Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. 10¢-Single Copy. S5e Per Week Home Belivered VOL. 95 -- NO. 180 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1966 She Oshawa Times Authorized os Second Class: Mail Ottew: Weather Report Increasing cloud cover e€X- pected. Little change in tem- perature. Low high Sunday 75. i Post Office Department a-and for payment of Postage in Cash tonight 50, TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. A LOSING RACE WITH DEATH year-old Richard Smith an attempt to revive after the child fell swimming pool at Ft. Lauderdale patrolman Don Manley rushes for help and applies mouth mouth resuscitation to two- Lauderdale day -- nursery Friday. The child was pro- nounced dead on arrival at at a hospital. in him into a Beas a 8 to- 1 one, of ainst t spokes- of MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)-- President Johnson said today Hanoi's leaders have been told the United States will halt its bombing of North Vietnamese military targets if the Commu- nists stop sending troops into South Viet Nam. And as he stumped across |New England in campaign fash- ion, Johnson also touched on ra- cial riots, declaring efforts to open up opportunities to Amer- ican Negroes "can succeed only in conditions of civil peace." In a speech prepared for 4 Manchester appearance, the second stop in the second day of a five-state swing,Johnson said Hanoi. holds '"'the passkey to peace." "We are more than eager to- let North Viet Nam live in |peace if they only will let South | Viet Nam do the same," he said. But until then, he added, }"'our task... is to carry on juntil the Communists grow weary and turn from use of force. When that day comes, our men can come home and the people of Viet Nam can go on with building their country." Johnson did not disclose in what manner, nor how recently, the offer to cease bombing was jrelayed to North Vietnamese \leaders, saying only that it has | been made known toe them both publicly and privately that "'if they will stop sending troops into South Viet Nam, we will immediately stop bombing mili- tary targets in their own coun- try."" PRESIDENT JOHNSON troops the line at the Buf- falo International Airport in Buffalo, N.Y. Friday on the first stop of a whirl- |_ The president called upon South Vietnamese who support| the Communists to give up their fight as a losing cause. In discussing peace prospects, | Johnson said: | "It may be one month or many; It may be one year or jseveral. No one knows but the jmen in Hanoi. They hold the |passkey to peace; only they can decide when 'the objective they| In a prepared speech he said |seek is no longer worth the cost; -- it carries." rioter's hands: In discussing civil rights at a|destructive fury University of Rhode Island con-/neighborhoods; vocation in Kingston, scars thei Second, "to succeed or fail as a single,one of hostility and people--not as-separate races."'ment." CNR Says Effect Slight Of Railmen's Wildcat | MONTREAL (CP)--A spokes-; There were 115 electricians; In Ottawa, a special eight |man for the CNR said Friday|out at the CPR's Angus yard Ini . A 'at Montreal-and 273 repairmen night the effects of a wildcat) i1q carmen off the job at the| Cues broke the Prime up for Minister Pearson strike by non-operating employ-| company's St. Luc diesel yard. |ees of the railway should "fizzle| DRIVERS WALK OFF jout,"' at least for the weekend. In Toronto, 300 CNR express Many of the estimated 3,600\qrivers were off their jobs, 50| men who were on strike Friday} office workers were out at the|walkout until all pre-strike pro against both the CNR and the CPR would have heen off the! otnor yards. land an official. strike date set job anyway during the week-| Another 150 workers were ex-|STRIKE NOT OFFICIAL end, the CNR spokesman said.| pected to strike at Toronto to-| The Train services, were reported| day. continuing as usual along CNR} and CPR routes. }warehousemen were off their|non-operative. rail workers be: Pointe St. Charles, while some|out in Windsor. g truckers were persuaded not to} Sydney, N.S., reported 138 cross picket lines at the Bona-|CNR men out with 90 more ex- for v Increases rangin venture express freight depot. |pected to strike today, wage is $2.22 an hour. Registrar Raps Grade 13 Grind TORONTO (CP)--T sity of Toronto's director missions Friday. termed For Last Man On Run LONDON (AP) -- While hun-| their homes in Yorkshire and{holed up in the capital. dreds of armed policemen re-' Cheshire. A wi io. friend told Scotland newed a massive manhunt) --A man was charged with|Yard Roberts telephoned her around London for scar-faced| two sensational murders in|Friday night saying: "For Harry Roberts--wanted in the! the northern town of Stock-|God's sake, help." killing of three Scotland Yard] port. | Police put an armed guard at policemen--four other big in-; --In additio, police combedithe woman's flat. 'I'm sure vestigations were under way in| wild moorland for two con-|the call came from the London widely separated: areas of Brit-| victs who escaped Wednesday area," she was quoted as say- ain, from a working party outside! ing. "Harry sounded desperate. --A headless body was found' Dartmoor Jail. |He wanted money and food." hidden on a rocky hill in Sus-| The search for 30 - year - old} Friday night police ended a i ag said: "It's mur- + poe Gecctinet by Romae' two-day search of Epping For- --Two young girls, aged 10 who may be carrying three|**"" waere Roberts had heen re- te A NB a? ol | ae Pe ae -., \ported hiding out, and concen- and. 7, were missing in sus-|guns, went into its second week trated on his old.London haunts picious circumstances from with police convinced he is 2 . a ences laeaa eg hci cee er Sec hat ce tilece Reeatied RE Roberts' estranged wife Mar- garet, a professional stripper he who lives in the north of Eng- ustra 1ans ac e ong jland, appealed to him to sur- jrender in a published state- " ment, Two other men already have In Bloody Viet Encounter »<:: charged with killing the _ {three policemen. SAIGON (Reuters) Aus-\storage depots in the southern|_ !" Stockport, a crowd of 300 tralian forces piled on the pres-|part of North Viet Nam Friday, | Screaming ohare tried to at- sure against the Viet Cong to-\ HiT HAIPHONG tack Robert Leonard Whalley, day after killing 214 Communist ; 24, as police brought him into erocne Siiaey te a Ginnavhue: Navy planes pounded a ma-|court Friday to face two ps Friday in a bloody-four ' Sachi the fodmndhein forcast cw the Viet jor fue] storage area southwest charges of murder Nant war. of key port of Haiphong. : Whalley was guarded by 30 : Crumpled bodies and piles of|policemen, but one woman got About 150 Australians, out-|Chinese and Russian - made through the cordon and hit him numbered eight to were|weapons littered the rubber|on the head with her handbag. down to their last rounds plantation today where the Aus-| Whalley was charged with the ammunition when _ reinfor tralians repelled an onslaught] stabbing of Mrs. Marporie Hill, ments reached the battle from an estimated 900 enemy/42, in August last year and ml rubber pl 1-| troops. John Crossland, 44, last Mon- tion 42 miles southeast of Sai-| Dawn after the battle showed day. Both were found driving in gon. the extent of the carnage.! woodland frequented by courting The operation continued today|Bodies -- some appeared to be| couples. as a full-scale d e hs of about 17--lay every-; Before Whalley's arrest, a Viet Cong, a. mi re, even inside the Aus-'note was found on the doorstep man said here ralian lines of police headquarters confess- The number 1errillas ; ling the two murders and saying killed in the battle was more . |My next victim will be a than the Australians had killed Anti-War | cenrager, Ha Ha. during their previous 14 months | Ce qe oe in Viet Nam. an (Australian headquarters in pe Canbe said 17 Australians Agitation were killed and 26 wounded in the: engagement in Ba Ria in 3 Phuoc Tuy province--easily the ie country's biggest loss in a sin- Curbs Likely gle day in Viet Nam.) The spokesman also reported WASHINGTON (AP) --Legis- that in the air war U.S. Airjlation to curb the activities of Force jets raided seven fuel/anti-Viet Nam war groups ap- pears headed for overwhelming approval by the House of Repre-| sentatives on the heels of this week's tumultuous hearings by the committee on un-American activities I think Congress is very re- eplive to this legislation," said Representative Joe Pool, Texas Democrat and acting commit- chairman e | n of ad Grade Ot members defiant, ant agreed that committee-beating war witnesses and ad- by several witnesses are. Communists will speed the: legislation to > the by nission t} hey pa a Poo uid he would seek com >,mittee approval next week of a bill he introduced to authorize maximum $20,000 fines and 20- year jail terms. for persons con- victed of helping the Viet Cong thought on/or North Vietnamese or. of tr: the movement generations is hammered He predicted that Grade 13 will way to a transformed Grade 12 which will spur grow ing independence of North regulars tagged signs, Vietnamése blindfolded and with identification sit cross legged av t part' of <td ' ' Army 1e part ¢ ft 9 block of men and materials to Viet a irue a ( r 1 school and university, 'Nam, y ACTION in joint U.S. Marine - South Viet Nam Colorado South Vietnamese Army headquarters in Quang Tin Province near the 17th pa- rallel. They ,were captured 500 enemy reported than were action, troops Army Operations put out. of in which more (AP Wirephoto) "The poor suffer twice at the First, when his} resemt-'drew member cabinet committee set up Thursday to study the strike} has said it would not be proper for) the cabinet to intervene in the Concord freight yard and 165 injcedures -have been exhausted | workers involved in the aitomane |unofficial strikes up to Friday A group of 30 drivers and|were a handful of the 98,000 In Montreal, Friday saw 2,400|railway jobs at London Friday|longing to 18 unions who have} men out at the CNR yard injand another. 120 non-ops were|been disappointed in their bid 8] from 55 cents to more than $1| © an hour. Their' present average} By DAVID DAVIDSON | TORONTO (CP) -- Premier) Robarts announced Friday the} appointment of a royal commis- sion to investigate labor law in Ontario, including the use of court injunctions in labor dis-| putes. | The one-man commission will} Premier Names Rand To Probe Labor Laws North Viet Nam Gets Bombing Halt Offer Royal Commission Will Study Injunctions Use lier this year at both' the Osh- awa Times and Tilco Plastics Co., Peterborough. The Oshawa dispute was re- solved before government ac- tion was necessary. to ensure compliance with a court order limiting picketing. But in the Tilco situation, At- ; be headed by Ivan C. Rand, re-|torney-General Arthur Wishart jtired justice of the Supreme! initiated contempt - of - court | Court of Canada, a recognized| charges and 26 men were found | authority in labor legislation. Mr. Justice Rand is 82, was| the originator of the Rand for- mula, which requires all em- ployees to pay union dues but} makes actual membership in| the union voluntary. Mr. Robarts said in a state- ment he was ordering a com- mission so the government will be able to review procedures for dealing with labor disputes un- guilty and sentenced to terms ranging up to three months, The conviction and sentences have been appealed. '. Both labor and management representatives met with Mr. Robarts and expressed their. views on labor law. Labor said injunctions should be abolished but senior management repre sentatives who met' with the premier wouldn't say publically resolved after the usual pro-|What their position was. cesses of negotiation, concilia-| tion and arbitration. | EXAMINE INJUNCTIONS | "In addition, a complete ex- amination will be made of the use of the injunction in labor disputes and of the various le-| gal procedures employed in ob-} taining injunctions from the} courts."" | There had been attacks in the legislature on the impartiality of the judiciary in labor matters and Mr. Robarts had told re- porters it would be difficult to choose a commissioner accep- table to both labor and manage- ment. Mr. Justice Rand's terms of reference as set by the govern- wind visit' to five states and Canada. (AP Wirephoto) :|New York Friday, Johnson \pledged to "take the profit out jof poverty,' announced an in- rjtensified effort to end pollution when|in the Great Lakes and said the Johnson|the atmosphere. of accommoda- said it is the country's destiny tion and consent is changed to United States was standing up for freedom in Viet Nam. He large, cheering crowds along the way Tourist Shot: By Accident A Portland, Oregon woman accidently shot by her husband early yesterday--is in satisfactory condition at Oshawa General' Hospital to- day. Police say Winifred Book- er, 40,.was shot in the back. | The incident occurred about 2 am. in a New- | castle area motel '| husband 45, was | | | Venerable Booker, cleaning his semi- pistol and it ac- cidently discharged. | The bullet, police say, pen- etrated. one of Mr. Booker's hands before hitting his wife. He was treated at Oshawa reneral and discharged. A son and daughter were | there at the time of the mis- haps, which followed by about 10 hours their crossing of the Canada - U.S. border to start | a holiday tour of Ontario, | Bowmanville police say. y| Bomb Blast Jars Vienna VIENNA (Reuters)--A bomb exploded in the centre of Vi-| enna eanly today, but first re-| ports said there were no casual-| ties, The explosion, which shat-| tered hundreds of windows, oc- curred in front of the, Alitalia | Airline office opposite the state opera building. The bomb was linked with the revival of terrorism in South Tyrol, but it was the first such} jattack in the Austrian capital, | South Tyrol, called Alto Adige |by the Italians, was formerly | |part of the Austro-Hungarian empire but was ceded to Italy| after the First World War. The! bulk of its population speaks) German. Demands by German-speak-| ing extremists for autonomy for| Alio Adige or incorporation into} | Austria have been accompanied by frequent bomb explosions| apd outbreaks of violence. | | | | | } | | whn_ her | 'N ment will be to inquire into the {means of enforcement of the tights, duties, obligations -and liabilities of management and trade unions with relation to each other and to the public. Also it will investigate the use of strikes, cessations of work, lockouts, picketing, demonstra- tions and boycotts, whether law- ful or unlawful in labor disputes. WANT THEM ABOLISHED There was pressure from la- bor earlier in the year for an overhaul of provincial labor law and demands that the granting of ex parte (one party) injunc- tions in labor disputes be abol- ished. | | The situation was spotlighted} by labor rebellion at the grant- ling of injunctions in strikes ear- IVAN C, RAND 'Ford Announces Worker Lay-Offs At Qakville Plant OAKVILLE (CP)--Ford Mo-/ Hallsworth, vice-president of ine tor Co. of Canada Ltd. will bys Der sors inittad' Sian j My ioe | "The modifie initial calle {duce its number of hourly rated ,ack results from simplification jemployees by 254 when workers) in the plant paint system, elims are recalled for the startup of ination of certain sub-assembly production of 1967 model ve-|complexities and an over-all ree - |hicles. |duction the vehicle assembly- The company announced Fri-/line complexity." day that 5,571 workers will be| Ford is the second car maker jrecalled. Those not gettingj)to announce a reduction in its jcalled back have six months or|work force for 1967 models, jless service. General Motors of Canada | "We are scheduling substan-|Ltd. said recently it won't be tially increased production ofjrecalling about 2,600 employees cars and trucks between startup|at its Oshawa plant because of and Dec. 31," said Kenneth|a drop in sales. ° sistas otra nt ete NH NHTSA LE EWS HIGHLIGHTS Kenya Sprinter Sets World Record LONDON (Reuters) -- Kenya's Kipchoge Keine today clocked the fastest mile ever run in Britain -- three minutes, 53.4 seconds -- at the British Games here. Mayors Study Breakaway Chances SUDBURY (CP) -- A six man committee of North- ern Ontario mayors and reeves has been formed to study the feasibilify of the north forming the llth province in Canada. ] Erhard Says He Won't Be Pushed Out FRANKFURT (CP) -- West German Chancellor Lud- wig Erhard today advised a growing group of domestic critics that he will never resign his post voluntarily: But He made plain that he is considering a reshuffle of his cabinet. { | itt Ui OO ..In THE TIMES Today.. Local Hungarians Honor Saint--P, 9 Civie Reception Planned For Top Swimmer--P. 5 Green Gaels Sweep Series--P. 6 Ann Landers--10 Church--12 City News--9? Classified --16 to 19 Comics--14 Editorial--4 Financial--13 Obits--20 Sports--6, 7 Theatre--15 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Momen's--10, 11 i (MMi