CES 69.00 IAL, set . lf Cart ir construction, ded, 12" disc ckets. "15.98 PHONE 725-7373 cooking uten- lean -- so con- meals. 1014" luge aluminum m cover. Probe PHONE 725-7373 q ntil 9 p.m.) Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in © Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 166 10c Single € SSe Per Week Home "Delivered She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1967 Weather Report Considerable sunshine ex- pected with occasional cloudy periods. Low tonight, 60; high Thursday, 80. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and fer payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES 'DUCHESS OF KENT VISITS BROTHER IN UXBRIDGE. The Duke and Duchess of and niece Willa. Kent. are spending the week at the Uxbridge home are shown with nephews Jonathan, left, and Harry, of the latter's brother, John Arthington Worsley, dur- ing a visit to Canada. They --Oshawa Times" Photo Newark Buries Dead, ii Kong Police Search For Arms "ences oO eI Reporter ark Negroes bury the first of their riot dead today while was among 37 persons indicted) Tuesday on charges from New-| ark's riot. He was released on| $25,000 bond on charges of car- Cooper Jr. urged calm upon them. In Paterson, north of Newark, a few rocks and bot- tles were thrown and firemen | Bombers Blast | Rail Yards Near H SAIGON (AP)--U.S. bombers | flew more heavy raids Tuesday |against North Vietnam, striking, jat four major rail yards north of Hanoi and blasting a missile |site inside a soccer | |midway between Hanoi and | Haiphong. | Pilots claimed their rockets | land 750-pound bombs blew up three of the Soviet-made sur- face-to-air missiles and their cer stadium. | U.S, pilots flew 133 missions} =z-about 400 individual strike} sorties--over the North Tuesday | and the raids cost one U.S plane, the American command| reported. | An air force F-4 Phantom jet. | 1612th U.S. combat plane re-| ported lost over the North, The| two flyers were rescued by heli-| copter. | Hanoi's official news agency anol northwest of. the centre of Haip- hong. Pilots reported their bombs left smoke billowing up to 7,000 feet. For the second straight day, stadium|F - 105 Thunderchiefs pounded} the Kep rail yard 38 miles north- east of Hanoi within a mile of the MiG airbase at Kep. Other Thunderchief pilots re- ported destroying or damaging 20 to 25 boxcars during heavy launchers in the Hai Duong soc-| raids on the Mo Trang rail yard) 39 miles north - northwest of Hanoi. Air Force bombers also raided the Phu Due rail yard 45 miles northeast of Hanoi and the Viet Tri yard 31 miles northwest of the North Vietnamese. capi- tal. Pilots reported cutting up jdowned by ground fire was the numerous sections of track and|__ inflicting heavy damage on ad- jacent support buildings. A South Korean spokesman announced that the 45,000-man Korean force has killed a. total STANFIELD MAY ENTER TORY LEADERSHIP RACE 'Announcement Expected On Return From Ottawa SYDNEY (CP) -- The Cape Breton Post says Premier Rob ert Stanfield of Nova Scotia has decided to be a candidate for the national leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party. In a front page story the newspaper says the official an- nouncement will come today. Mrs. Stanfield said Tuesday } night her husband's plane was delayed en route home from Ottawa. The Post says Mr. Stanfield made the decision following two weeks of ne- gotiaiions involving some of the party's most influential politi- cians. The premier returned to Hali- fax early this morning from Ot- tawa. The Post said he made the de- PILOT RESCUED Canadian Air Force Flight peieggece ae "commie jcision to run after two weeks of afar his techue, Hb. wae | strenuous negotiations involving fateh 16 sient: rank hig some of the Conservative party's | peas fe Leaieaih 'atic most influential members, i . | Otaiha at eee among them Opposition Leader| PREMIER STANFIELD Med ie jel en a eonoth Diefenbaker, Senator Grattan! «+--+ to make announcement O'Leary and Senator Wallace} McCutcheon, considered it In much the same It is known Mr. Stanfield also|way I have considered ski- | conferred with Dalton Camp, PC|jumping." |national president, and Premier; During the recent provincial |Duff Roblin of Manitoba, wholelection campaign, he repeated Algeria HONG KONG (Reuters) -- a|storage depot only 10 milesi2,397 wounded. Hong Kong court today sen-} iy wee claimed four American planes were shot down Tuesday. The ground war in South Viet- nam slackened with only small, scattered skirmishes reported. | of 9.511 Viet Cong and North} s pany eal ol gt eg To Decide nam in the fall of 1965. | On Tshomb He said 900 South Koreans | Navy bombers attacked an oil| have been killed in action and ALGIERS (Reuters)--Former|Davie Fulton, \also have been mentioned as|his statement that he expected | candidates., | Mr. Stanfield's. entry to remain in Nova Scotia. In would that election, the Conservatives raise the number of known con-| won a fourth consecutive term jtenders to eight. The others are|!n office, a record for the party George Hees, Donald Fleming, |!n this province. They captured | Alvin Hamilton |' : k and Michael Starr, all formerjing the Liberals only six. 40 of the 46 seats at stake, leav- other New Jersey cities fought ) rying two revolvers. Congolese premier Moise} early flickers of racial trouble. Plain- tield authorities hunted a cache of stolen arms, Newark's night was quiet after nearly a week of bloody battles. A few shots Tuesday night punctured the peace which came to Plainfield after a white policeman had been killed by a Negro gang. In New Brunswick, six miles from Plainfield, 100 Negroes marched to City Hall where Mayor Patricia Sheehan and chased false alarms. In Jersey City and Elizabeth all was normal in areas where sporadic violence burst Monday. were scheduled for three of the 23 Nergoes shot down during sprays of gunfire from Thurs- day through Sunday. The fun- eral of a white fire captain slain In_ Newark, funerals by a sniper also is being held. A white policeman was buried Tuesday. PLAYWRITE INDICTED Negro Councilman Aldrage Negro playwrite Leroi Jones Sporadic Racial Violence Breaks Out In Other Areas By THE CANADIAN PRESS Cairo, Il. --. Violence broke out again in this small Illinois town and Governor Otto Ker- ner ordered national guards- men to put down the outbreak. Sporadic sniping and some hurl- ing of firebombs was reported by police Tuesday night. An all- Negro housing development was cordoned off by troops. West Baton Rouge, La.--The | Queen Mother | Rests At Sea SHEDIAC, N.B. (CP)--Queen Mother Elizabeth is spending a restful day at sea today cruis- ing towards St. John's, Nfld., aboard the royal yacht Britan- nia. She will arrive there Thurs- day at 9 am. NDT 'or the charged under state anti-terror-| The third attack was made on final three days of her 13-day centennial. tour of the Atlantic provinces. In St. John's, her itinerary in-| eludes a children's rally at St.|t0 incite a riot is expected to been uneasy since last Septem-| John's Memorial Stadium and a} trooping of the colors ceremony by the Royal Newfoundland Regiment at Peasantville, near St. John's Thursday, and a visit to Newfoundiland's Memorial University and a garden party at Government House Friday. The Queen Mother is sched- uled to leave St. John's on an RCAF Yukon aircraft Saturday at 9:50 a.m. NDT. for a direct flight home to London. Tuesday the royal yacht ar- rived at Summerside, P.E.I., carrying the Queen Mother on an overnight voyage from Char- 'ottetown. She left the vessel in heavy fog at 1 p.m. and drove to the Summerside raceway where she met civic officials, presented awards to boy scouts and girl guides, and watched a march past by the RCMP mu- sical ride troop. FLIES TO MONCTON The Queen Mother then boarded an RAF Andover air- craft for a flight to Moncton, N.B., in order to spend a sched- uled three hours there and in Shediac, a seaside resort town home of a Negro woman was the target of an explosion late Tuesday night. The blast dam- aged the lawn and front of the home of Viola Logan, a retired school principal and an active member of an all-Negro im- provement association. Erie, Pa. -- Racial disturb- ances again led to fires as they had last week. Two fires were set Tuesday night in the Negro section. A rag processing plant was destroyed with its owner estimating damage at $150,000. Greensboro, N.C. -- A white man was charged Tuesday with burning a cross in the yard of a Negro minister, Rev. Frank! Williams, who recently moved into. an all-white neighborhood. Arrested was J. R. McBride, a neighbor. Also' arrested was Clyde Webster, identified as a Ku Klux Klan leader. Both were ism laws and released on bond. _ Washington--A vote to make it a federal crime to cross state lines or use interstate facilities get overwhelming approval in the House of Representatives today but Senate passage is doubtful. Seventy indictments now have been returned for carrying con- cealed weapons and looting. Up to 700 cases are to go to the grand. jury. the Wanchai bar district las Prosecutor Louis Kaplowitz in| week. Plainfield set a noon deadline} Hsiao Ping protested durin; for return of 36 semi-automatic rifles reported stolen from a munitions factory Middlesex. Mayor George Het- field said the rifle crates were found in the riot area. | Negro volunteers continued to |tour the trouble zone urging calm. Milt Campbell, a 1958 mapped" and beat him, claims. charged with taking part in an unlawful assembly and_ with having been part of an intimi- dating assembly July 11. He | Olympic champion from Plain-|was sentenced to two years on field, flew back to walk thejeach charge to run concur- streets talking peace. Campbell | rently. \now lives in Toronto. | Meanwhile, police backed by | The most serious incident in|Gurkha troops today raided 'Plainfield was firing at a car|buildings in the San Po Kong {by rifleman manning. a check-/district, scene of some of the |point. The car contained ajrecent riots and demonstrations | white couple, who were cut|in the British colony. slightly by glass splintered by ARREST FOUND-INS bullets, Police charged them ; " with curfew violation, saying | Police said they found masses their car sped away from ajof Communist literature, sharp- Gomboand to halt. x ened pipes, first aid armbands ea ah a sak : jand rubber goggles in one of io buildings. Ten men and two N th K women were taken into custody. or orea | Police later evicted the China |Products Co., which sells main- Vi | t B d land goods, from a store in a 10la es Or OF \neighboring district for display- SEOUL (AP)--At least twol gwar tie eet day North Korean and a South Kor-|_,4_, "48 the seventh day of ean were killed early today in|i4S aimed at cleaning terror- three North Korean attacks gs rage tg 4 h across the armistice line, the b beh ted | ihe cate ai South Korean army reported. REL en eet aoe ee Four South Koreans were wounded, the army said. » Two of the attacks were inate CALGARY GUARD on a South Korean infantry di- 'vision on the west-central front SENT TO JAIL 'about 40 miles north of Seoul. , CALGARY (CP) -- Bruce Chapman, 24, of Calgary; Tuesday was sentenced to "two weeks at the piace where you are employed" by Magistrate Frank Quig- ley after pleading guilty to driving while disqualified. Chapman was a guard at Spy Hill jail. another South Korean unit on) |the central front about 60 miles |northeast of Seoul. | The Korean armistice line has ber due to what the UN com-| |mand rates as '"sharply in-| jcreased" North Korean hostile) actions. ' charges resulting from a clash) between a mob and police in| China's official New China news agency to two years in jail on} | t the trial that police he By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|reconvenes Thursday after ul in nearby/Judge Derek Cons rejected his/of Algeria and President Abdel Premier Houari Boumedienne Rahman Aref of Iraq, the latest The correspondent wasjArab pilgrims to Moscow, have apparently failed to win Soviet backing for new military action soon against Israel. A communique issued in Mos- cow after Boumedienne and) Aref flew back to Cairo Tues-} day said they exchanged opin- ,ions with Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev and Premier Alexei Kosygin on how to bring! jabout. an Israeli withdrawal \from Arab land seized in the June war. But the absence of | lany claim of agreement strongly suggested the jand Soviets disagreed on ie do it. The most militant Arab voices | were represented by Boumedi-! enne, who has not accepted the UN ceasefire and who has been urging Palestinian Arabs to} wage guerrilla warfare against! Israel, Aref is considered a ;}moderate. ABANDONING DEMAND? The Russians sent a letter) |Tuesday to the UN Security | Council president charging Is- rael with creating a situation in the Suez Canal area "'that could develop into a wider military | conflict." | The letter, which followed an Israeli claim that 'right to patrol the canal by boat, was considered an indica- tion that the Soviets were aban-| doning their attempt to get a resolution demanding Israeli} | withdrawal through the emer-| jgency session of the UN Gen- eral Assemby. The assembly, which was) jcalled by Russia, has frustrated | Russian hopes for a condemna- tion of Israel as the aggressor 'in the June war. The assembly it has the t |M three-day recess, In the letter to Council Presi- dent Endalkachew Makonnen of Ethiopia, Soviet Foreign Minis- ter Andrei Gromyko charged Is- rael with bombing Egyptian towns and inhabitants in the Suez Canal area. He also said continued occupation of Arab land in Egypt, Jordan and Syria violated UN principles and in- fringed on Arab territorial sov- ereignty. The Israelis announced they | |were returning Government House in Jerusalem to the|Benabdallah made a vi United Nations. The building, on|Plea for a public hearing. It ja hill just south of Jerusalem, |might be the "last occasion for], Arabs | had been the headquarters of|M. Tshombe to express himself! NOW| the UN Truce Supervisory Or-|in public." ganization since the 1948-49 Arab-Israeli war. Top Arabs Resume Summit CAIRO (Reuters)--Top lead- ers of four Arab countries today resumed talks on Soviet prom- ises to support their campaign wipe out Israeli military gains made in last month's war. Algerian Premier Houari Bou- medienne and Iraqi President Abdel Rahman Aref, who re- turned from a flying trip to oscow Tuesday night, met with Egyptian President Nas- ser and Sudanese Premier Mo-; hammed Ahmed Mahgoub into the early hours today. The four conferred again later, Cairo radio reported. WHOOPDEDOO STARTS TOMORROW RAFFLE GOLD BRICK Edmonton Re-Lives Days Klondike a|Sion to hear ar jdia, ordered the press and pub-| he would only consider it 'in an| dow - breaking rampage early |emergency."" | 17 miles away. EDMONTON (CP)--With all the fancy store - bought duds, beards in-every shape and color and the old - style store fronts, tourists soon realize some- thing's up. All the ballyhoo is part of Edmonton's Klondike Days celebration which commemor- ates the city's pioneer days. The nine - day whoopdedoo starts Thursday and runs until July 29. Businesses, merchants, hotels and the tourist association have joined forces to give Edmon- tonians and visitors the swell- est, old - fashioned - est time of their lives. Tailors in town have been \ featuring period clothing on a sale or rental basis. Gold and silver brocade vests, high-collar shirts, arm garters, stovepipe pants, spats and long coats are in vogue. Hundreds of thousands of dol- lars in prizes will be given away, the biggest of which is a $50,000 gold brick being raffled at the exhibition. More than 500,000 people are expected to attend the Klondike Days exhibition. A record of 337,431 was set in 1966, but that party lasted only six days. The exhibition association an- nounced Tuesday that Prime Minister Pearson and his wife would be here today to attend the opening ceremonies. They will attend several re- ceptions and Mr. Pearson will ride in the parade for a short distance before returning to the official reviewing stand for the rest of the 75-minute show. Parade committee chairman Tomn.y Fox say the parade should draw 200,000 persons. Along the 23-block parade route through downtown Edmonton. A promenade the following Sunday is expected to draw 125,- 000 participants, most of them in Klondike garb. Just before the promenade comes the Re- gatta which will be held on the North Saskatchewan River. A crowd of 75,000 is expected to line the river banks to watch this. The $50,000 gold brick will be given away on the last day, as will a $40,000 completely-fur- nished home, an airplane, a car and 2,050 silver dollars. Service clubs and youth or- ganizations will play host fo thousands at sidewalk cafe breakfasts and luncheons; and most of the nightspots have made special provisions for en- tertainment which follows the Klondike Days theme The Edmonton Centennial Agricultural Show will be the largest: since its beginning with more than $93,- 000 in prize money, Exhibition Tshombe today appeared before Chinas afeai New Cvoa rows! Aral Leaders Left Moscow 2 nes Lacking Full Soviet Suppor hear whether he will be extra- 'dited to The Congo where he faces a death sentence for trea- json. j Conservative cabinet ministers, Speculation mounted |Senator McCutcheon and Johnjthis year when Mr. Stanfield |McLean, a Brockville, Ont.,/talked with Premier Roblin dur- | businessman. jing a visit to Winnipeg. This The 53-year-old Nova Scotia|time he denied they discussed |premier has repeatedly denied his entry in the leadership race. The court went into closed ses-| he had any intention of entering I politics. His most recent it s tradition request by the Congo|comment was after his resound- N R t government of President Joseph|ing victory in the May 30 Nova } 10 Mobutu. |geria since a chartered plane he| was flying in was hijacked over} the Mediterranean and landed! near here 18 days ago Scotia election. At that time he Tshombe has been held in Al-/said: "T have been elected gored n yac of the province. That's all I wish to say." -a. ay|, NYACK, N.Y. (AP) -- About Last November he said: "I/199 sheriff's deputies and po- A little more than five min-| have no interest at all in federal|jicemen from neighboring Hud- utes after the court went into/politics and no intention of en-/son Valley towns and villages session, its president, Ould Aou-|tering federal politics." He said) put down a rock-throwing, win- lic out for security reasons, WANTS OPEN HEARING Defence lawyer Abdessamad| vigorous The lawyer said Tshombe should be given the chance to explain that he did not murder | Patrice Lumumba, first premier of The Congo after it gained in-| j dependence from Belgium in 1960. Lumumba was killed in 1961.) A captive of the centreal Congo- lese government, headed at the| time by President Joseph Kasa-| vuba, he was sent to secession-| ist Katanga, then ruled by} |Tshombe, to be held in protec-} |tive custody. | Tshombe looked well today when he was excorted into the court by two plainclothes guards. Buckled Boat Still Afloat | | PUGWASH, N.S. (CP)--The |6,000 - ton lake freighter New) |York News remains upright at} \its moorings in the harbor here} \despite a submerged misdec- j\tion. The 359 - foot ship had} loaded about 5,000 tons of salt| early Tuesday when it buckled without warning. The bow and stern of the ves- sel, owned by Quebec and On- tario Transporting Co. of Thor- old, Ont., remained afloat al- though its midsection was be-) neath the water. } George Corbin, marine super-| intendent of the Ontario firm, | which is a subsidiary of On-! tario Paper Co., arrived late Tuesday to review the situation. salvage officials from Founda- rived determine what could be done with the freighter. jhere Monday to load 6,000 tons jof salt for Montreal. Capt. |George Moffatt of Toronto and | the 20-n.an crew were forced to | = jscurry to safety, many dressed thing to stay here in Nova Scotia." T : : 'today by about 50 young Ne- Still later he said, "'if some-| groes, like an emergency de-| The youths tore through part velops and you are asked to do|of the village's business dis- your part I suppose you do it.|/trict, breaking windows in But other than something like| shops, homes, schools and autos hat happening, my intention is)before the officers brought the situation under control, police said. No looting or serious injur- jes were reported. Asked about. the possibility in February, 1965, he said, "I've NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Plane Crashes In U.S., 73 Aboard HENDERSONVILLE, NC (AP) -- A Piedmont Air lines jet crashed in rugged mountain country near here today shortly after taking off fron. the Hendersonville air- port. First reports said the Boeing 727 airliner collided in flight with a smaller aircraft. The small plane went down in flames, The airliner was reported to have had 73 persons aboard. Calgary Girl's Condition Poor CALGARY (CP) -- Chelley Lynn Stanway, the 15-year old Calgary girl who recently underwent treatment for bone cancer at a New York hospital, is back in hospital here. Her father, Ken Stanway, said Tuesday Chelley's condition is 'not very good." Chelley returned from New York a month ago. It had been hoped she had built up enough strength to resist the disease, which destroys blood- producing bone marrow. Open Switch Causes Crash TORONTO (CP) -- An electrical breakdown has, been blamed for a head-on crash between two streetcars at downtown Cnurch and Queen streets during the rush- hour Tuesday, Twenty-seven persons were taken to three hospitals but were later released. Injuries were mainly bumps, bruises and scratches. A Toronto Transit Commis- sion spokesman said a track switch permitting westbound cars to make a ieft turn did not close after a car made the Earlier in the day a crew of |= tion Marine Ltd. in Halifax ar- |? to assess damages and |< The New York News arrived |= turn. nmnetsnrrsense ne i Ann Landers--14 Ajax News--5 City News--13 Classified --23, 24, 25 Comics--27 Editorial--4 Financial--22 only in night clothes when the |= ship cracked at 3:30 a.m, | @m em aaa MMEAUENMTAEN ENN .. In THE TIMES Today . \3 Duke and Duchess Of Kent Visit Uxbridge Relatives -- P. 13 = Oil Tanker Truck Turns Over On Freewoy -- P. 5 3 Gole Lumber Blanks Ajax Merchants -- P. 8 ut mai A Obituaries--25 Pickering News--5 Television--27 Theatres--21 Weather--2 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 18, 14 -- yom