Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmans ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centses in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Very cold weather expected to continue. Some snowflur- ries anticipated. Low tonight 0, high Thursday 18, She Oshawa CZimes Authorized as Second Closs Mall Post Office Department Lake Terror O en fs a CHICAGO (AP)--Five mem-|to blow up the Howard L. : ; ; bers of two maritime unions|\Shaw, a Canadian grain z "i . 6 a KY IN AUSTRALIA [BJ Seeks $5 Billion More Leftists Oppose' For Defence During 1968 bitter labor dispute involving The ship was stranded in its | . ' FS WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi- Visit By Premier Canadian Great Lakes seamen. dock in Chicago's Calumet Har- i A federal grand jury charged) por for 151 days during 1963 be the five with a series of vio- when members of the Grain a lent acts, including the bomb-| Fleyators. Union refused to © ing of a Canadian freighter in cross picket lines to load its Chicago, and the bombing of cargo of grain. A dynamite railway facilities in Maumee,!/pomb knocked a hole in the Toledo and Ashtabula, Ohio. ship's hull Sept. 7, 1963. It Three of the five were sailed, still empty, 14 days dent Johnson said Tuesday next year's defence budget will top $73,000,000.000--an increase of about $5,000,000,000 over the cur- CANBERRA (CP) -- With had oye EU mini skirted demonstrators Johnson, meeting with report chanting "'one - two - three, go ers in his office, also said that home, Ky," ; South Vietnams military outlays in the current premier arrived in Australia's fiscal year, which ends June 30 capital today andd faced a press : , conference of tough and at times hostile questioners. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and charged with the illegal inter- jater .State trans i yna- ae ausporrauon Of dan The indictment resulted from will be increased by $9,400,000,- 000 under a supplemental his wife arrived in Canberra for a nine-day visit to Australia and mite. ; pees Four of those indicted are @ three-year investigation by agents of the Federal Bureau propriations request he will soon send to Congress New Zealand during which members of the opposition Ta- members of the Seafarers In- per Rees ternational Union. They are Jo- of Investigation. seph Tanner, 48, Dearborn The refusal of dock workers Heights, Mich., former vice- to load the 450-foot grain car- president of the Seafarers Tier was seen as a sympathy Great Lakes district; Lawrence move for the seafarers union, which was involved in a dis- The president previously had said the spending impact of the supplemental request in the cur- jrent year would range be- bor party have pledged to stage tween $9,000,000,000 and $10,- demonstrations against the war 100,000,000. : and his visit | Fielding every question at the ; press conference with smiling | - | urbanity J , | Rice, 38, Trenton, Mich.; Alvin was | Cupp, 34, La Follette, Tenn; Pute with its owners, Upper Lakes Ltd. of Toronto, over : | Johnson summoned reporters E ae ss to his office to brief them on : e U ; . Ky: ' TC isho T es bs : = + e=Insisted--that---his--visit--was ee not to bolster his regime but . ; to thank the people of Aus- New Abortion Law VOL. 96 -- NO. 14 Bsc per Week Home Belivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1967 THIRTY-SIX PAGES ap. ston, Tex. The fifth, Jack Pearl, 36, Cherry Hill, N.J., is a former business agent of the Marine Engineers Beneficial Union, the company switched to crews The defendants were specifi- affiliated with the Canadian cally charged with conspiracy! Maritime Union. Members of the seafarers un- ion had formerly manned Up- per Lakes vessels but in 1962 j|down the budget deficit by post poning,; deferring or~ stretching jout programs authorized by Congress. He said he hopes to pare actual spending in the cur jrent- year by $3,000,000,000 by f holding up outlays for a broad | range of projects involving an! and Walter Chipmen, 32, Hou- 5 manning of the ship. administration efforts to hold tralia for their sacrifices in PRESIDENT JOHNSON behalf of his country . cuts road spending --Denied that Adolf Hitler was his hero, that he had never LONDON (AP)--Dr. Michael Ramsey, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has called for le- galizing abortion in Britain in certain cases. would prove beyond the moth- er's capacity. | Dr. Ramsey drew the line at! this point in an address to bishi- | | fought for the Vichy regime in France--"I was only 12 years old'--or that he had) ever taken part in the Alger- jan war for France. | » » » reception hostile eventual total of $5,300,000,000, [Planning @ variety of programs jaimed at least partly at min- CUT RDAD PROGRAM jimizing the economic impact Johnson, .who had just con-|Should the war in Vietnam end ferred with budget director|abruptly. ops and clergy of the Anglican Church. | The House of Commons last July passed by 223 votes to 29 WILL VISIT U.S Be ht Boheme girs Charles L. Schultze, said he also| He said he wants to plan for ee itunad Ti haan summit conference 1a ober, lis considering postponing an ad-\providing future jobs "so we --Rea firmed his intention to and Ky said then he would like | ditional $400,000,000 of highway|won't have to do it overnight." visit the United States after to thank the people of Australia eee fe ce vata announced: he will He said Tuesday abortion should be allowed where there is risk to the life or mental or physical health of the mother, where there is risk of the birth of a deformed or defective child or of conception after on second reading an. abortion bill to liberalize existing law. | The bill goes into committee | for detailed discussion today, before coming to the House rape, or where bearing a child floor for final third reading. Mother Took Fertility Drug Bears Quintuplets, Four Die DUESSELDORF (Reuters) One boy quintuplet born Tues-| hormone Injections last summer day to a West German woman|to end her infertility. struggled for life here tonight) The babies weighed between after his three brothers and one two and three pounds each. The, {Wolfgang Januschek, received sister died. 'death of the first boy was the) The quints were born tw0 result of heart weakness and ee ee Ae grS circulatory complications. ne boy died a .m. to- ; i ; day. Two other babies died later, Reber ge sey eg -- in the morning and the fourth Bi Boa artery . 1965, after being given fertility died about 4 p.m. drug treatment, All the New Rosemarie Januschek, 29, Zealand babies survived but wife of 32 - year - old engineer|/only one of the Swedish 2 ORES ~ |mother's lived. U K Lib ] | Dr. Johnnes Bokelmann, who) jattended the Januschek births, s . 1 era Sis Tuesday night he considers the survival chances slight. |. The babies, born two months ect Cd prematurely, were seriously un- derweight and had _ breathing and circulation difficulties. All are in an incubator. But they all were built nor- mally and the mother's condi- tion was excellent, he said. The Januschek couple, who knew of the coming arrivals from x-ray photographs, have no other children. The only previous quintuplet! births in Germany took place in Munich in May, 1965. They all died. Two sets of quintuplets were born last year--one in East London, South Africa, and the other in Pittsburgh, Pa. Medical experts estimate that one set of quints is born in 54,- '000,000 births. LONDON (Reuters) -- Jer- emy Thorpe, 37, a left - wing Liberal and long -sstanding sup- porter of African advancement, | was elected leader of Britain's minority Liberal party today in place of Jo Grimond. Grimond -- resigned Tuesday after 10 years as leader of the middle-of-the-road party. Thorpe was elected unani- mously by the 12 Liberal MPs of the 630-seat House of Com- mons when his two rivals step- ped down after the first ballot. They were Emlyn Hooson, 41, a right - wing Liberal, and Eric) Lubbock, £7, the party's avia- tion spokesman. jernment's 4 ONTARIO COUNTY. CENTENNIAL WARDEN Charles Healy, reeve of Mara Township, is given a kiss of congratulation by his 12-year-old daughter, Diane, after he was elected Warden of Ontario County. The new warden defeated Reeve George Brooks of Whitby, and Reeve Ross Murison of Pickering Village in the vot- ing held at County Coun- cil's inaugural mecting yes- terday held at the County Buildings in Whitby. --Oshawa Times Photo Chinese Power Fight Opponents Deadlock /| TOKYO (AP)--China's feud-} ing Communist leaders ap- peared deadlock in their power struggle today with each unwilling to compromise or to force a showdown. A week after Mao Tse-tung issued a virtual ultimatum to the followers of President. Liu} Shao-chi, there was every indi- cation it has been ignored and Minimum Wage Hike Foreseen TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and Mail says an increase in {Ontario's minimum wage of $1 an hour will be considered by the cabinet as part of the gov- legislative program | at the opening session Jan. 25. The newspaper says changes in the hours-of-work provisions, which set a maximum work week of 48 hours, are also ex-| pected in any overhaul of labor | legislation. The federal labor standards code sets a minimum wage of $1.25 an hour for all industries under federal jurisdiction. them higher wages and better working conditions, But the dis- that Mao's boast of support from the armed forces' had not budged his opponents. Mao's New China news agency referred in one dispatch to "'the bastions in which counter revo- lutionary revisionism has en- trenched itself" and refrained from proclaiming final victory over what he called the "'latest counter attack'" by Mao's op- ponents, The Peking correspondent of the Japanese Newspaper Yo- miuri reported that the up- heaval on the mainland seemed to have 'passed its peal" and that tension subsiding in Shang- hai, Nanking, Peking. and other cities. He credited the changed at- holding on to their jobs. It was doubtful that such a situation could continue long.| Shanghai, a city of 8,000,000, is} the commercial hub of China. Industrial and commercial un- rest there could poison the} country's business life and com-| pel Mao's faction to force a} showdown there. So far it has not been able to do so or has not wanted to. President Liu has been under attack in Red Guard wall post- in party cells for at least six mosphere to Mao's personal as- months. That he and his follow- sumption of leadership. ers have resisted the attacks for| But the available.evidence.so_ long, and in a Communist) pointed out a pause only. In Shanghai, where Mao's. of- ficial news outlets admitted anti-Mao strikes and sabotage had occurred, Liu's followers presumably were clinging to the municipal party apparatus. Official organs for the last week charged that Shanghai party leaders had turned work- ers against Mao by promising One of the current targets of Red Guard posters is Marshal Chu Teh, the venerated 80-year- old "father" of the Chinese Red Army. The Japanese Kyodo news agency said he was attacked for the third day in a row, with a poster charging he had sought to undermine Mao for almost 40 years. SECT BLAMES RC CHURCH HEADED BY RIVAL POPE Police Hunt For Hidden Children ST. JOVITE, Que. (CP)--The Police found 16 of community leader of a break- away Roman Catholic sect, court judge sought after a social welfare signed 66 children Father warrants In another interview Tuesday, Jean Marie du Sacre Coeur, a senior priest of the Last week he served two days, and previously he served two days and four days for re- the Constituent Assembly fin- and New Zealand personally for |jiey that constitution their help to Vietnam. ishes writing a for South Vietnam. eration Front participating in| . ps Air police with German shep-|000,000 of road money. --Said he has no objection £0 herd watch -dogs guarded the i the Viet _Cong's National Lib-\}ase's fenceline as Ky departed|the administration already is'foreseen develop." for government house to meet - neat ae wt AS a sae projects, He had announced ear. | there would be al|send his new budget to Congress stretch out in spending $1,100,-\Jan. 24 and will submit his an- nual economic report Jan. 26 Johnson also disclosed that|"unless we have something un- patches did not say these lead-| Prime crs had been replaced, The im-|told Ky as the premier and his|personally lead demonstration plication was that they were|Wwife stepped from their plane.jagainst Ky. General } day emerged from a closed! He also noted that only New ers for almost two months and |° state, testifies to their strength. | whose pope thinks he's the real one, said Tuesday that 50 chil- dren he admits to be hiding from provincial welfare author- ities are "happy and secure." Father Jean de la Trinite, Quebec head of les Apotres de Amour infini--the Apostles of the Infinite Love--said reports that the children have been hidden in shacks and are suf- fering from hunger and cold are untrue. A force of provincial police- men moved into the area Tues- day to hunt for the children, who have apparently disap- peared from the sect's monas- tery 20 miles from here and 50 miles northwest of Montreal. The force is led by Sgt. Ray- mond Bellemare, who says he believes the children are still in the immediate area of the mon- astery. last week following evidence at a court hearing alleging that the children were in danger be- cause the monastery premises were unhealthy. SAYS THEY'RE IN HOMES Father Jean de la_ Trinite said in an interview Tuesday that the missing children are in private homes. He had just returned from two days of visits to the chil- dren and all were in good condi- tion. "They think it's a great ad- venture. A kind of hide-and- seek. "It's their parents who are doing the real suffering. They don't now what's going to hap- pen to their children and their greatest fear is that they will be found and turned over to the welfare." sect, said he believes the influ- ence of the Roman Catholic Church is to blame for the pres- ent situation. "We are the victims of reli- gious persecution,' he said. "There is no possible reason for anyone to want to take the children out of our care, es- pecially since the parents have asked us to care for them and have not complained to us. "We do not recognize the right or authority of the QPP or social welfare court in this matter' and we will not reveal the whereabouts of the chil- dren." WILLING TO GO Father Jean has said he will go to jail before revealing the children's location. He has al- ready done so on three occa- sions. care fusing to divulge the informa- tion to a social weifare court judge. He said in an earlier inter- view: "The conditions for the chil- dren at the monastery are quite adequate. Because we still are building school. facilities there temporary problems that mean children have to go fur- ther for toilet needs. "But our teachers do have diplomas and there is no teach- ing of children by amateurs." The group has its own pope, Michel Collin, a former Roman Catholic priest who founded the sect in 'France in 1952. He calls himself Clement XV. Collin says he was told in a vision he would succeed Pope John XXIII. He regards Pope Paul VI as a usurper. negotiations to end the Viet-\the 'governor - general, Lord namese war "'so long as they| casey, are part of the Hanoi delega- < tion." USED POLICE DOGS | About 70 ie unionists 4 Special police and guard dogs students turned out to protest/aiso patrolled the airport at the Ky's visit with placards de-inorth coast city of Darwin, nouncing him as a fascist, @ where Ky's plane landed briefly. killer and "baby burner. "T believe the Australian gov- ASSAIL 'KILLER' lernment and people. will "Waterside workers say keep/after us," Ky said during the}Communist War killer Ky out" read a_typical/Stopover. ji placard waved by the demon-| Leaders of both the Aus- | ¢ strators. Along with the demonstrators, sition a few thousand curious turned sharply up along the motorcade route. unnecessary "It is good to see you again Arthur Calwell Minister Harold Holt|bor party chief, Labor parties have | criticized Ky's visit as|¥ and Australian said he would|S Trading Stamp Legislation Hinted At Queen's Park TORONTO (CP) -- oe ee that you don't need the Arthur Wishart Tues-|stamps." in. lc Fi : \si meeting at Queen's Park with|Brunswick, Ontario and Quebec! representatives of the Consum-|among Canadian provinces al-| ° hinted at possible legislationjother provinces have "blanket | concerning trading stamps. prohibition in general against) ¢ At a news conference follow-\the, trading stamps." |w ing presentation of a brief by|__ The brief, presented by Mrs.) provincial branch representa-|K. E. MacIntosh of Kitchener, | that promotional tives, Mr. Wishart said the pidge : Due aie ; " rery strong|Vices such as trading stamps} brief sakes Bs ery ame 'add to the cost of food without} returning an equivalent Sh M t to the purchaser. | arp ee S$ The brief said there are only three ways of financing promo-| tional devices -- through price reductions to the 'producer, ab- OTTAWA (CP)--Firance Min-|or added cost to the consumer. | ister Sharp met with 10 execu-) ]~ quotes farm sources as| tives of general insurance com-|saying that their incomes have | panies today to discuss neW/fajien behind other sectors of safeguards for protection of Pol-|the economy and it quotes re- The meeting grows out of the!prices are pared as greatly as collapse of North Americanjis economically feasible, leav-| General Insurance Co., which\ing only the consumer to bear} Mr. Sharp has blamed on|the cost. | "theft." c ana | He was expected to sound out} value | Underwriters sorption of cost by the retailer | icy holders. \tailers as insisting that their the underwriters on a number| of measures that Ottawa could take on a joint basis with the) ---- For Guards | der fire Tuesday -- man who SAIGON (AP) --U.S. Army|;ey roles in the current "cul-| jthe central coast today for ajtor of the main Communist | A spokesman for the U.S. Istjtrance to the newspaper's of- |disappearance of Michele Ray,|of the "hourgeois reactionary} , | New Target | s ao | oman Missing PEKING (Reuters)--The Red only last week was named as | helicopters and Vietnamese | ty ja] revolution." | |French woman correspondent | newspaper People's Daily. 1 Air Cavalry Division said the}fices, described him as a po-| a 26-year-old blonde former|line" -- the name given by sup- | Guards' latest target came un- In Cong A n on Tea a member of two bodies playing ground troops searched along, He is Tang Ping-chu, new edi- reported missing Tuesday. Posters put up near the en- searchers. found no clues to the litical intriguer and a supporter) model who had ben in South|porters of Mao Tse-tung to the 'Vietnam about four months as a'policies of those said to be op- j free-lance photographer. |posing the party chairman. i { tralian and New Zealand Oppo-|Miles_ northeast of Saigon. unwanted. | centidary La.{helicopter said he saw the huge| __. |zone which the Viet Cong is re-|they |ported to use for base camps 'and infiltration routes. r's Association of Canada and|low the stamps and that the| FIGHTING SCATTERED de-| Fire Bomb Rain On Jungle As Cong Hideouts Struck SAIGON (AP)--B-52 bombers)from stepped-up air raids over look|rained tons of fire bombs on|/North Vietnam Tuesday. Zone D today; The headquarters said the n an attempt to burn Viet/Thai Nguyen railway yard 40 'ong hideouts in jungles 32/miles north of Hanoi was heav- ily damaged by 16 flights of U.S. military spokesman) F-105 Thunderchiefs which pum- yho observed the unusual in-|melled the sprawling yard for bomb raid from ajeight hours Pilots reported 10 large and tratoforts, flying out of sight at/several small secondary explo- s|30,000 feet, made 10 passes over|sions and said they left the area 30-square-mile area of the|covered by smoke. They said also destroyed some anti- aircraft gun positions around the vards. A few miles to the west of the} U.S. pilots flew 103 bombing zone, U.S. forces reported kill-| missions over North Vietnam g 20 more Viet Cong in Op-|Tuesday, the first time after eration Cedar Falls in the Tron | weeks of bad weather they ex- Triangle 20 to 30 miles north of|ceeded 100. Saigon. U.S. troops also uncov-| ered a grave with \bodies, a spokesman placed the One plane was lost, U.S. head- 19 enemy, quarters said. An air force }photo reconnaissance Phantom ommunist death toll at 495\jet did not return. It was the nce the operation began Jan.|third Phantom reconnaissance plane lost over the North in two days and the 460th U.S. plane reported lost in the North. Only small, scattered ground) Navy flyers reported damag- ghting was reported else-jing three surface-to-air-missile yhere, but U.S. headquarters|sites, one of them 28 miles nnounced successful results!south-southwest of Haiphong. ma. } EWS HIGHLIGHTS Marchand New Quebec Caucus Leader OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson announced today the appointment of Manpower Minister Jean Marchand as leader of the Quebec caucus of the Liberal party to rep!ace Privy Council President Guy Favreau who stepped down because of ill health. NATO Official Cites Dangers In Pact ROME (AP) -- Manlio Brosio 'of Italy, secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, warned today against any European security pact that would exclude Canada and the United States. . . Sukamo Irked by Suggestion He Quit JAKARTA (Reuters) President Sukarno expressed anger today at a suggestion by Foreign Minister Adam Malik that he step down as president of Indonesia. ..In THE TIMES Today.. Healy Elected County Warden For 1967----P. 17 Yacht Club Membership Mushrooming -- P. 5. Obits----33 City News--17 Sports--10, 11, 12 Classified----30 to 33 -15 Comics--35 WwW r--2 Editorial--4 , Ajax--5, 6, 7 "7 Financial--29 Women's--18, 19, 20, 28 Theatre