Weather Report Sunny, cloudy with some thundershowers Friday. Low tonight, 62; high tomorrow, 82. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 166 10¢ Single Ghe Oshawa Times Copy 55c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1966 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-FOUR TRANSIENT TOBACCO workers are stopped by po- lice on a road leading to Delhi, Ont., as they march- ed on the town complaining about food and lodging on a nearby camp. The workers were met by police armed with shotguns and by Mayor 700 At CPR In Toronto Leak Denied Remain Ide By Robarts TORONTO (CP) -- About 700 Canadian Pacific Express han- dlers decided today to continue} a wildcat walkout here but 425) express workers at the Cana-| dian Nationa! Railways re- turned to work. The strikes began Wednesday. CP express men said they want a written guarantee from the company saying there will be no reprisals for the walkout. "As far as we are concerned! the strike will continue unless! The premier's statement was PTeSs | we get this,' Sydney Tomalinjissued in the wake of "news-\equalization payments in the} Local}paper reports that Mr. Pearson} neighborhood said. The president of 2331, Brotherhood of Railway) and Steamship Clerks, Freight! Handlers, Express and Station) Employees (CLC) would make} no further comment, | The CNR express workers voted Wednesday night to end|ments concerning the proposed equalization formula, it seemed 20 men,|to me the whole matter was | the walkout. But an extimated Premier he TORONTO Robarts denied (CP) today on equalization' grants to the Canadian premiers here earlier this week "I would like to make it clear," Mr.'Robarts said in a statement, "that I did not de- liberately reveal any informa- tion which I considered to be confidential." has been critical of certain pro- cedures of the premiers' con- ference made by Premier That- cher of Saskatchewan and my-| self." mostly shedmen, were standing|open for public discussion," Mr. | in front of the express shed in|Robarts said. } downtown Toronto today, trying| "In view of the fact that the} to get other workers to stay off|province of Ontario will make} the job until they too received|a very large monetary contribu- guarantees from the company of no reprisals. A CNR spokesman said "'The business of discipline is to be discussed later today by union) and management." 2,000 Remain In Walkout MONTREAL (CP)--A wildcat walkout by 2,000 non-operating union employees continued to tie up express services of the CNR and CPR here today. About 1,200 CNR employees, supported by more than 700 CPR employees, picketed sev- eral properties Wednesday in support of their demands for more speed by Judge C. A Cameron, the federally - ap- pointed conciliator, in present- ing his report on a proposed new working agreement. The impetus behind the sud- den work stoppage was not im- mediately known. Union offi- cials said Wednesday night they were surprised by the action be- cause all the men knew that a union-supported strike was al- most inevitable later this month. J. A. Pelletier, secretary of the joint protective board of the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- way, Transport and General Workers (CLC), said union ap peals for the men to end the walkout have been futile. jwhatever equalization formula should be wide to some other provinces) | | tion may eventually be adopted, surely it is my right and duty to ensure that our taxpayers} who have to meet this bill are completely informed. "It is my feeling that there public knowl- edge of exactly what these fed- eral - provincial arrangements are and how they operate." PEARSON SURPRISED Prime Minister Pearson said at an Ottawa press conference Wednesday he was surprised so much publicity was given to equalization at the. premiers' talks. He described the information divulged as confidential federal proposals for tax sharing that Jobless Laborer were intended for consideration re-|in advance of the meeting in| vealed confidential information| September of federal and pro-| |vincial finance ministers in the Iprovinces at the conference of) tax-structure committee The equalization issue erupted at the premier's talks after Pre- mier Ross Thatcher said he had seen the federal proposals and that Saskatchewan would lose $35,000,000 under them Premier Robarts later told a ess conference the present of $280,000,000 |would be increased by about 1$110,000,000 and that Quebec would get $90,000,000 of the in- crease, | | .when I made my com-| 'Mr. Thatcher. criticized the| federal proposals because, he said, his province still depends on wheat for economic health and a run of poor crops could strangle the provincial treasury. Mexico Paper Ends Publication MEXICO CITY (Reuters)-- The evening newspaper Diario de Mexico announced Wednes- day it has been forced to cease publication by order of Presi- dent Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Under the headline "Presi- dent Diaz Ordaz decrees death for Diario de Mexico," the newspaper says a June 23 error resulted in the transposition of captions on pictures, The 15-year-old journal said misprints are inevitable; and denounced the official order as "a grave attack on freedom of the press and an abuse of public power st our professional and civil life.'"" _ 24, Is Held In The Kidnapping Of Girl, 12 DANVILLE, Ill. unemployed laborer was charged Wednesday with kid- napping a 12-year-old girl from her home and holding her cap- tive for 15 hours in his car. The man, Robert Huff, 24, who is estranged from his wife, was accused of abducting Betty Farrell Tuesday from in front of her .home in Grape Creek, south of here. Huff was taken into custody Sheriff Jack Clark of Ver- (AP) -- An by milion County earlier after the Farrell girl had been found sit- ting on the steps of an aban- doned store in the town of Bel- gium, four miles south of Dan- ville, The girl, dressed only in the light, summer clothes she wore when she got into a car Tues- day afternoon, told a search party that her abductor had driven her around all night and let her out when the "car broke down." TODAY'S AUTOPSY MAY ANSWER QUESTION tin | DELHI JOBLESS DEFY RIOT ACT DELHI, Ont. (CP) -- Police armed with shotguns Wednes- . in: Y pe Ane da av jOmG55 WaclG workers who refused to disperse after Mayor A. M. Sayeau read the Riot Act to about 200 of the wit demanding better food and lodging. More than 500 workers, mostly from the Maritimes, Northern Ontario and Quebec, are waiting in a camp near here for the expected opening of the tobacco harvesting sea- son Aug. 8. They receive free meat and cheese sandwiches twice a day. A large "circus tent' with a canvas floor serves as a dormi- tory Police Chief Carl Johnson said night that if they did not get more food they would march Nie the-towi ana take. it. Wednesday they marched but found the road blocked by two police cars and eight policemen. On police recommendation, Mayor Sayeau read the Riot Act. HAS STRICT PENALTY Under the Criminal Code, this may be read when 12 or more persons unlawfully and riotously assemble. They are liable to life imprisonment if they do not dis- perse within 30 minutes. Most of the demonstrators dis- persed but 10 who refused were arrested. Charges of causing a disturbance and unlawful as- sembly are pending. man of a citizens group which operates the tiaimicin camp, wramed the trouble on a few ringleaders. He described these variously as "big mouths," "odd balls and goofs," "rabble-rous- ers" and "guys with long hair." Of the camp, the priest said: "It's not living at the Ritz but it's free. The food is better than ever it was. We never started out to give them more than bare subsistence." Mayor Sayeau said there is "an awful lot to be desired" at the camp, but more municipal money could not be spent on it. The camp is partly financed by the federal and provincial governments, local welfare de- partments and charitable agen- cies, Other money comes from tobacco farm and an annual Blan ne -Ontavin Wie. Cured Tobacco Farmers' Mare keting Board. Robert Gluck of Ville Jacques Cartier, a Montreal suburb, said some of the men supplement the food provided with un- ripened corn from _ nearby fields, ."'The farmers should take them in and give them a place to sleep and something to eat,"' A After the. demonstration a camp delegation met Father Langan and requested regular meals, "For free, of course," said Father Langan "Tf we did that, all the tour. ists in the country would want ai Oia \released immediately. the workers threatened Tuesday t | LOVER MEETS SAD, SAD FATE SALTA, Argentina (Reut- ers)--Simon Quicho, 62, has been condemned to prison for 10 years for killing, roasting, and eating the lover of his 18-year-old - - wie tee Forces Council Planned was. pub- | The court found that on May 22, 1963, Quicho saw | 22-year-old Wenceslao Ru- | eda steal out of his daugh- | ter's room. He killed the young man with an iron bar, cut his body into | pieces, roasted it and forced his ee wife ti HALIFAX (CP) -- Gen. Jean| ata, daughter Nicolasa and , pps Re Anis | | 46-year-old son Pedro to join V. Allard, chief of ( anada 8 de-| esis, fence staff, announced today the} in the banquet 5 formation of "an armed forces} As evidence of the crime council" composed of senior of-| the public Rabe oe ficers at headquarters in Ot- | showed the bones of Ruec rh tawa and the commanders.of all |. found buried in Quicho's tele commands. | small ranch. He told a news conference} here that the council will have} the job of considering the steps} ICC Members by which integration and unifi-| cation of the forces will be car-| L4 ried out. al tra ed The first meeting of the coun-/ cil will be Aug. 10 in Ottawa| SAIGON (AP) --- Commu-|and it will meet regularly once} nist dispatches said Wednesday|a month thereafter members of the International) 'The general said it will be the| jControl Commission were | council's job to draw up recom- | among those strafed by U.S.| mendations concerning integra-| and South Vietnamese planes in}tion and unification, but the! alleged attacks on a Cambodian final responsibility as to what frontier village. recommendations will be made The ICC--composed of Can-}to Defence Minister Hellyer will ada, India and Poland--was re-| remain with him ported investigating charges of}, Gen, Allard said the council 'earlier strikes at the village of | will determine to a large extent Anlong Trach when one raid|"the course of action I will took place Tuesday, the Soviet) take." news agency Tass said. "Y want the council to partici-| The ICC was formed in 1954| pate fully in the decision mak- to supervise. the truce estab-|1n& 3 lished by the Geneva confer-| He said matters of current} ence that year. policy ig sep ee but the} * Pout tc Bele .o.| council will have a large say in U.S. officials in Saigon 188 recommendations for future pol- fused any comment on the re-|,-- ' Prana ports. The ICC for Viet Nam icy. One of the matters with said any srotests: would be filed which the council will deal is say ¥ P iN " ; . unification of the navy, army with the ICC representatives for and air force and the proposal Cambodia. for a single uniform. | He declined to comment d s rectly on the recent so-called Two Persons Die "admirals' revolt'. except to say "he-didn't think "it was a Te- In Head -on Crash volt at all. He thought the term "revolt" was something BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Two | dreamed up by the press. persons were killed and seven} others injured Wednesday night in a two-car, head-on 'collision on the Macdonald Cartier Free way about 26 miles west of here. Provincial police said the two who died in Kingston Hospital| following the accident were! Montreal men. The injured per- sons include a family of six from Connecticut Names of the victims were not Did Drugs Spur Sniper On? AUSTIN, topsy report to show whether i J. Whitman was under fluence of drugs when he 15 persons and wounded ers before police him down. Jerry Dellana peace, said he inst pathologists making th topsy to search for dexed Whitman's blood Tex today is ex justice has found in. Whitman's after he was shot by At lice: Monday, on the 2 observation tower of the | sity Whitman, 25, killed 1 sons with a spray of rif from the tower shot and stabbed his mot death and fatally knife young wife, Kathy, 23 slept, police said Meanwhile, Governor J (AP)--An the bullets Dellana such pills -- goof balls -- of Texas main. building Earlier as she He au- pected *harles Connally, is might prevent st Whitman's bo that of his mot Wednesday ni Worth, Fia., where Roman ( services were t day. His wife w nesday near Houston in- killed 31 oth- cut of the ructed e ale rine n said town I am the whole ques crimes being. co "serial through a plea punishment be Connally ence Wednesday reached a point sre we tend very 5 per- le fire he her to 5 ad his nals aid he recommendation ohn B, legislature . that seeking their home town, Rosenberg vicinity services at Needville, her home disturbed told a is considering a laws that ich slaughter along with was flown to Lake ay, person her, ght Jatholic funeral 0 be held Fri- buried Wed- in the funeral marks as after would law about notify tion of heinous pmmitted and-- of insanity-- ing escaped," news confer- pee . We've in this country to coddle crim- urge trist. But public ing a preven the Texas "whenever a to fully q law for Texas and requiring said Whitman would have been der a registration law. serious crime where loss of life like this one occurs, and the is found insane, that the perpetrator be incarcerated for life--and never parolled or re- leased, He added that he felt his re- were not particularly ap- plicable to Whitman Connally also indicated he consider a new firearms possibly a psychiatrists to police of patients who ex- press homicidal urges or show possible murderous tendencies. Whitman had expressed such an to a university psychia- of the firearms law, he said he didn't want to give the GOV. JOHN CONNALLY, right, is shown at his news conference in. the _ state capitol at Austin today. With him -are: R. A. Miles, left, Austin police chief and John false hope that by pass- firearms law "we would t this sort of thing.' He ualified to own a gun un- Rev. R. J DIES AT 40 Comedian Lenny Bruce, 40, one of the first sick tumorists, was found dead in his Hollywood, Calif., home last night. Police said narcotics paraphernalia was found near his body. --AP Wirephoto Langan, chair- a $5 assessment on each local to stay there." "= POLICE HALT SKIRMISHES STELCO WILDCAT STRIKE - Back-to-Work Plea Irks 5,000 At The Main Gate HAMILTON (CP) -- A squad/|local, manhandled by workers|pired Aug. 1 have been under of 180 policemen broke up minor |skirmishes at the scene of a wildcat strike which closed down the Hilton plant of the | when he attempted to urge them |back to work, called the strike illegal. | He warned the men on picket way for four months. Wednesday night, picket lines appeared at Stelco's main plant as hundreds of afternoon shift Steel Co. of Canada Ltd., here | lines they are harming them-j| workers turned back the night early today. | The plant closed when some /4,000 day shift. workers joined | 17,000 fellow employees in refus- jing to cross picket lines. | Nearly 5,000 members of Lo- cal 1005, United Steelworkers of jAmerica (CLC), blocking the plant § main gate, made a |threygh loudspeakers to return \to. work. | Police quickly surrounded the \officials and whisked them out of the area in cars. | selves by continuing the walk- out. Morgan was hooted and told |to go home by the workers. A |group of pickets pushed him in- to the street while the rest shouted: "Out, Out, Out." "You can see the union's exe- |cutives have no control us through the picket lines." CALLS STRIKE FUTILE shift of about 3,500 men. One man was grabbed and and shoved into a prisoners van shortly before 9 a.m. today when pickets surrounded a po- lice car attempting to get through the gate with a mem. ber of the company's supervise I r over ory staff. lunge at their own union lead-|this Mr. Morgan said. 'They | ers who were urging them/(the workers) will not even let! Police. Chief Len. Lawrence said it isn't likely the four ar- rested men will be charged. "We'll let them cool off for In a prepared statement, he|@ Couple of hours and probably said the strike is futile and the|release them later. It all de- The incident occurred about|Workers won't get pay from ei-/pends on what happens here 7 a.m, 4 MEN ARRESTED | Four men were arrested after | minor altercations with police. | John Morgan, president of the/and company officials, said: the rocking, A NO MARRIAGE IN 100 YEARS? CARY GRANT LONDON (AP) Cary Grant said Wednesday he thinks marriage won't exist in 100 years The American movie ac- tor--married four times and a father for the first time at 62--expounded his views on marriage at a luncheon arranged by Columbia Pic- tures Corp. "Our divorce laws are more relaxed now," he said. "Women are more in com- petition to men," AYS IT'S SO Grant, whose wives have included women renowned for their beauty and wealth, now is married to former actress Dyan Cannon, 29. They have a five-month-old daughter. Grant said he has decided to give up playing romantic roles. "When I was a young man I remember it was dis- tasteful to me to see men of my present age making love to younger women." BR sco Pace, of San Antonio, chair- man .of Texas Public Safe- ty Commission. In express- ing concern over the mass slayings by sniper. Charles J. Whitman, Gov. Connally said he is _ considering recommending a new state law to incarcerate for life killers who are found to be insane. (AP Wirephdéto) |ther the company or the union. during the day.' ' | Judge Walter Little of Parry! REPORTERS MANHANDLED }Sound, Ont., chairman of a |three - man conciliation board meeting in Toronto with union Newspaper men attempting to cover the strike were subjected to manhandling, jeers and care photographer was |talks will be suspended due to) pushed and shoved and had his |the illegal strike. | "The board has no intentions jof resuming negotiations until |the picket line is removed and |the employees have returned to | work, "It is the unanimous view of |the board that the law prohibit- jing Strikes during conciliation }proceedings must be upheld. |The unwarranted conduct of ir- | responsible elements acting con- | trary to the law and against the | specific instructions of their jelected leaders and bargaining representatives cannot be toler- lated." | Judge Was appointed |chairman of the board July 19 T issn miu jat the joint request of the par- ties. | CONTRACT EXPIRED Negotiations for a new con- jtract to replace one that ex- | United States and the Soviet ground nuclear tests by the a report released today. The 1961 census. The slowdown 13.4 per cent and 14.8 per camera smashed when he tried jto take a picture, Stewart Rooke, the union's area supervisor, said the strike was ""organized by an irrespon- sible group." The union is demanding wage parity with United States steel- workers. One of the workers said the reason for the walkout was the slowness of getting the concilia- tion board report. Other issues in dispute are pensions, job training and supplementary un- employment benefits. The union is demanding a 90+ cents - an - hour package over a two-year contract. The company has offered a 62- cent package over a three-year contract, but the union says the company offer is really only worth about 42 cents an hour. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Sweden Makes Appeal GENEVA (Reuters) -- Sweden appealed today to the Union to agree to stop under- end of this year. Mrs, Alva Myrdul, chief Swedish delegate, told the 17-nation Geneva disarmament conference the positions of the two major nu- clear powers on this issue are close and she hopes agree- ment might be within. reach. Population Hits 19,919,000 OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's population at June 1. was 19,919,000, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics estimates in total represents a growth of 1,681,000 or 9.2 per cent in the five-year period since the In from increases of previous five-year growth cent in periods is due to the dropping birth rate, DBS says. ..In THE TIMES Today.. Malleable Iron, Union Meet Friday -- P. 11 Department Studies Post Offices Needs -- P. ? Oshawa Green Gaels Topple Brampton -- P. 8 Ann Landers--12 City News--11 Classified--20, 21, Comics--18 Editorial---4 Financial--7 22, 23 8.9 Theatre--19 Weather-----2 Ajox News--5 Women's--13 10 Sports- Whitby t wand 4