Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and 'neighboring centres in. Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 9$ -- NO. 191 Weather Report Hot, hurnid weather forecast for today and Saturday, Low tonight 65; high 85. Authorized as Second Class Mall Pest Ottawa and for payment tomorrow EIGHTEEN PAGES dent Ian Sinclair, left, is shown as he told report- ers in Ottawa that he fully expects the rail-strikers to return to their jobs. W. J. REACTIONS WERE mix- ed Thursday when the bill outlawing the cross-Canada rail strike was 'passed in the Commons. CPR Presi- comply with the law and call the men back to work, Labor Minister Nicholson, right, relaxes in his Parlia- ment Hill room _ shortly Smith, center, president of the 22,000-member Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Work- ers, said his union would Men Still Picket Viet War PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)--France and Cambodia to- day called for evacuation of all foreign troops from Vietnamese territory. The call came in a joint declaration ending Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle's official visit to this Southeast Asian kingdom. The joint declaration signed by de Gaulle and Prince Noro- dom Sihanouk, Cambodian chief of state, in the royal palace, said France and Cambodia "sol- emnly call attention to the ex- treme gravity of the situation" in Southeast Asia. "Despite the differences which have divided and still di- vide the Vietnamese, it is es- sentially the foreign interven- tion which, in transforming a civil war into an international conflict, gave to the hostilities their present dimensions,"' the communique added. The two countries appealed after the House passed the final stage of the controver- sial bill, (CP Wirephotos) U.K. Will Oppose For Rhodesia Sanctions Calls Peking Sets | 'PEKING (Reuters)--The New In Communist Hierarchy for "rigorous observance" of the Geneva accords of 1954-- that is "the respect of Viet Nam's independence and sover- eignty and no interference in in- terior affairs." At the same time all acts of war must cease on Vietnamese Out Changes Troubles France, Cambodia PRESIDENT DE GAULLE territory, which implies that any foreign power which has in- troduced troops there first of all make the engagement to retire them in a set length of time and to cease all intervention," the communique said. The first version listed some} jin evidence -in most railway TORONTO (CP)--Some Ca- nadian Pacific Railway trains began moving in. central On- tario this morning, and most employees had returned to their jobs at both the CPR and the CNR, but picket lines were still communities. Seventy-five workers returned to their jobs at CPR facilities the Toronto area, and telecom- munications service was re- stored to normal. A company spokesman said the 75 were all that had been called back for a shift that started at midnight, One CPR train left for Osh- awa at 8 a.m, and another for London, Ont., at 7.10 am. A train was due in the suburban Agincourt yards at 11 a.m. Several employees had shown up at the CPR's downtown ex- press office but were unwilling to cross picket lines there, the spokesman said. A CNR spokesman said the company had no trains moving in the Toronto area. Some freight shed workers were back on the job, and some telecom- munication's services had been Locals Schedule Meetings Unions Silent On Rail Bill Union spokesmen indicated there will be no mass return to the job on either railroad in south-central Ontario until after union locals have held meet. ings, ' The meetings will be informed of the federal back-to-work leg- islation and the order by union leaders to return to work. Union spokesmen would not indicate whether they thought the gov- ernment order would be obeyed, "I know the men are not satis- fied, and I cannot say whether they will or will not go back yet," said a spokesman for the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- way, Transport and General ordinating headquarters at Tore onto. "Tf the majority decide to go back pressure will be brought to bear on the others," Picket lines were still in ef- fect at almost all Toronto area facilities of both companies at 9 a.m, Twenty men were picket« ing Union Station, Resistance to the back-to» work call, made by union lead ers after Parliament ord: i was reported in Montreal, W! sor, Ont., Belleville, Ont., Cal restored, gary and Vancouver, Votes Delay Return To Work Tae ESAS DT CR By HAROLD MORRISON jissue to prepare his position, the Ian Smith regime from Sal- China news agency Thursday|leaders as they were placed in LONDON (CP) -- Prime Min-|When the 10-day Commonwealth isbury. Most prominent among | viont withdrew its report on|open cars, and observers be- ister Wilson will oppose African/PTime ministers conference demands for mandatory United} Nations sanctions against Rho-| opens here Tuesday. A number of African countries the African demands is that) | Britain ask the UN to make the} |trade freeze against Rhodesia Wednesday's mass rally here jand issued a. new one which laid down more precisely the |lieved the second version was Hanoi, China Railway Link Officials Await Confirmation : desia, an aide said today. jhave threatened to quit the Wileoe as. ucca with advisers.on the Rhodesian/not take tougher action to oust National Guards Patrol Riot- Torn Negro Quarter DAYTON, Ohio (AP)--Aboutjwere being questioned by the 1,000 national guard troops pa-|police. trolled the city's sealed-off Ne-| At the peak of the disorders, gro section today where a de-| gangs roamed the city's west struction spree by roving bands|side, looting, stoning buses and of Negro youths resulted in 23)breaking store windows. injuries and 105 arrests. The disturb ances touched off Thursday: when a! 270,000 which President Johnson Negro, Lester Mitchell, 40, was|plans to include as a stopover shot from a car apparently Monday on his Labor Day week- driven by whites. The man died/end tour of the middle west. later in hospital. Two whites) 'The police made no estimate jof the amount of damage caused Ir Gi by the roving bands, an 1ves JACKSON, Mich, (AP)--Scat- fies tered incidents of violence hit . n Irp ANES writes against a carload of Ne- | groes, city officials insisted that NEW DELHI (AP)--Iran ON beeing nignts incidenis were given an assurance to India that} Sse it is taking steps for the return| However state police Cpl. Ber- of Canadian-built F-86 Sabre jets| "ard Schlenhuber said Thursday it had sent Pakistan for '"'re-|Might the trouble was "defin- | second straight night of trouble | here. Although the night's major pairs, servicing and modifica-|'tely racial" and called it a tions," Foreign Minister Swaran|| Wide open riot." He told re- Singh told Parliament today. He was answering questions|#™0ng gangs of whites and Ne- from all parts of the House, in-/ STS and that stores, restau- cluding his own governing Con-|'@"ts and police cruisers had gress Party, on the way nearly| een stoned. eonieiring|Commonweaith if Wilson does| compulsory. Zambia has stated it may de-|~ cide to leave the Commonwealth if Wilson does not produce a tougher front against the Smith regime at the Commonwealth talks. Sierre Leone says it may also leave. This threat of a shrinkage in the 23-country association has! roup running the cultural rev- left no material impact on the | Cution instead of deputy head. | Chairman Mao Tse-tung. jrade-in-arms," and that Mao! Tse = tung's wife, Chiang Cig,|, was "first deputy head" of the} rankino of Cammunict leadersievery detail ta the real rank-| ; who accompanied C o m m unist/ing. } The new account made clear/ond version gave the following that Defence Minister Lin Piaolas the top; five Jeaders after alone had the title 'close cont-/\wao Tse-tung and Lin Piao; remier Tao Chu; Party Gen- 'eral Secretary Ten Hsiao-ping; Ideology Specialist Kang Sheng; jissued to make clear that the jcar loads did not correspond in| Omitting Chen Po-ta, the sec-/ SAIGON (AP)--Six flights of U.S, air force jets cut the north- west _ rail line. between Hanoi and China in 10 places 'Thurs- day, a U.S, spokesman an- nounced, but the loss of two more planes pushed the toll of the air war against North Viet Premier Chow En-lai; Vice- It was the first outbreak of wereracial violence in this city of British administration. Nor has} The 'new version, whith. cor it caused much concern among|,ocnonds to the report in Thurs- the British public. Some Na-| day's newspapers, inserted a tional press commentators have | new second paragraph. suggested a decline may be 8) '3 jisted those present at the good thing since it would reduce] iy, giving the same order for [Seiten & foreiga aid COMMIT ihe top 15 leaders as appeared » saaaaes , lin the. official report on a rally 'PRODUCE OR ELSE' two weeks ago -- except that Others, such as the Labor-/Chen Po-ta, head of the group supporting New Statesman, sug-/ running the cultural revolution, gest that Wilson either produce|who was listed as fifth two ja new initiative on the Rhode-| weeks ago, was absent Wednes- sian crisis "'or he must resign! day. himself to his place in history! p UNG STILL 13TH as the prime minister who pre-|" phe new version put Vice- clash matched a carload of|#0MS have reduced Rhodesia's | porters there had been fighting 90 of these jets sold by Canada Three plate glass windows sided over the dissohition of the! premier Ho Lung 13th -- his |Commonwealth." lusual place in the hierarchy, | The aide said Wilson believes) although Wednesday he rode in jJackson Thursday night, the|that pursuit of the present pol-|the first car with Mao and Lin. | jicy should be continued. Re-| -- -------- jports have been circulated! showing that the voluntary sanc-| Danish Princess Plans Betrothal llast January. At that time he) jtold Commonwealth prime min-} COPENHAGEN (AP) -- The jisters at Lagos, Nigeria, the|usually well - informed Danish Smith men would be crushed|national news service reported within a matter of weeks rather|today that Princess Margrethe, than months. |26, heiress to the Danish throne, Later Wilson agreed to have|Plans to become engaged to a his officials open exploratory | French nobleman-diplomat, talks with Smith's civil servants}; The report from Ritzau, an to decide whether ground could|angency owned by the Danish be found to negotiate a crisis|press, came directly from high settlement. These months ° of/court sources. fruitless talks were suspended a} The Frenchman is Count jexports though they have not brought the Smith regime to its} Iknees as Wilson has predicted | jand Head of State Liu Shao- 'Firefighters 'Stage Strike ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP)--Fire-| men walked off their jobs at fire houses throughout St. Louis |today in a strike that was not jendorsed by union leaders. | A preliminary unofficial | |check indicated only that 75 of | |350 firemen worked on the day| shift were at work, A spokesman at the Central) Fire Alarm Office said the} "strike is 100 per cent effective | among the working members of |the department." Chris Burke, president of the firefighters Local 73, said: "F-am-definitely.opp te this action because of the inter-| jnational union rule against} |strikes, but we will have to go| jalong with what the majority) " Burke said the firemen were dissatisfied with a Civil Serv- jice Commission recommenda- tion for -cent pay raise} over two years. The proposal) Nam past the 350 mark. The air force announced that an F-104 Starfighter and an A-1E Skyraider were shot down by ground fire during raids Thursday, This brought to 351 the number of U.S, planes re- ported lost over North Viet Nam. Both pilots are missing. Viet Cong mines exploded in a village voting office and under a civilian bus today in an up- surge of five terrorist attacks close to Saigon. A South Viet- namese spokesman said 12 per- sons were killed and 10 were wounded in the attack on the bus. The rash of attacks, some clearly aimed at disrupting the Sept. 11 national elections, over- shadowed the ground war, which contnued in a lull. The air war over North Viet Nam also was slowed by bad weather, Torrential rains lim- ited U.S. pilots to 70 missions Severed By U.S. Bombers Thursday, about half the usual number, four bridges along the main supply route. The pilots also hit at oil and supply depots and transport fa- cilities in- the Hanoi and Hai- phong area and in North Viet Nam's southern panhandle, In the most daring of the ter- rorist attacks @ group of Viet Con@ walked !n™® a village vot- ing office at Tan Thoi, 30 miles northwest of Saigon, and asked for voting information. They left behind a mine which wounded three village councillors and five other civilians. 4 The bus was mined 24 miles northeast of Saigon. The 12 dead included eight South Vietna- |mese civilians and four militia- | men, Three other attacks were re- ported within an 18-mile radius of the capital. Guerrillas attacked a militia outpost 12 miles northwest of Saigon and another outpost a mile farther away, A South Viet- namese spokesman said several militiamen were killed and wounded in the attacks, In some of these cases the return to jobs was delayed CNR spokesman said. Re; services to Halifax, Que In the raids on the Red. River rail line to China, pilots re ported destroying or damaging pending a vote by local mem- Scismip. in S0me Sthers, iocal Officials said they were await- ing official word that they were to return, Parliament ts end- the-strike bill at 10:19 p.m, EDT Thursday night, Employees began returning to work shortly after midnight. The CPR reported that a suf- ficient number of men "'re- turned to work to enable us to Start up this morning." Both railways ran "pilot trains" in various parts of the country early today to make sure that all was in readiness to resume regular service. The pilot trains consisting of box- cars each were used to wear rust off the rails and provide a check as to whether signals were operating normally. A freight train which left Bridgewater, N.S., at 5:05 a.m. ADT may have been the first to move in Canada. The first in Prince Edward Island left Charlottetown at 9:0 a.m. carrying freight and CNR equipment for the western part of the province. A commuter train left Deux- Montagnes, Que. at 7:4 a.m, for the 25-mile trip into Mont- real. The first scheduled inter-city train from Montreal Police Interrogation Guides Rejected By Lawyers' Group WINNIPEG (CP)--The crim- inal justice section of the Ca- nadian Bar Association Thurs- day defeated a resolution which to West Germany and later by| were broken by rock throwers. West Germany to Iran found) At least one shot was heard by} their way to Pakistan. ja police sergeant. He said the moment India| No arrests were made Thurs- came to know in January of this/ day night. At least 35 persons developing it took up the issue| were afrested Wednesday night with Canada, West Germany| in fighting. and Iran. po mn He said Iran had been reiter- ating these jets had been sent) to Pakistan only for repairs and) 'ON EDGE OF DISASTER' week ago when the Smith gov-|Henri Marie Jean Andre de La- jernment announced legislation|borde de Monpezat, 32, third to increase its power to jail rest-|secretary of the French em- less Negroes. bassy in London. | The all-white Rhodesian gov-| The official announcement, jernment proclaimed its indepen-| Ritzau said, is not expected un- idence last Nov. 11. "some of these already have| been returned to Iran." } | MAKES SETTLEMENT He said West Germany has in-| formed India "it has worked out with the Iranian government) LONDON (CP)--The world is ineed for the Labor govern- procedures to ensure and verify|in danger of being plunged into| ment's wages-and-prices freeze. the return of these aircraft from|a depression similar to. that of Pakistan to Iran." the 1930s, union chiefs have He said amid cheers: "The,been told by Prime Minister House will no doubt learn with) Wilson. satisfaction that the Canadian| One report said Wilson, warn- government has expressed its|ing against devaluation of the disinclination to allow further| ound sterling, saw the world sales of Canadian-made aircraft|."'poised on the edge of disaster to Iran." jas bad as that of 1931," facing Singh reminded his question-|a global tieup of trade. He told ers that Canada, West Germany leaders of the 9,000,000-member and Iran were "sovereign na-/Trades Union Congress of his tions" who could not be or-|fears dered to do things at India's bid-| A Wilson aide said later to- ding and to India's liking. day the prime minister was -dis- He said India had succeeded/ cussing something that might! | Written reports now have been jcirculated to members of the |TUC's 'general council, now in | Blackpool preparing for next week's annual meeting of the giant congress, Wilson, at his own request, is scheduled to address congress delegates at Blackpool Monday in a do-or-die attempt to win support for his pay freeze, which many union leaders re- gard with deep suspicion. | AIMED AT DOUBTERS By putting Britain's economic itil next month at the earliest.|to $5,448 yearly. s at the time of the depression. to "some extent" in the repre-|happen if present trends con- plight in world terms, Wilson sentation of its case to the|tinued, rather than an immedi-| apparently hopes to overcome three governments 'although ate prospect the doubters and appeal to the time alone can show to what ex The prime minister made his statesmanship of the union tent their assurances will bejestimate in private talks with) chiefs. honored." ithe TUC in emphasizing thel In any case, the economist- HAROLD WILSON would establish salaries of from) $6,141 to $7,426 a year. guards for persons taken into He said the firemen wanted|custody by police. jincreases that would provide} The resolution called on po- | $6,770 to $7,463 a year. jlice to advise persons in cus- Firemen 'in St. Louis, a city|tody they need not answer ques- of 750,000, now earn from $5,035|tions or give statements until |they had consulted a lawyer. BACK TO THE 30s recommended additional safe- PM Warns Unions Of Depression premier toid the TUC economic|be worth less and would buy committee there' is a '"'terrible}less goods, so trade would in-| shortage'"' of money to finance/evitably slow down Interna- international trade. He had dis-| tional liquidity is scheduled to cussed this in Washington and|be among topics discussed next Paris with President Johnson|week at the Commonwealth and President de Gaulle, James/prime ministers conference in Callaghan, chancellor of the ex-} London. hequer, was continuing to dis-| : | cin it with other contin. The dire warnings apparently | ronvinced the TUC economic} The: world was on the edge} Convince . " of a disaster as bad as the 1930s| Chiefs of the need for following {the government line, especially) In 1931, incidentally, the Labor| When it was argued that unem-| government of Ramsay Mac-| Ployment in Britain might rise} Donald was replaced by a co- past 500,000 to as high as 2,000,-| alition comprising mostly servatives and Liberals It was in 1931, when there Wilson, in stressing the cur-| were 2,750,000 unemployed here,| Al Sarchuk director of prose- cutions for Manitoba, submitted the resolution but said he was not in favor of the restrictions it recommended. He said the motion would have been a guide to police on how far they could go in inter- rogating someone. Sidney Paikin of Hamilton said the section should not de- vote itself exclusively to the rights of the wrongdoer, "The rights of interrogation of suspects and accused is part and parcel of police duty and lawyers have no right to inter- fere with that--it is in effect an obstruction of police," he said. Mr. Paikin said the lawyer jcan do everything possible for his client in court. Bishops Blast Birth Control SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) A major Roman Catholic pro- |= nouncement today attacked cur- |= rent moral standards in Austt lia--hitting out at alcholic in-| dulgence, the abandonment of| Con.| 000 if there was a world slump.| chastity and the: sharp rise in|) the use of birth control pills. The statement, signed by the/: was scheduled to leave at ec wors expected te be resimelf later in the afternoon. 4 FP CPR did swe start ye 4 'on' commuter runs today. 'It planned .to open senger operations with a rad muter train from Montreal to Rigaud, Que., at 4:10 p.m, In- ter-city runs would be resumed City, Toronto and Some 24 trains were schéd- uled in and out of Toronto to- day, The first passenger train was expected to leave at 6:10 p.m. ' Freight services at most mas jor rail centres across Canada were expected to start up before noon, Although start-up operations were proceeding "as well as might be expected" there were some pockets of resistance among the non-operating em- ployees. 2 In Calgary CPR employees called back to work Thursday night were halted early today by pickets outside the CPR sta+ tion in. downtown Calgary. A railway spokesman said the pickets refused to return to work until they received word from union negotiators in Ot- tawa. Non-pickets declined to cross the picket lines, , Employees of both the CNR and the CPR also maintained 12:10-p.m,. today. for. Ottawa, a pickets in Windsor, Ont. CNR Workers Won TORONTO (CP) -- CPR NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 't Obey Parliament trains began operating in shortly afterwards, yor central Ontario today but CNR operations were still legislation passed Thursday to work, - state of emergency in the oc vocated an invasion of North Communist south. infiltration of men and paralyzed when workers refused to obey the federal night ordering them back Greeks Declare State Of Emergency ATHENS (AP) -- The Greek government declared a entral and western parts of the Peloponnesus peninsula today following an earthquake in which 20 persons were injured. North Viet Nam Invasion Advocated BA RIA, South Viet Nam (Reuters) -- Lt.-Gen. Nguyen, Van Thieu, South Viet Nam's head of state, today ad- Viet Nam in retaliation for supplies into the ttt ' Ann Loriders--10 City News--9 ..In THE TIMES Today.. Steelworkers Consider New Offer--P. 9 Ajex Home Sustains $12,000 Damage In Fire--P. S$ Oshewe Gele's Lumber Blank Belleville--P. 6 Obits--17 Sports--6, 7, 8 Classified --14 to 17 Theatre--12 rent shortage of liquidity, said|that Britain was driven off the|archbishop of Sydney, Norman | that if Britain is forced to de-| gold standard and the La b or) Cardinal Gilroy, and 36 bishops, value the pound sterling, other) party split, leading to formation) also called for a "watchful and countries will have to follow. |of a national government under|reasonable censorship" of books, | More generally would then|MacDonald. jmagaines and movies, Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial--19 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax News--S Women's--10, 11 UL