he three-piece king. Full of easted jacket, , browns and ee-button jac- gh-bulk! veck er ach ter is just call for. eve, turtle- -but-warm- esting rub- front .'V"', 1 ribboned : better-to- n, we say. green, or 6 to 40. WEAR, T. 246 73 hion me an net ts tne yA ABamin Pyne rm . sree i . _-- : P OTTAWA (CP)--Despite an , soare yee ' nusually large increase' in no i by reed to Last. year's July rate was 3.1 296,000 teen-agers entered 'he Farm employment accounted gains ranging from 1.3 per cent Atlantic area 4.3, In June they British Columbia's rat obs, unemployment in Canada almost all of in. July but per cent. labor force and, after deducting for 76,000 of the new jobs that in the Prairie provinces to 5.1 had been the same, 4.6. : ' \ pe ased only slightly to 284,000 at ~ matel all "or the gain was 'The job picture in brief, with the normal withdrawals of mar- -- showed up between June and per cent in British Columbia. cag ' dropped to 4.2 per cent in July relies ee: parece atched by an equally unusual -- egtimates in thousands: ried women, swelled it by 266,- July while non-farm jobs grew fac Ontario's jobless rate was 31 -- from 4.7 the previous month. in iid-July from 292,000 in June increase in the labor force, trig slimates sands: ' , , ) : e Regional unemployment rates er cent. down f 35 dnd was 40,000 whose the July abor force, trig- July June July 000 to a record 8,125,000. Practice by 198,000, "a _ substantially per cent, down from 3.5 in Jun@ -- July of 1966 it was 3.7. i vel" lag ogee ise fered by a rush of high school 187 nae thie cally ali of them found work. larger increase than is custom- showed an unusual switch, with but above the 2.7 level' set ta Of the nat al ae | Bureau of Statistics and the ee Labor force & 195 7.859 1 ed The labor force in 'July was ary at this time of year." Quebec replacing the Atlantic -- July of last year. iit out of He tke Sour on " Pe " anol ore Aad 1,809 A 4 my o 7 ine 7 7 it T > 7 manpower department reported The unemployment rate Emplves Fat ee ee Ih BC Brovinves. 95 Me Aves with the The Prairie unemployed work for four months or less. todiy declined © 3.5 per cent of the Vesnevesel ne aay than an a eae sey _ it : ; a Goes Leoeeig of jobless, represented 1.7 per cent of There were 103,000 teen-agers watet emoly fo . i Jnemp! 2 2922 « year while employment rose by regions share he year- uebec had.4.6 per cent of its available workers, com e w va a mployment in the labor force from 37 in June. The report said an estimated 298,000 or four per cent. to-year rise in jobs with the labor force out of work, the 16 in June and 1.7 inet ag ad cane =e on ee i "mm 4 Home - Newspaper & Weather. Report Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- : ville, Ajax, Pickering -and Continuing warm. Thunder- neighboring centres in Ont- showers Eriiay aternedh, aro and Durem Counties we Cees Low tonight 65; high omorrow 85, VOL. 26--NO. 190 : Ie Single C : . Bic Par Wack Heine Balivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1967 Autliorized as Se Pepa ACA Tl Sela TWENTY-TWO PAGES { yment ge in Cos } B 5 WALK TO RESUME FRIDAY | 32 Inland Firms Target 'VIOLENCE ON INCREASE , Louisiana March Marks Time Of 5,400 In SIU's Ranks | | | NEW ORLEANS (AP)--The of the Seafarers' International | 4 ;Union began walking off ships lcivil rights march by Louisiana Negroes. beset by increasing in Halifax at 11 am. EDT violence, marked time today. today, even as negotiators met Pe Its leader A. Z. Young, said here in last.minute talks that Z they would do."a little replan- could stop the strike from fe \ning " spreading up the St. Lawrence z | The march will resume Fri- River and into Great Lakes day at Walker, where it was ports halted Wednesday shortly after A strike against 32 inland state police swung carbine shipping companies was set for butts and billy clubs to break | \noon, local times, by the 5,400 up an attack on the Negro col- member SIU. umn by some 75 whites. Both company and union rep- Meanwhile, Negro leader H. resentatives were pessimistic ° Rap Brown arrived in the state, about any hope for a settlement called Governor John J. before the deadline passed for McKeithen "a fourth-class {ports in Ontario and Quebec, j idiot,"" and said he would speak 'NO MORE MONEY' at the rally scheduled Sunday "We just don't have any more money to offer,'" the chief 7 negotiator for the shipping com- in Baton Rouge to mark the end of the 106-mile march from Bogalusa. | The attack Wednesdgy came at Satsuma, a little crossroads town on U.S, Highway 190 some 30 miles east of Baton Rouge. WHITES INJURED Several whites stumbled out of the fighting with head lacer- ations streaming blood. Fight |men were arrested and later released on $500 bonds. Four | men, one a state police officer 3 with a gashed cheek, received treatment for head wounds at © PAINT -IN GIRL, SIX, DISPLAYS ART TALENTS mcm * nies said. as mmed about 10° -m, An SIU spokesman said more han 70 of 181 lake bf} : < JUDGE RENE LIPPE is mediator in the Seafarers' would be tied up today by the |strike. Another 60 would lose/ International Union dispute pres crews by Friday. _ | with Canadian shipping The talks today were being) companies. jheld under Judge Rene Lippe, | jhead of the three-man trustee SIU {board concerned with maritime! lunion affairs. The talks were adjourned at midnight Wednesday. Mr . McLaughlin said Bale may continue beyond noon EDT Wednesday revealed that 97.8 per cent of the voting sea- men were in favor of striking and that 98-per cent of the the| Great Lakes membership had actually marked ballots. Last to vote were seafarers _-- ie DL Youngest competitor in sea cruise and here she has "Paint-In' was supposed to governor says the guard is cost+ | "1 we can't avert a strike,|on 31 ships in Port Arthur and the Oshawa city hall fence almost completed her task. terminate at 8 p.m., some | ing $2,500 daily--were with the the next best thing is to make it|Fort William, Ont., who voted "Paint-In" yesterday was The one-day event attract- entrants were still working |marching Negroes when the as short as possible," he said|96.1 per cent in favor of strik- six - year - old Margaret ed almost 80 amateur paint- on their project at mid- | whites attacked Wednesday. ie ; - 7. "e before today's resumption of ing Gomille of Division St. Her ers to the site df the city night The whites marched three a FER ROR St Fo e : negotiations Ports from Halifax to Fort version of happiness is a hall addition. Although the --Oshawa Times Photo abreast along the highway in a s Be 0 PS 8 | REPORT SOME PROGRESS William will be affected as sea- ee ee me -------- the opposite direction from the) NEGRO CIVIL RIGHTS ker, La. following a brief at- marchers who are enroute to | Judge Lippe said the 40-hour {avers leave their jobs in 181 TIMES OF LONDON SAYS: |Negroes. When the two groups) marchers are framed over a tack by whites. The trooper the state capitol at Baton |woek was the main issue divid.|C2'e's operated by 32 inland . jwere opposite each other, the) shotgun displayed by a Lou- is facing a group of whites Rouge to present a list of ling the parties. But he said shipping firms. jsudden charge came. Several! jsiana state trooper as the who are standing off the grievances to the governor "some progress" had been|..JU President Leonard Negroes were knocked down, demonstrators neared Wal- road watching the passing (AP Wirephoto) | made Werinesday night. McLaughlin said during an ear- l 00 GIs Desert earl a eee a aS : ee me so pee pee Tie ee "This is the first real direct lier break. in the negotiations ' Y back " ol haath gy turned " and serious negotiations|that "Canadian sailors are ack the white assault. | P ] R t F da | S between the parties since last/ going te fight for the 40-hour |---- eect es ries oO © e O ew l ] e March." week and the eight-hour day." Fr m West Euro e Bases 1c p r | Both union and company The original decision to call a O ; egroes Ooam . lsources said earlier they had strike vote was made on the | little hope for cancellation of heels of an announcement by | ly l Sla V lI igs At Shell | ake the strike as a result of the Labor Minister Nicholson that |last-minute talks, which were the shipping companies had expected to last until close to'been granted an additional 18- LONDON _ Reuters)--The|cent of wartime resistance,conflict in Vietnam" have had I S Times says U.S * servicemen! movements. much effect. n yracuse - os late a ene ; } prccags ay ales on ee Wiese i hettes ey In Amstergam last Lune, the SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)--| SHELL LAKE, Sask. (CP)--|remained optimistic that hun-|Prince Albert and 16 miles west the noon deadline. month delay before being can bases in Western Europe at) without U.S. Army co-opera- public SPrOsecuat ords red the Bands of Negro youths in auto-/Few clues were reported from dreds of inquiries, extending to of the Peterson farm. 4 final count of ballots at the; required to implement the 40- the rate of 1,000 a year. tion, but its investigations injPolic e to invesiigats _PresS mobiles roamed through widely|an intensified search by 50jnumerous police departments (ci pee : Montreal headquarters of thelhour week. , lreports thai Dutch youths were scattered sections of the city|police Wednesday into the slay-/elsewhere, would provide leads SENSELESS KILLING ae ir way is be Britain, France, Holland, West F Aine bales pica | , ; It says their way is being |helping American soldiers to Wednesday night and earlylings of seven children and their|to the shooting early Tuesday) Wednesday night operations , 7 " rer Germany and Sweden. indicated) ,--- ' " : uesd ; aR : Re Seca can by oe the number was not exaggerat- -- because of the Vietnam today, smashing windows and parents. of James Peterson, 47, his wife had been hampered by jack of techniques often are reminis-|€d. : looting stores. _ : Police at one point were sift-| Evelyn, 42, and seven of their, cycnect, a murder weapon ot NEWS HIGHLIGHTS aakonee eit -- ----| The paper refers to an offi- A Dutch television program Police moved in quickly,jing the soil around the family nine children. : Rn wae eiseanen4 cial statement by Gen. James claimed that at least 509 sol- a rrested 28 persons and|home. overturning rocks and Police said search operations a motive in what appeared to 3 x ae eR already deserte , declarea: the situation under!checking bar urr ding were being concentrated within be a pointless crime RCMP by + \H. Polk, commander-in-chief of|diers had already deserted with checking barns on surroun SIU Crews Leave Ships At Noon - |the U.S. Army in Europe and of the help of provos (beatniks) control. although incidents of farms. a 20-mile radius of Spiritwood, declined to comment on what the U.S. 7th Army, which and financial aid from a Quak- vandalism continued virtually An RCMP spokesmanaa town of 700, 83 miles west of four-year-old Phyllis was abje MONTREAL (CP) -- Crews on lake carriers operated denied that "organizations\er, two Trotskyites and several unabated for several hours. jto tell them, She was the oniy hy 32 shipping companies left their ships at noon today and in a strike that 1s expected to tie up about 82 per cent encouraging resistance to the|pacifist organizations. bg rong' re pied e 200 survivor of the slayings and at leas' ree 'other fires was staying with her unele and : 'es inland marit transportati were reported during the Damage Hits $ 000,000 Dic Maid Mca, Helmer Hen) Oe cnneas ee ee ee geton. Their home, 3% miles} a g 1 i nig Patrick Ahern, s from the Peterson farm, was RCMP D i V R t Ex- Gl In Viet Nam Fight "reals! 8 tn Floods At Fairbanks =!» el es ae Says U.K. Deserters' Haven reported injured. 5 has denied reports from Vancouver Wednesday that de- Oe ea FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)--| "It's much more than 1| Casualties tails of a triple murder there in 195§ have been sent here The brown flood waters of the|expected it to be,"'>said Creath| in connection with the mass slaying of the James Peter- 2 itai Chena River receded today, but) Tooley, western regional direc- son family. The Vancouver report said the details had BIRMINGHAM, Engla nd) Britain because they think they Houston Fires lat a pace so slow that the city's |tor of the president's office of Sh D heen sent to RCMP Inspector Brian Sawyer because the (AP)--A former U.S. soldier) are safe. 15.000 evacuees: were notiemergency planning, who} OW rop still unsolved Vancouver case bore similarities to the slay- claimed today many U.S. Army) Mepham said he had twice Follow Shot expected to begin returning to| toured the city of 30,000 by boat | ine of the Petersons. RCMP. §. Sgt. R. E. Sondergaard, deserters from Vietnam are been wounded in Vietnam, once : their damaged homes and busi-/ and helicopter Wednesday. SAIGON (AP)--U.S. combat Sone (aiken obiner 5 in the Peterson case said: 'There finding refuge in Britain. He! when a helicopter he was inj HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)--Fire- nesses before Saturday "You just don't expect to sce a casualties in the Vietnam war i sreanitely ia substance" in the report isays he is one of them. lwas shot down by the Viet)men fought a series of fires Qnly a tiny fraction of them! town inundated such as this." |last week dropped to their low- as eee ' ; |, British-born Gordon Mepham. |Cong. early today after the shooting | carried flood insurance, offi-, Governor Walter Hickel, call-|est number since last January, a |26, said here he fought for two) «1 giq not resent being called|0! 4 Negro by a white service) cials said. Damage was placed ing for Fairbanks to be desig-lreflecting a lull in major lyears in Vietnam with the 2nd up but I objected' strongly to| Station manager set off disturb-' at s900,000,000 nated a federal disaster area, ground fighting, the U.S, com THE TI ES T d = ' .In M oday.. | : <i eo ' : Battalion, 7th Cavalry. 'fighting in Vietnam," he said. | 2nces in 2 predominantly Negro" The bodies of four more vic-| said he thought Saturday would) mand announced today 5 "T was called up because I, %, ae . rea tims "were found Wednesday,\be the earliest time residents Q 29 rice . \lived in the United States for Pet aor rib T liked the "Police Chief Herman Short police "reported, bringing Alas-' could return to their nomen pe 748 on es wee Malton Strike Dolers Rueonasetes "70 79m 7 DIES AT 63 more than six months," he Cac 2 pusht wah Put 2 said the fires were set. Police! \ka's flood death total to seven, -- rain holds off. Re de oe Ontorio County Crop Failures Said 60 Per Cent--Page 5 The Rev. John Courtney |said. "P went to America in could never agree with their reported a bottle fire bomb was. About 95 per cent of Fair- : But a new series of small Ajax Girl Medal-Winner In Winnipeg--Page 8 3 Murray, 63, died yesterday 1963. The only way to get out of Cause. I would PaMieY fight for! thrown at a patrol car but nojbanks' buildings were affected MORE RAIN EXPECTED fierce scattered skirmishes that = = in New York City, He was Vietnam is to volunteer for six the other side. Ninety oe eld amage resulted, Policemen! by the flood, but an insurance| Cloudy skies settled above the could develop into something Ann Landers--12 Obituories---20 a prominent Jesuit theo!o- months' extra se rvice. The wy! gala a SERS OGN Taleo reported hearing gunlexecutive estimated just two|city today and the weather|Pisser was reported by U.S Ajax News--5 Sports--8,9,10 gian, head of the John La- jarmy gives the soldier 30 days jknow w lat _ they are fighting) shots : lper cent of the conimunity's)bureau forecast a few fight|™arines rooting out Viet Cong) City News--11 + Television--21 Farge Institute, a Jesuit or- [leave and pays his fare any- |for. bao ine Paden oth Police quoted Rule Scott, 48, property owners had flood | showers. erent hills west of the| Classified --18,19,20 Theatres--15 ganization active in ecu- |where in the world. I chose/everything the Johnson acmin-' manager of the station, as. say-| insurance The danger of uncontrolled {Coastal plain of Tam Ky, about : oT Weather 22 ; menica! affairs and race /Britain because it is my home. |!stration stands for ing he shot a man in the leg| The situation prompted calls fire, which had officials on edge|%90 miles northeast of Saigon. oe / 5 F relations, and a professor (I know of many other Ameri-| 'I have no intention of going after the man tried to rob him.|for immediate federal rehabili-| Wednesday after five old frame! In the air war over North Editoi@il--4 Whitby News: Fi of theology at Woodstock jcans and other nationalities back to Vietnam. I think what [| Leon Perry Jr., 26, a Negro.|tation funds and low cost loans| buildings burned in the down- Vietnam, bad weather limited) = Financial--17 Women's---12,13,14 : College in Maryland |who have deserted from Big ey done is justifiable moral-, was arrested and changed with|to businessmen and homeown- town 'area, tapered off with no} U.S silote to 111 - missions! J i AP Wirephoto [army and come straight tolly," he added lrobbery by assault, ers, ladditional fires reported today,! Wednesday, ( eraomuaiiiiionaomMNMRc es ~~ 4