Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 96-- NO. 101 10e Single ¢: 85e Per Week Home t The Oshawn Times elivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cash Weather Report Thunderstorms forecast. Mainly cloudy, windy and cooler Tuesday. Low tonight 48; high Tuesday 62. TWENTY PASE For St _ Key Leads Clouded or Girl - ie SUNNY SOUTHERN ALBERTA SHROUDED IN SNOW The southern Alberta town of Claresholm spent Sunday digging out from a spring snowstorm that dropped more than five feet of heavy snow on the area, stopping almost everything Crowds Jam Subway, | Attendance 1,500,000 | MONTREAL (CP) -- Attend- ance at Expo 67 during its first three days is officially estimated at about 1,500,000 and the fair's management is expressing ela- tion. Expo authorities said Sunday night that attendance Sunday had been 569,500 with some persons still reported on the site and not included in the figure as of midnight. Officials said that on Thurs- day night, 72,000 non-employees had visited the fairgrounds as possessors of special tickets al- lowing them in within several hours of that day's formal in-|figure for the 1964-65 world's! ' augural ceremonies. The general public, under the time span set down by interna- tional rules for the fair, was allowed in, beginning Friday. That day saw 407,500 persons come to the fair. Another 423,000 flowed in Sat- urday and then came the Sun- day crush. Robert Shaw, Expo's deputy commissioner-general, said 710,- 000 was the record for daily attendance at the 1958 world's) fair in Brussels. The highest daily attendance HELLO rcs EXPO! «+» 'Dolly' Carol Channing Arrives Ottawa Welcomes Selassie; Formal For All Except Dog OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment turned out its top people Sunday to greet Haile Selassie in a formal affair leavened by the pre-dinner barking of the Ethiopian emperor's pet dog. His Imperial Majesty--another title--was the first of more than 60 heads of foreign states to make a Centennial-Year visit to Canada. The 74-year-old African monarch got the protocol works, from. guard-of-honor at Canada's centennial flame in front of the Parliament buildings, to black- tie dinner. The slight and bearded ruler, en route to the Montreal world fair, was greeted by Prime Minister P e ars on, Governor- General Michener, External Af- fairs Minister Martin and State Secretary Judy LaMarsh at the parliamentary ceremony. Miss LaMarsh is in charge of centen- nial celebrations. The emperor, and his dog Lulu, began a Canadian visit in Victoria last Wednesday. Airport protocol was minimal Brawl! Quelled Near Peking TOKYO (Reuters) -- Reports from Red Guard wall posters in Peking said Chinese troops broke up a three-hour brawl be- tween thousands of Red Guards at Tientsin, 60: miles southeast of the capital. At least 220 Red Guards were injured--50 of them severely-- said the poster, which the Pe- king correspondent of the Japa- nese daily Asahi Shimbun said appeared Sunday, * in keeping with an arrangement worked out originally to reduce airport trips for Georges Vanier, the ailing governor-general who died March 5. CROWD APPALUDS A crowd of 2,000, under bril- liant sunshine on Parliament Hill, applauded as the emperor mounted a reviewing stand to take the salute from the guard of honor of the Second Battalion of the Canadian Guards. The RCAF band played the Ethio- pian national anthem. Mr. Michener in a brief mes- sage of welcome in both French and English, referred to the emperor as a man whose cour- age, wisdom and humanity are known throughout the world. 2 ery. \fair at New York was under- stood to be about 446,000. SUBWAY CROWDED | The crowds going to and from |the site of the fair on the St. in at least one Montreal subway station Sunday. A section of the station had to allow a drain-off of passen- gers and to avoid panic and) possible injuries. | Temperatures at the Expo site reached 60 degrees Sunday. This was the warmest since the fair opened. Both Saturday and Fri- day were marred by chilly breezes. The sun, however, had shone) :|consistently from clear skies since the fair was officially opened Thursday by Governor- General Roland Michener. Most of the fair-goers so far have seemed to be Montrealers. They lined up in droves at the stops stipulated for Expo buses, and poured through the turn- stiles in an orderly fashion. Fair-goers are expected to come pouring in from elsewhere in Quebec province, from other parts of Canada and from beyond Canada's borders as the spring goes on. BREAKDOWN REPAIRED A breakdown in apparatus at :|the Man and his Health pavilion was ended Sunday after a tech- nician flown in from Germany joined forces with local experts to repair a damaged lens and faulty synchornization machin- The equipment is used in dramatizing the accomplish- ments of modern medicine. The $2,000,000 high-rise ride called the Gyroton, a central feature of the amusement centre known as La Ronde,' remained out of action Sunday after first faltering into inactivity Friday. Officials said it may take three weeks for the huge opera- tion to reach perfection. 500 On Strike At Toronto Firm TORONTO (CP)--More than 500 workers at Canadian Johns- Manville Co. Ltd. went on strike today, with alleged excessive overtime a key issue in the dis- pute. Some employees have been working more than 100 hours' overtime a month, said a spokesman for the Chemical Workers International Union. The union also is trying to close the wage gap between its members and workers at the corporation's lowest-paid U.S. plant, a difference of 43 cents an hour. Lawrence River caused crushes| ' in southern Alberta, (See story Page 3) to be shut down for 17 minutes) | » GENERAL DIES Maj.-Gen. Howard Ken- nedy, 74, former chairman of the National Capital Commission and veteran of two world wars, died at his home in Ottawa Saturday. (CP Wirephoto) $2% Million In Gold Theft LONDON (AP)--Bandits over- powered the crew of a narmored car in London today and got away with gold bullion esti- mated to be worth £750,000 ($2,- 250,000), a Scotland Yard spokesman said. He said the gold in the May Day robbery was in 140 ingots. The armored vehicle was hi- jacked in the Islington district of north London. Police said the van's three- man crew were overpowered by the gang who then drove it away. Their vehicle was later found abandoned in Kentish town, about four miles away with the crew tied up in the back. The daring robbery was one of the biggest in Britain since the £2,500,000 ($7,500,000) Great Train Robbery in 1963. One member of the van's crew was taken to London's Middlesex Hospital with head and chest injuries. The other two were taken to Moorfields Eye Hospital in Lon- don. Police said the gang used ammonia in the attack and beat up one of the men. The crew was found trussed up after passers-by heard nois- es from inside the van. (CP Wirephoto) | -|police, ' :|mile area. The mass search will In Search F BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)--A mass search by 18,000 persons failed to turn up any trace of a missing 10-year-old girl Sunday, }but police are hopeful publica- ltion of a composite sketch of a lsuspected abductor will provide a new lead. The girl, Marianne Schuett of Inearby Kilbride, Ont. ,has been missing since last Thursday, |when she was seen getting into "a Jate model, foreignmade sta- *\tion wagon outside her school. The searchers, volunteers and covered a 400-square- be discontinued today, with only '|police combing the swampy Kil- bride area. The only trace of the missing girl uncovered so far was a blue running shoe, found on a-high- way north of Milton Friday and identified as belonging to the _|missing girl. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Schuett, have offered to sell their home to raise ransom for her safe return. |EXPERT DRAWS SKETCH Police had a provincial po- lice identification expert, with the help of three witnesses, draw a sketch which resembles the driver of the car'in which Marianne was last seen. The sketch was released Sun- day after Inspector J. William Lidstone of the criminal inves- tigation branch and Burlington Detective William i checked on a suspect who a | sembled it. Provincial police said they| have received tips from as far as 150 miles away from Kil-| bride, a 100-family community | 15 miles north of here. Search volunteers came from within a 40-mile radius of Kil- bride in school buses, taxis and cars. Salvation Army workers and girl guides prepared about 80,000 sandwiches and _ gallons of coffee and milk to feed the searchers. Rewards totalling $3,000 have been offered for the girl's safe return or any information about her whereabouts. The Burling- ton board of education is offer- ing $1,000; the Burlington po- lice commission $1,000; and the Hamilton Spectator $1,000. Detroiters Get Auto Pact Pay DETROIT CP - Three hun- dred auto workers here have been certified eligible for spe- cial pay cheques because their jobs have gone to Canada. The workers, employees \Eaton, Yale and Towne spring works, are the first Detroiters found eligible for the weekly payments under the automotive Products Trade Act of 1965 Those who have not found other jobs will receive the max- British Women Jailed In Athens ATHENS (AP)--The British embassy today reported the ar- rest of Betty Ambatielos, British wife of a former Greek sea- men's union official who was convicted of Communist activi- ties and spent 17 years in. jail. imum weekly amount of $73 for |52 weeks. Unemployment bene- jfits. will raise the total to $115 jweekly for the average worker in the auto industry. Workers also are eligible for United |States federal retraining pro- \grams, The spring works employees were jobless when the firm moved its leaf spring manufac- turing to Chatham. None of the workers followed their jobs to Smith| U.S. Marines Battle rategic Hill Three More MiGs Bagged In North Vietnam Attack SAIGON (AP) -- U.S. pilots!North Vietnam and a record 577 jshot down three more Commu- strikes over the South. nist MiGs over North Vietnam! The MiG kills brought to 48 today while just south of the the total number reported shot demilitarized zone U.S. marines down in the war, including four suffered and inflicted heavy ca-|in the last two days. The U.S sualties battling North Vietna-\command has announced the mese soldiers for a_ strategic|loss of 13 U.S. planes to MiGs. hill T : : : There was no announcement oe eon aan 13p | Whether any U.S. planes were § ; .¢ nc 90} o' were wounded as they fought eb ed eligi ob tile foot by foot Sunday up the|MODEL NOT KNOWN slopes of twin-peaked Hill 881.; U.S. Navy pilots were credited The marines have had a total|with bagging two of the MiGs of 86 men killed and 240|today. But whether they were wounded in the last week in the|the late-model 21s or the earlier, area. less manoeuvrable 17s was not The spokesman said the ma-|known. The specific area where rines killed 188 Communists they were shot down was not an- Elements of two marine bat- nounced either. os talions clung to their positions} In the third kill, a U.S. Air overnight and moved forward|Force Phanton drove a MiG-17 today in a new attempt to take |into the ground during a dog- the summit so they could use | fight between eight F-4C Phan- it as an outpost for checking |toms out of Da Nang air base North Vietnamese 'movements.|and eight MiGs about 20 miles There are reported to be 35,000!/southwest of Hanoi. North Vietnamese regulars in| The three kills made a total of and around the demliitarized|nine MiGs downed in the last zone. week. As the marines halted their| Despite four attacks on Mi@ advance late Sunday, tactical|bases in the last week--the first bombers and B-52s dumped tons|time they were attacked in the of explosives on the North Viet-/\ war--more and more of the namese positions. |Communist interceptors are be- The air war flared to a new|ing sent up to oppose the Ameri- POLICE released this composite drawing of a sus- pect sought in last Thurs- day's kidnapping of Mary Anne Schuett, 10, of Kil- bride near Burlington. (CP Wirephoto) Bonuses Ordered By Junta ATHENS (CP)--Greece's new|prices. Three butchers who military government ordered to-| broke eel rig ra at ae + o price 0 eir Haster lam ave day that all municipally owned been summoned for trial by land should be distributed court martial. among landless farmers and) 4 public works contractor in Aid For Landless Farmers -|Moscow's giant May Day pa-|ygin, and President Nikolai intensity with 133 missions over|can raiders. Chinese Stage Walkout |At Giant Moscow Parade MOSCOW (Reuters)--China's;sia's military might thundered representative and his interpre-|past were Chairman Leonid ter stalked angrily away from|Brezhnev, Premier Alexei Kos- rade today as Russia's new de-| Podgorny. fence minister, Marshal Andrei| Despite China's failure to join Grecho, hit out at the Chinese/in a common aid program in for not joining in a united Com-|Vietnam, Grecho said Russia munist aid program at Viet-|and other Communist nations am, |"'will continue to fight persist- It was the second time in six|ently to curb the warmongers months that the Chinese have|and render active and many- staged a walkout at a parade|sided assistance to the heroi¢ here. that all employers should pay Easter bonuses to workers with- out delay. The orders, issued by Brig. Stiliakos Patakos, interior min- ister and one of the three army strongmen in the cabinet, was the 'latest of a series of edicts calculated to promote popular- ity for the new regime. | The instruction to employers said the customary Easter Bo- nus of half a month's salary Salonica was jailed on charges of not paying the last Christ- mas and Easter bonuses to 14 laborers. Two owners of an Athens electric appliance fac- tory were arrested on charges of not paying wages to four em- ployers. In his first statement as head of the government installed after the military coup April 12, Constantine Kollias said he will seek a "just distribution of in- Hundreds of guests saw An Chih-yuan, the Chinese charge d'affaires, and his interpreter push through crowds on the dip- lomats stand in Red Square. The walkout today came as sured if China would join other Communist states in a common aid program there. The last Chinese walkout was Grecho said that Communist} victory in Vietnam would be as-| | Vibiramiens people." | He attacked the United States as the "main aggressive force" in the world and accused West Germany of seeking revenge for Germany's defeat in the Second World War, Workers throughout the East- ern Hemisphere and in parts of Latin America celebrated la- jbor's traditional day. Although Labor Day is celebrated in Sep- tember in Canada and the of} come." Meanwhile, King Constantine joined soldiers, sailors, airmen must be paid no matter what a company's financial straits may be. Normally, it is com- mon to postpone payment till;and policemen Sunday in the later in the year. |egg-cracking that. is traditional One publisher who protested on the Greek Orthodox Easter. he could not afford the bonus). Great cheers of "Constantine! has' been threatened with trial|\Constantine! Constantine!" by court martial. He is Ioannis|swelled as the king visited the Papageorgiou, publisher of the|military camp that played a newspaper Athenaiki. key role in the bloodless coup United States, American groups Nov. 7 when the late Marshal|held loyalty marches Saturday Rodion Malinovsky, Grecho's|in cities from Newport, Ore., to predecessor, criticized Peking) New York. policies. | In Saigon, students scuffled _Grecho today was making his) with police following a May Day first May Day speech from atop rally at the Saigon zoo. Police the huge red and black Lenin|moved in when some students mausoleum in Red Square. jand labor union members un- Standing with him as the|furled banners calling for an troops and heavy armor of Rus-|end to the war. : that suspended democratic rule. BUTERS BREAK RULE Another law now in effect for- bids shopkeepers to raise their Common Mart Bid Approved LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- ter Wilson's cabinet agreed Sun- day that Britain should try, again to join the European! Common Market, but it set con- ditions apparently to assure pro- tection of its trading interests. The conditions were kept sec- ret. They were part of a com- promise agreement reached at an eight-hour meeting at Chequ- ers, the prime minister's offi- {Ontario. cial country home. MINISTER SNOW - BOUND venture as WEDDING WHEN SNOW MELTS! Groom-To-Be Braves Blizzard, But... a could be held in the drift-felled NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Weather Waming For North Ontario TORONTO (CP -- The weather bureau today issued severe weather warnings for White River, Cochrane and western James Bay regions. Heavy thunderstorms with freezing rain and snow have caused extremely hazardous driving conditions over a large area north of Lake Superior. Conciliation Beard Fails TORONTO (CP) -- Dalton Bales, Ontario labor min- ister today announced that a three-man conciliation board has failed to resolve. contract disputes between 3,300 workers and three Hamilton plants of Canadian Westing- house Co. Ltd. The workers may legally strike at mid- night may 8. Search For Boy Ends Happily ST. THOMAS (CP) -- A one-day search by police and volunteers ended happily this morning when eight-year- old Dennis Hobden of St. Thomas was found asleep in a storage shed. The search for the boy started Sunday when his paretns reported him missing. |) connmnqmnitt nner arrange si i NEW DAYTON, Alta. (CP)-- Gerald Weber of Calgary won his own round with a vicious blizzard in an attempt to 'keep his wedding date Saturday. But he lost the next two rounds to a day - old baby boy and a snow-bound church minis- ter at 'Lethbridge, 30 miles northwest of here. The one-two decision postponed the wedding until three feet of snow has melted. Gerald, a 23-year-old aerial surveyor, fought southern Al- berta's worst spring blizzard on record. in a power toboggan to reach the home of his fiancee, { Judy Morrison, 23, at New Day- ton. He travelled the first 70 miles from Calgary to Vulcan, Alta., by truck. From there -- the northern edge of the storm's path--the trip took 20 hours to cover the remaining 85 miles, He arrived with his best man, his brother Ronald, on the back of the two-seat vehicle and was prepared to ferry .the wedding party to Lethbridge, two-by-two, for the ceremony. ACTED AS MIDWIFE But Weber's prospective mother-in-law had made her 4 3 first midwife, while he was en route, helning the wife of a hired hand on the Morrison ranch give birth to an eight - pound, eight - ounce boy. Mr. Weber's mother said in an interview Sunday in Cal- gary that she had received word of her son's arrival, and ad- ded: "They said they have been so busy, they haven't had time to think about the wedding." When the couple did have time, and telephoned the minis- ter who was to perform the ceremony, he told them there was "just no way" the wedding city of 37,000. The baby was born by can- dlelight at 6:30 a.m. Saturday to Mrs. William Heninger. The electricity had been off since 11 p.m. Friday, and with it went an electrically + oper- ated furnace and a water pump, DOCTOR CONSULTED A doctor was consulted at 3 a.m. Saturday, he promised to phone every hour but the tele- plione went out of service. He was unable to reach the home through the blizzard. It was not until after the birth that tele- phone service was restored. MISS INTERNATIONAL Mirta Teresita Massa, 19, a dark-haired model from Buenos. Aires, Argentina, was named Miss __Inter- national Beauty in Long Beach, Calif. She won a $10,000 first prize for her victory over 82 contestants from around the world. (AP Wirephoto) Ty .. In THE TIMES Today .. 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