospital, Four| Despite possible police action, | emerged in good condition. at least one local plans to £0) The men were trapped when|ahead with its scheduled demon-! fire flared through timbers near| stration, the 200-foot level while less than| "We are definitely prepared) 20 men were at work in the|to face charges," Bert Dobson, area at 10:45 a.m. YDT Thurs-| past president of OFU Local 157) day, in Coldwater, 12 miles west of| Local reanue teams plunged/Orillia, said Thursday. "But we | into the 'mine wearing oxygen|don't expect charges will be! masks and by early evening) laid, | had found two men. One was) 'The parade will go on un-| dead. The other was taken to|less we get specific orders from hospital. | the police not to." Meanwhile firefighters) He said tractors will be) brought the flames under con-|spaced out, and a parade cap-| trol. The fire continued to burn/tain appointed to regulate traf-| - but Mr. DeLaporte said it was/fic. They have also asked police pretty well contained. for an escort. ey French Leader Makes Call | For U.S.S.R. Industry Link | NOVOSIBIR6GK, U.S.S.R.; De Gaulle spent an hour visit- (Reuters) -- President Charles|ing the turbine factory, accom- de Gaulle called for closer co-|panied by Soviet President Nik- operation between French and jolai Podgorny. | Soviet industry when he visited; He shook hands with many of | a giant turbo-generator factory the 8,000 workers who cheered iad WHITBY TOWN MERGER AGREED WHITBY (Staff) -- While dis- cussions between the Town of Whitby and the Township of Whitby are -continuing, the ama)gamation of the two muni- cipalities is a step nearer as the result of a resolution passed by the councils of both munici- palities during the past week. Whitby Town Council, at a special meeting, passed the fol- lowing resolution: 'That discus- sions be continued and that the proposed target date for amal- gamation be Jan. 1, 1967; and further that the department of municipal affairs be asked to provide a program for such staging." The same resolution has been passed by the Whitby Township Council, "Whitby filed annexation pro- ceedings two years ago,' Town Clerk John R. Frost said this morning, 'Talks between the two municipalities have been carried on since that time," Mr. Frost said that, due to the volume of detail work to be done by the department of municipal affairs and the fact that an Ontario Municipal Board hearing must be held, it might not be possible to meet the target date, "The motion means that for the present, action on a possible annexation has been suspended and that all efforts will be made leading to an actual amalgama- tion of the two municipalities by the end of this year," said Mayor Desmo.d Newman. "T feel we have made a tre- mendous step forward and have reached a high degree of co- operation with the representa- tives of the township, The situ- ation at the present time can be definitely stated, that both councils have agreed to amalga- mation, subject to the solution of many major problems, We ps ieainieNNGENNN NNR I 1 have asked the Ontario Munici- pal Board to set guide lines to make sure everything is taken care of," said the mayor, Included among the major problems to be studied during the summer months are those of joint services in education, fire protection, police protec- tion, joint planning, court of revision and committee of ad- justment, a8 well as sssesse ment procedure, The area covered by the pro- posed amalgamation extends from the Pickering Township boundary to the Oshawa boun- daries and approximately 10 miles north of Lake Ontario, Both municipalities face prob- lems. Among the major items are the need by the township for sanitary and water services; while the town needs land for industrial expansion, n t (pti ECE ea Sh NR f Roblin Returned Has Bare Majority election as both Liberal and par"es showed im- provement, --CP Wirephoto | Ky Regime Paratroops Close Buddhist Temples SAIGON (AP) - Paratroops and riot police sealed off Hue's two main Buddhist pagodas to- day and hauled away the coffins of two women who burned them- selves to death last month in the Buddhist struggle against Pre- mier Nguyen Cao Ky's govern- Ky's men threw up barbed- wire barriers in front of the Dieu De and to Dam pagodas to prevent the Buddhists from holding a public funeral--and probably atn anti - governmen demonstration--in defiance of a government ban, The two bodies, of-a nun and a 17-year-old girl, had been kept in the Diey De pagoda since their immolations May 29 and May 31, The nun was the first of 10 Buddhist suicides by fire which failed to arouse suf- ficient public horror to bring} down Ky's government, | Three Buddhist monks and about 20 'Soldiers of dubious loyalty also were arrested in the northern Buddhist stronghold, The soldiers detained included a nephew of the Buddhist ex- tremist Thich Tri Quang, now under arrest in a Saigon clinic where he continued a protest fast for the 17th day. here today. The French president arrived in this Siberian city Thursday |countries and made the gener-|tiating with moderate Buddhist|lature Wednesday confirms to start a 6,300-mile tour of the/ators for Egypt's Aswan dam.| Soviet Union, De Gaulle will leave by air Friday for Leningrad. But hejof your good relations with|opened the main pagoda on the| The OPC report said there is will make a detour on the way|French industry and I see no/grounds of the Buddhist Insti-/organized crime in Ontario with to become the first Western vis-|reason why we should not work) tute, Government rangers and "tentacles" reaching deep into itor to Russia's space launching /closer together." site at Baikonur, Kazakhstan. Russia Seeks Trade Increase MOSCOW (CP)--First Deputy welcome him as he toured the vast plant, | which exports equipment to $7; In Saigon, where Ky is nego- leaders. and the extremists have been pushed into the back-| He told factory manager Py.| the government re-| otr Bazunov, "I am glad to hear| ground, | plainclothes police stormed it at| As he left he wrote in the fac-| dawn Thursday to clean out the} - |tory's golden book: 'With my | last pocket of militant Buddhist }best wishes and hopes for co-| rebels, operation with French try."' indus-| While Tri Quang sustained) De, Gaulle flew here Thursday | from Moscow after two days of | talks with Kremlin leaders, His} in Novosibirsk was} Premier Dmitry Polyansky sug-|generally agreed to be warmer) gested to Trade Minister Robert Winters Thursday that Canada should import more goods from the Soviet Union to help redress a huge trade imbalance between the two countries, The suggestion was made at 35-minute Kremlin meeting held four days after the signing of a three year, $800,000,000 contract) for the sale of Canadian wheat to Russia. Winters, who came here last Saturday, left later for Canada.| He is due in Ottawa Saturday) afternoon. He returned here} earlier Thursday from a two- day visit to Leningrad. Polyansky, member of the Soviet Communist party's ruling presidium, tried to impress on Winters the need for a better balance of Canadian - Soviet trade, reliable sources said. This has been a_ favorite theme of Soviet officials since} Canada began massive sales of wheat to the Soviet Union three years ago. Sources said the Soviet gov- ernment is "naturally"' unhappy} about the present imbalance) but that Polyansky appreciated there was a limited amount the Canadian government can do to improve matters. Basically, Winters told him, it is up to the Russians to in-|Choy and the Romanian party crease their sales in the private enterprise Canadian market but} the Canadian government would} facilitate matters to any extent} habitants than that on his arrival in the Soviet capital Monday for a 12- day visit. Almost all the 1,000,000 in- of Novosibirsk, and many people from the surround: ing agricultural area, appeared to be out on the streets to greet him, Chou Visit Ends Badly | BUCHAREST (Reuters)--Chi- nese Premier Chou En-lai left Romania for Albania today ending an eight-day visit which began with smiles and ended tn barely-concealed controversy, The Chinese leader left) empty-handed in his attempt to win over the independently- minded Romanians to Peking's side in the Soviet-Chinese ideo- logical conflict. The Romanians stuck stubbornly to théir neu tral role. Chou flew to Albania--China's staunchest ally -- after embrac- ing Premier Ion Gheorghe Mat- rer But Western diplomats in the Romanian capital believed that chief, Nicolae Ceausescu, clashed Thursday. night over the} text of a speech the Chinese) leader intended to make to a packed friendship rally. Little Daniel Richter of Massena, N.Y., one of the | youngest persons attending |himself on sugared liquids, the'an effective bankruptcy fraud military junta continued con- tacts with his chief rival, the moderate Thich Tam Chau, Ky in his talk with Tam Chau is believed seeking the church's endorsement of the Sept, 11 elee- tion for a constitutional conven- tion, which Tri Quang wanted the Buddhists to boycott, Another problem arose for the government and the V.S8... mili- tary establishment when 6,000 skilled and unskilled Vietnamese workers of the huge U.S, con- struction combine went on strike in the Saigon area for higher wages, The walkout by workers of the Raymond + Morrison - Knudsen consortium affected such jobs as the expansion of Saigon's over- crowded port facilities and the busy Tan Son Nhut Airport out. side the city. 'Crime-Busters' Team Needed Says Ontario Liberal Leader TORONTO (CP)--A team of "crime-busters" should be set up in Ontario to deal with or-| ganized crime, says | Leader Anarew Thompson, He charged that during the jast five years the efforts of at- torneys-general to combat or- ganized criminal activity have been ineffective, 'We need a team of sophisti- cated crime-busters in the prov- ince. to cope with sophisticated criminals,' the Liberal leader said in a statement. The Liberal leader said the report of the Ontario Police Commission tabled in the legis- statements made about Ontario crime in 1961 by John Winter- meyer, his predecessor, the United States as well as to Quebec and Western Canada, Mr, Thompson in his state- ment calls on the attorney-gen- eral to establish "immediately the Jehovah's Witnesses convention in Toronto, is too tired tness any: y Liberal |----~ squad of lawyers and account- ants in the same way that Que- bec province has done." Buganda King Safe In London LONDON (Reuters) -- The de- posed kabaka (king) of Bu- ganda in south-central Africa, who arrived here Thursday night from Burundi, received medical treatment today for malaria and a back injury, He suffered the back injury when his palace near. Kampala was stormed and occupied by Uganda government troops last month, He caught malaria dur- ing weeks in the bush following his escape from the palace, The palace battle took place after the kabaka, Sir Edward Frederick Mutesa, had rejected a New Uganda constitution and ordered the government to quit the territory of Buganda, larg- est kingdom in Uganda, TOO TIRED TO WITNESS ANYTHING thing, He even ignored the title of the religion's offi- Tear Gas Used Manitoba PCs Lose Ground By DON McKEE CANTON, Miss, (AP) -- Fraz- zied by a hectic night of tear gas and tension, the Mississippi march regroups today for new confrontations, Dr.. Martin Luther King Jr, said. a detachment would drive 60 miles east to Philadelphia, Miss. a Ku Klux Klan strong. hold, for a rally. "We will maintain the peace come hell or high water,"' said Governor Paul Johnson, in urg- ing Philadelphia residents to stay away from the rally--part jof the march"s effort to spur |Negro voter registration. | The busy schedule also called |for organization of a Negro boy- cott of downtown white mer- chants and @ general work stop- page by Negroes in Canton, while a few continue the march toward Jackson. From Canton, the march swings south along U.S, 51, the same highway where it al was started by James H, Mere- dith in Memphis, Tenn., 20 days and 220 miles ago. Jackson is 20 miles from Canton, Meredith, who broke the ra- cial barrier at the University of Mississippi tin 1962, was wounded by shotgun blasts June 6 as he walked near Her- nando, PLANS TO REJOIN Recovered from his wounds, Meredith, now a Columbia Uni- versity law student, planned to rejoin the march today, King, who got a strong dose of tear gas in Thursday night's uproar in Canton, called the highway patrol move to cial magazine. --CP Wirephoto NDP Gains Prairie Seats On Marchers drive the crowd off a Negro a ground "brutal inhuman- y." The barrage of about 40 tear gas canisters came.alter marchers set up their big tents on the school ground in defi- ance of the city's refusal to al- low them to camp 'there, About 100 police in riot dress moved in on the crowd, drove them back with clubs and' the choking gas, then pulled down the tents, packed them on the ae and had the truck hauled|" The action came after about 2,500 Negroes, with a sprinkling of whites, held a rally on the lawn at the courthouse in down: town Canton, The crowd then moved on to the school ground, about eight blocks away, SLUGGED. WITH GUNS Many were kicked and slugged with gun butts by the gas-masked highway patrolmen as demonstrators groped blindly in the acrid clouds of tear gas rolling over the area, One white Roman Catholic priest, Rev. John Prater of Chi- cago, who has been on the march for several days, was punched in the stomach with a rifle butt, When a marcher pro- tested that the priest was a "man of God," the officer snapped, 'I'll put him with his God," With their tents missing, most of the marchers--about 70 white and 90 Negroes -- were quartered in Negro homes for the night, March leaders recovered the tents several hours after the gassing. King said the Philadelphia de- tachment would return to Can- ton after the rally there, and make another attempt to pitch the tents at the school ground before dark. Hopes Rise In U.K. Talks LONDON (AP)--Talks be: tween striking seamen and Britain's shipowners resumed today in an atmosphere which was believed better than any since the strike began 40 days ago, Thursday night's first session at the ministry of labor lasted more than three haurs, William Hogarth, secretary-general of the National Union of Seamen, told reporters afterwards: "While there is talk there is)? hope,"' Chairman of the talks is Lord|# Pearson, the judge who headed|~ the government's inquiry into|= jthe dispute, The inquiry recom: |= mended that the seamen's goal of a 40-hour week be fulfilled next near instead of immedi-|3 ately as they demand. Leaders of the 65,000-member | > ,; union are reported to have rec-|> ognized that they will have to|> compromise on the 40 - hour week along the lines suggested by the Pearson committee. The bone of contention now | > is believed to be the number of days of theix paid shore leave. WINNIPEG (CP) - Premier Duff Roblin"s Progressive Con- servative government began a fourth term today in Manitoba with a bone-bare majority, It was support for the New Democratic Party that sliced into the government's strength, ough the. Liberals remained the official opposition when the count was in from a record turnout in Thursday's provincial election, The standing compared to the last election Dec, 14, 1962, with voting deferred to. July 7 in Churchill constituency in the h: At dissolution of the legisla ture in May, the standing was PC $6, Liberal 18, NDP five, So- clal Credit one and two seats were vacant, : Jacking up its share of the popular vote to 22.1 per cent from 14 per cent in 1962, the NDP under the veteran Russ Paulley captured two seats from the government and the same number from the Liberals, The Liberals under leader Gil Molgat made three gains from the Conservatives but saw their share of the popular vote dip to $3.5 per cent from: $7, The Conservatives, whose magic number for seats won had been 36 in both 1962 and in the election before that in 1959, dropped to 39.6 per cent from DEFEAT MINISTER The Conservatives had one casualty of cabinet rank with Municipal Affairs Minister Rob- ert Smellie falling in Birtle-Rus- Hy to yo nes ee "6, a farm nt dealer, fam, nacre a ing leaders, 'I' haven Mr, Molgat, 39, a man who entered politics full» time when he was. drafted as Liberal leader five years ago, said both his party and the Con- servatives suffered "because of the bad effect of the situation in Ottawa," "People consider the petty arguments in Ottawa, incl the Munsinger affair others," he said, "and their dise satisfaction was shown in eninge Edward Island and Que- af In those two provinces, were the order. The por Bay n servatives found themselves in a deadlock with the Liberals Pending a deferred vote in one riding in P.E.I, and Daniel Johnson's Union Nationale squeezed out Jean Lesage's Libe erals in Quebec, No other provincial elections have been scheduled to date this year, Both the Liberal and NDP campaigns stressed the theme that eight years of "stand-pat, do-nothing" Conservative gove ernment had left Manitoba standing still in comparison with economic development in the rest of Canada, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Steelies Strike Simcoe St. Plant Members of United Steelworkers, Local 6958, went on strike at Pedlar People Ltd., today at noon, The local had turned down an offer made yesterday by the company. Pension Plan 'Stacking' To Be Legal TORONTO (CP) -- The government today introduced a bill that will allow municipalities to "stack" or integrate their pension plans with the Canada Pension Plan, Belgian Steel Producers Amalgamate BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- producers announced today Belgium's two largest steel they are planning to merge into a company of 'European size", required by the con- tinuing development of the Cammon Market, Pam Miller Wins District Golf--- Ann Landers---14 City News---13 Classified---18 to 22 Comics----17 Editorial---4 Financial-----6 ... In THE TIMES today... Whitby Township Singers Tape Program--p.5 Land Assembly Plan Approved--p.13 Obits------22 Sports----8,9,10 Theatre--1) Weather----2 Whitby, Ajox News-+5 Women's---14,15,16