iS ass id puts his name on w it had better be of his reputation an personally in- the EATON Tru- ears his name, | Sporting Goods Level , July 26th) | & 12:30 pm nsure a one ated lamine s iron forg: and-blasted shafts. Pre- 66.00 124.00 35°) %. 78" uality navy 19.95 NE 725-7373 [TON'S igs th. VOL. 26--NO. Home Newspa per Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Onte ario and Durham Counties, 172 10e §) 55¢ Per Wi hy Copy eek Home Delivered Weather Report Scattered showers and thun- dershowers expected this eve- ning, tomorrow. Low tonight 65; high Thursday 80, Che Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1967 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for poyment of Postage in Cash THIRTY-TWO PAGES DEGAULLE GOES HOME, REBUKED BY PEARSON | PM PUTS IT ON LINE Ottawa Visit Dropped OTTAWA (CP)--Text of the Statement by Prime Minister and, as such, they are unac- ceptable to the Canadian Canada has always had a special relationship with , ada "are matters for the Cana- PARIS (AP)--French news- papers expressed shock and|"The remarks of Gen. de Gaullejobjective: to astonishment today at President de Gaulle's support for Quebec|brought forth a Canadian gov-|their autonomy so their struggle| nearly Salm: ernment riposte which one could! will be associated with that of separatists. A sampling of editorial opin-|have expected. Can one be sur-;Paris against It is clear that;hegemony': . Combat--left of centre: "'What|from the time he arrived onjde Gaulle set off will leave its|sons shot and wounded in Sagi- ion: he said to the Canadians can| lead one to think that he could prised? . DE GAULLE TRAVELLING, BUT NOT TO OTTAWA e+. In Subway, On Montreal Tour As De Gaulle Statements Le Figaro -- Conservative: )of the republic has a precis€/cecsion singing the Ave Maria since his arrival in Canada . French-Canadian soil, Gen. de fallout most everywhere in the!naw, Mich., and another three this outbreak' of violence." Gaulle gave his declarations a) world. say anything to anyone any-|character and a_ tone which place. It's alarming." Les Echos -- finanecia|}:|chief of state v "France is inciting the French|and allied country should have jj¢ mixing into affairs which 'are not our own... . Canadians to 'free' themselves) from British 'protection'. . . .| Are we dreaming? .. . Gen. de} Gaulle wants to destroy this old experiment of multi-national co-|position? . dian federation, with its faults) but also advantages." | went beyond by far what @ extremely unpleasant to see a| police confronted Negro youths ti.6 peace also prevailed after|trying to reason with an angry nesday. isiting a friendly | president of the French Repub- amid intermittent rifle fire. Bog ss 5 Paris Jour -- Independent: "What reasons caused Gen. de Gauile to take such an extreme Papers In Britain Condem De Gaulle Separatist Views. By JOHN LeBLANC LONDON (CP) -- While the British government trod softly around the prickly issue, Brit- ain's national newspapers today loosed a near-unanimous flood of condemnation upon French! President de Gaulle for his flir-| tation with Quebec separatism. | Editorial writers pulled out a drawerful of adjectives--rude, ruckeless, ill-advised, astound- in, alarming--to describe his espousal of the "'Free Quebec" cry in a Montreal speech Mon- day. Cartoonists lampooned the general as a modern-day Wil- iam of Normandy, the Con- queror; as a transatlantic French revolutionary and as a belated rescuer of the defeated Montcalm. A Daily Sketch writer ex- horted Prime Minister Wilson to encourage Prime Minister Pear- son to "send this meddlesome old man packing." CANADA'S GONCERN Wilson, in the Commons, told a questioner that events in Can- dian government and not for wie?" Likewise, the official foreign spokesman deadpanned a "no comment" when asked at his press briefing whether the Brit- ish government now would strengthen the Channel Islands, off the French coast. The press lambasted the French chief of government in one of the fiercest concentra- tions of criticism upon the head of a friendly nation unleashed here in a long time. A theme of the strictures in that Gaullist anglophobia has burst out again, tangled up with such elements as pride of eral's long - standing fixation over American 'domination.' Some writers consider he was taking a backhander at the United States. Others suggest that the in- firmities of age are catching up with the 76-year-old de Gaulle. OUTRAGEOUS BEHAVIOR its editorial "A sad perform- ance," but it adds: "His behavior in Canada is more than the privileged eccen- tricity of a grand old man. 'Interference' Swiss Press GENEVA (AP) -- Switzer- land's French - language press has attacked President de Gaulle's statements in Quebec and wonders if he would dare the same approach to Switzer- land. Switzerland is largely a Ger- man-speaking country with a French minority, including a small band of fanatical separa- tists. The most bitterly-worded at- tack comes from political com- mentator Jan Gaud in the inde- pendent Feuille Davis de Laus- anne who says: "Indisputably, Gen. de Gaulle is interfering. in matters which have nothing io do with him... . "Constantly struggling to maintain their fragile unity, the Canadians, whether English- or French - speaking, have every right to be outraged by words which are nothing less than an invitation to insurrection in Que- French ancestry and the gen- bec, |Pearson Tuesday night on re- marks made by French Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle Monday: I am sure that Canadians in all parts of our country | were pleased when the presi- dent of France received such | a warm welcome in Quebec. people and its government. The people of Canada are free. Every province of Can- ada is free, Canadians do not need to be liberated. Indeed, many thousands of Canadians gave their lives in two world wars in the liberation of France, the motherland of so many of her citizens. We at- tach the greatest importance fo our friendship with the French people. It has been, and remains, the strong purpose of the gov- ernment of Canada to foster Action OTTAWA (CP) -- President de Gaulle of France today can- celled the balance of his centen- nial state visit to Canada, 15 Unprecedented Public ceremonies were to in drafied in two emergency cab- hours after he was publicly re buked by Prime Minister Pear son for espousing the separatist cause in. Quebec The general will fly home later today from Montreal in- stead of coming to the federal capital for an official welcome by Mr. Pearson and a round of state functions The announcement was made by the French embassy in a message to the cabinet, re- ceived while it was in regular session. What one external af- fairs official described as an "operational decision'? was al- ready being put into effect, can- celling functions here for Gen.! de Gaulle Prime Minister Pearson, who ssued a statement late Tuesday However, certain state- ments by the president tend | to encourage the small min- ority of our. population whose =| aim is to destroy Canada; France and other European countries, Canada will remain united and will reject any effort to destroy her unity. that friendship. I hope that my discussions later this week with Gen. de Gaulle will dem- onstrate that this purpose is one which he shares. # Race Tempest Boils @ In Fresh Outbreaks By BOB MONROE | RIOTS AT-A-GLANCE Associated Press Staff Writer { The U.S. midsummer night y ty | mare of street violence con branding the French president's : 5 sf > libre" --th tinued today with fresh out- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' of looting but Soitaa said it wae aS a Pigs 3 breaks occurring as rapidly as other disturbances were put down, The presence of federal! troops did not prevent new riot- Detroit--A- third night of ter- ae gt tsi b i ror brought the city's riot death eveland -- Firepombs ex- toll 10 33 ploded along Hough Avenue, 0 Z 4 scene of riqting that took five ing in Detroit. Sazinaw, Mich.--At least eight jives last yéar. tie the killing, burning and persons were wounded in an Phoenix, Ariz, -- Sniper fire|" Het looting continued in Detroit, the outhreak of sniping in the City broke out in Negro section of WOULD REJOICE fifth largest city in the U.S.,!100 miles from Detroit, the city. The general said in Montreal the death toll jumped to 33 and) Grand Rapids, Mich.--Three, Havana--Black Power advo- Tuesday night, after Mr. Pear- property damage was | than $150,000,000. rattled through the night. \home were hit by sniper fire.|groes are organizing for Comparative calm returned to} New York--Relative calm pre-|fight to the death." Detroit with dawn, as dwindling vailed in Spanisty Harlem, Quebec -- as unacceptable. This term is a strong one in diplo- matic parlance, used when one) country rejects the views of an- French - language Quebecers Mich., Rochester, N.Y. i land nuns led a candlelight pro-|perienced a five-block outbreak! glewood, N.J. wi othe, Brunswick, en. de Gaulle was to encourage th€/inq for the first time in three . arrived on Parliament Hill for a demand nights the neighborhood was) Maryland Governor Spiro T.; In Saginaw, Mich., police said/formal welcome to Canada at Agnew expressed sorrow atjai least eight persons were shot/5:45 p.m. EDT today, after hav- "this senseless destruction pre-'and wounded during a siege of ing arrived in Quebec Sunday. _ cipitated by a professional agi-jsniper firing. Hundreds of Ne- He was to have left from Ot-} There were at least eight per- taigr whose inflammatory state-\groes roamed through the city,/tawa late Wednesday after din-! ments deliberately provoked!100 miles northwest of Detroit,/ner tonight at Government} after an abortive sit-in. House, a visit to Hull, talks and} Three Negroes were shot andjlunch with Mr, Pearson, and a French Canadians to the 'American POLICE WOUND 11 . . The bomb that in Grand Rapids. In the south- rig | There was an uneasy calm at is'western U.S., Phoenix, Aurore--Conseryative: "It Violence was also reported in'He spoke while proposing al clude a welcome on Parliament! inct sessions, Hill today, the place of a It was described by Opposi- Wreath at the National War tion Leader Diefenbaker as a Memorial Thursday later a weak response to an "inexcus visit to city hall in nearby Hull He arrived on the French cruiser Colbert at Quebec City Sunday, then drove to Montreal Monday along a 180-mile ablaze with the French tricolor In. Montreal, he compared scenes along the route to those of the liberation of France spoke of a "liberated" Quebec, and used the politically potent separatist slogan: "Long live free Quebec.'® route DIED FOR FRANCE The Pearson statement id stiffly that thousands of Cana- dians died in two world wars to liberate France, "Every province in Canada is free," it said. "Canadian need to be liberated." It added: "Canada will re- main united and will reject any effort to destroy her unity." -- do not Federal cabinet ministers sup- posed to meet Gen, de Gaulle! heads.'"" on his arrival at Expo 67 Tues- day were called back to Ottawa able intrusion in domestic af- fairs."' Mr. Diefenbaker had advo- cated a stern reprimand and said Gen. de Gaulle should be told to make no more public speeches while in Canada. ONE EXPO SPEECH He ended his single speech of the day with "vive le Canada, vive le Quebec." However the damage had been done, New Brunswick Premier Louis J, Robichaud said he would not attend a dinner for ( ren. de Gaulle because it might he interpreted as condoning the separatist movement. Editorials across Canada de- scribed the de Gaulle remarks as an insult, a deliberate af. front, deliberate interference in |Canadian affairs, a blunder, 'cheating mischief," "inflam. matory advice to young hot- an encouragement of subversion, dangerous, an abuse ,|of hospitality and an attempt to where the statement was | divide the country. MONTREAL je of Montreal's (CP) -- Presi- more|members of a volunteer group) cate Stokely Carmichael, attend- son's rebuke, that he would "re-| Calm De Gaulle Gu1fire)trying to keep troublemakers at\ing a conference, said U.S. Ne- joice profoundly" if his Cana-| "ajdian visit had been useful to) .Tours Montreal nd maunt Ver-jtoast.{o Quebec Premier John- New Ci at a dinner boycotted b. cai Pontiac federal cabinet 'ministers pret ier Robichaud of New Hams oe. Gaulle set out on a the president on his Mayor Jean Dra; were loel Tremblay, Quebec's Ry ig w th re fo by | versy-filled visit was being cut/100 news ayn cad pase short and that he was returning! raphers. eee: to France tonight without going to Ottawa. The 76-year-old president, who stepped ashore in Quebec City Sunday for the start of what was to have been a five-day visit appeared physically tired as h Entering the subway after the morning rush hour was over, the party boarded one of the sparkling blue and white trains for a short underground ride ta Place des Arts, a Montreal cul- {tural showpiece made up of Ariz.,/that city Tuesday night. Rela-/wounded in Grand Rapids while/French embassy reception Wed- set out for his tour of the city.|three different theatres, "Whatever one says. about the Along Cleveland's Hough Ave- . . This intervention| remarks of Gen. de Gaulle since|nye, where rioting took five existence which is the Cana-|into the internal affairs of a his arrival in Canada, the re-|lives a year a friendly and allied country iS ,ctions from all sides astonishing. . . . The president crisis within the Canadian Con-| girl and four persons shot to federation. prising that the French Cana-\caig) National dians i _ |area where three Greek-Cypriots On this theme, the mass-cir-| were found shot dead Tuesday culation Daily Mirror headlines | The president visited the Sir Wilfrid Pelletier Theatre, larg- est of three and told Francois Mercier, president of the core poration which administers the theatres, he was impressed with the spaciousness and modernism of the 3,000-seat theatre. interview were | Crowds were sparse and gen-| WASN'T SURPRISE erally undemonstrative as he The departure decision' came |started the tour with a drive to as no surprise in diplomatic|the hub of Montreal's spanking circles and confirmed earlier; new subway, fashioned after the unofficial reports.in Montreal,|Paris Metro with the help of after the president was told in| some engineers from France. van |hO uncertain terms Tuesday by| The president. still =""|Mr. Pearson to stop oe : nights of disturbances in Engle-'crowd. Police said they Chicago's west side was the .ooq N.J., Pontiac, Mich., and/hit by sniper fire. They were ks scene of sporadic looting but PO Rochester, N.Y. members of a volunteer group lice said they confined the out- Rochester Police Chief Wil-,trying to convince troublemak- break to a five - block area. liam M. Lombard credited step-jers to stay home. ped-up anti-riot training for his! There were 42 major. fires men as a key factor in putting during the second day of vio- go, a number of down the violence that took two/lence in the western Michi Hnunmanite -- Communist: ° gaye no making 'outward sign he was aware of In an under-|firebombs were thrown, lives there. city. | oka sdenes later, Mr. score. the aceidlusiesscob. thea latest to die in ' y undiplomatic remarks while in the controversy which has Mercier said the president had r pen Detroit were a_ four-year-old this country. swirled around his visit. It came | 0t mentioned plans to cut his visit short and return to France. He said the president seemed to be quite. sprightly, RECEIVES CHEERS Cheers and applause broke from a crowd of about 1,500 stu- dents and staff as the president arrived at the University of | Montreal, next stop on his city tour. They shouted "bravo" and vive de Gaulle." The crowd, mostly from tha 1,00-strong summer school en- rolment, lined the steps of the those accompanying! university. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS. Welland Bridge Undergoing Repair ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- A road bridge over the Welland Canal was knocked out of commission when it was struck by an Indian freighter, the Jalajaya, Tuesday. En- gincers said other tocal bridges would handle traffic -while repairs, which will take about five days, are completed. . . . Grain Carriers Lie Idle OWEN SOUND (CP) -- Four bulk carrier. vessels are | lying idle here and a fifth is expected to tie up after un- -| loading a cargo of grain Sunday. Spokesmen for shipping for export shipment is not being moved, resulting in a slowdown in Great Lakes shipping. - . It is not sur-'qeath in a motel room, police i guardsmen s are becoming more and/opened up with machine-guns NICOSIA (AP)--A forest fire raged out of control early today near the Turkish village of Y lia in western Cyprus, the s he . The cabinet was meeting to a head when he gave appar- ac ine- un 1re us. es when the news became public.|ent endorsation to the Quehee An external affairs depart-| separatist movement Monday ment official said it was impor-|nicht, shouting in an emotion- ipers In Detroit Rubbl m4 Detroit Board of Commerce pre- Snipers n I l e Sap petieng ie announced by! Quebec libre"--long. live - free ost of the rioting in =e ' Mee ene CIMenes Quebec, Fire Rages fh caliten atea could By DON McKEE quently sparked by the single! Officially, a spokesman. for leventually reach $1,000,000,000, | DETROIT (AP) -- National report of a small weapon or the the department said, the gov- USED AS SLOGAN ' cat the Te The slogan has been used by pas sday that th ar-| Streets with y d pang | Sou ver Sear t he small-arms fire today as they |street in one area and poured advised by Prime Minister,Canadian Confederation and es- jockeying for. political 'advant- battled elusive snipers on De-| bursts of .50-calibre machine-| Pearson that some of his re- tablish an independent state age Hotween Mayor Jerome troit's riot-torn west side. }gun bullets into the darkness for marks have tended to encourage| . Among g Mayor . ons as the city's third night of} Several blocks away a single) ada." and a Greek and Turk. killed) WARRANT FOR BROWN ~ 'racial terror ended |shot from a small-calibre rifle! "As such, they are unaccept- Sunday. In Cambridge, Md., a federal) 'Ten persons were killed by|halted another tank and within able to the Canadian people and A United Nations spokesman fugitive warrant was issued gunfire, some apparently by aec-| minutes 20 police cars, each its government." fired in the area today. No cas- of the Student Non-violent Co-| rose to 33. Fusillades- from a ilght. ma-\that Gen. de Gaulle's five-day ualties were reported. lordinating Committee, charged' Two city policemen and pos- | chine-gun, Tifles and shotguns visit be cancelled. UN troops were helping to with complicity in the riot in|sibly five guardsmen were|drew occasional shots, but again! In fact it expressed the hope fight the blaze. |that city Monday night. wounded in pitched battles fre-|the sniper or snipers got away. that the president will complete | between France and Canada. | Gen. de Gaulle was to arrive | here by train at 5:30 p.m. EDT) jand depart for Paris by air} : on some suspected sniper nests. tant that the decision to quit) filed speech from the steps of In C rus | And the president of the De-| guardsmen and' police raked| whine of a bullet. ernment is not in a position to | and rubble - strewn) A national guard tank rum- comment "at the moment. separatist organizations that Cavanagh and Governor George Dwindling rifle fire replaced|more than half an hour after! "the small minority" of separa- 5 "I 3 said the fire's cause was un-Tuesday for the arrest of H.| cident, as the toll of dead in two|carrying four men, pulled up at' The Pearson statement fell sae RSN et ae Sean Arora ee ae te his centennial tour and_ that DR. COTNAM TESTIFIES AFRAID TO TREAT PATIENTS | Thursday ht. more demonstrative. ... : The president of the Greater Canada was made by the gen-:|Montreal city hall: "Vive le ; ne saciati ae buildings ASSO! ; 6 > roit Police Association said in machine-gun and|bled over cars drawn across a! The 76-year-old visitor was|want Quebec to break from the Romney. the clatter of automatic weap-|scattered shots struck its side. | tists who would 'destroy Can- known but added that shots were Rap Brown, the militant head|days and three nights of strife | the scene. well short of angry demands} cordial relations will continue} TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's supervising coroner said Tues- day he has had complaints from the Ontario Medical Asso- ciation about the increasing number of inquests in the prov- ince and the resultant unfavore able publicity for doctors. Dr. H. B. Cotnam told the Parker royal commission that many doctors have told him that publicity from the inquests is making doctors increasingly afraid to treat patients and pa- tients more afraid to seek treat+ ment. He did not say what the OMA wanted him to do. Dr. Cotnam was cross-exam- ined by E. B. Joliffe, lawyer for Dr. Morton Shulman whose al- legations of government inter- ference in inquests prompted the royal commission inquiry. Dr. Cotnam admitted that he had written in the Ontario Med- ical Reviews of 1964 that the fear between doctors and pa- tients might be reduced by keeping the facts of some unu- sual deaths from the public, in the interest of doctor-patient re- lations, JURY SHOULD DECIDE Under further cross-examinas tion, Dr. Cotnam said that in several memos-he has sent in recent years to Ontario coro- ners he had directed that a coroner's jury, nol a coroner, should decide in unnatural deaths how the person died He admitted that a death in a Pembroke hospital in 1961 should have been. investigated by a coroner's jury. Dr. Cot- nam, then coroner in Renfrew County, said no inquest was held because he was satisfied about the cause of death. He testified that the late Dr. Smirle Lawson, the supervising coroner, advised against an in- quest in that case. Dr. Cotnam said he was not then aware that a 1961 change in the Coroner's Act gave each coroner the power to order an inquest without the authority of the supervising coroner. The death was that of three- year-old Barbara Moore, which Dr, Cotnam said resulted from the girl's stomach being "blown out" by oxygen being adminis- tered "too forcibly" after an op- eration for removal of tonsils end adenoids, Police Find Bullet Hole MONTREAL (CP)--Police to day were investigating a bullet hole found in the wall of a Montreal city hall office They said the bullet may have heen fired about the time that President de Gaulle of . France was speaking outside the city hall Monday night. "We are exploring every as- pect of the case," a spokesman }for the Montreal police depart- jment said "But there is absolutely noth- ing to indicate so far that the shot was fired during the gen- eral's speech," companies said grain | | | | Elevators here now hold about 2,000,000 bushels, half their capacity, when at this time last year they held only a few hundred thousand bushels. .. In THE TIMES Today .. GM-UAW Bargaining Sterts Next Week---P. 17 Ship Popular With Whitby Residents--P. 5 Leoming Fires No-Hit Shut-Out--P. 14 Ann Landers--18 Ajax News--5, 6 City. News---17 ified --26, 27, 28 cs--29 Pickering News--5S, 6 Sports--14, .15 Television--29 Theatres---22 Weather--2 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--18, 19, 20 Finor Obituories--24 an im ol iis il 5 - aoe]