imp. motor, oilite eee LAY 2.2 amps at 115 uck, and locking 16.86 s°3 amps. at 115 ns 24.49 PHONE 725-7373 H SET ardened, tempered and triple et sets; 4", 9/32", 5/16", ind %". 6" spinner handle al case, Model 1896, y | 15 i H SET sockets are: 7/16", 2" and jion, adaptor universal joint, dy metal. case. shed thumb-screw adjustment, cess, Qa d. Box end is slightly offset! Size Reg. hid 2.79 1 1/16" (3.49 1%" 3.98 1%" 4.69 "Ke 2.20 2.79 3.18 3.73 PHONE 725-7378 va 'Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, -- VOL. 26--NO. 211 10¢ Single Copy SSc Per Week Home Delivered 'She Oshawa Sines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1967 Weather Report ; Sunny skies continue as tem- perature rises slightly. Low tonight, 50; high Wednesday, 75. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for poyment of Postage in Cash THI RTY-FOUR PAGES a RIP-ROARING WELCOME Stanfield Cabinet To Confer Today By ANN HELLMUTH HALIFAX (CP )--Robert Stanfield, the new national leader of the Progressive Con- servative party, meets mem- bers of his cabinet here today to decide when he will officially resign as premier of Nova Sco- tia. During the day the premier will also have discussions with Cyril Kennedy, PC member of Colchester- Hants, who has offered to give Parliament for up his seat so Mr. Stanfield can contest a byelection in that rid- ing. The premier was given a rip- roaring welcome when he arrived here Monday from Toronto where he was named national leader of his party Sat- urday. The normally staid Lord Nel- son Hotel on downtown Spring Garden Road took on a festive air as banners with 'Welcome home Bob" and "Welcome our next prime minister" were strung across the balcony in the} lobby. Pipers Ernie Macaulay of| Halifax and Roy Henderson of} Truro, N.S., the premier *s| hometown, played traditional] Scottish airs as the premier| CYRIL KENNEDY e+. would step down and his family made their way slowly through the crowds of well-wishers waiting inside the hotel to greet him. Police estimated a crowd of more than 3,000 gathered in the Yukon Voters Give Council Mandate For Autonomy WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -- Yukon voters Monday elected a new-look territorial council pledged to seek autonomy from Ottawa for the territory. Five new members, including ® woman, and one member of the last council, won seats in the voting. The seventh seat on the council was filled nomina- tion day when George 0. Shaw, the speaker, was returned by acclamation in Dawson. Monday were: (x- mem? * the last cor Cc. macks-Kimane: . esey. ' Mayo-Elsa: Mrs, Jean Gor- on. Watson lake: xDon Taylor. Whitehorse east: Norman Chamberlist. Whitehorse North: Ken McKinnon. Whitehorse West: John Dumas. in Liy- Watson Lake was. the only constituency in which the elec- tion-night count of votes did not cover all polls. In Watson Lake, Mr. Taylor had a 15-vote mar- gin over his only opponent, Rudy Couture, on results from eight of nine polls, There were 13 eligible voters at the final poll, a remote road-grader headquarters site. The members serve three- year terms on the council, which has the power to debate bills introduced by the territo- rial commissioner or by council members. Recommendations of the council may or may not be accepted by the commissioner, who is responsible to the feder- al northern affairs department in Ottawa. The council does not have the power to propose money. bills. U.S. Navy Planes Attack Pn eer 'gets within two miles of the Four Targets SAIGON (AP)--U:S. Navy planes attacked four targets close to the heart of Haiphong Monday, hitting bridges, ware- houses and rail yards from eight-tenths of a mile to 1.7 miles from the centre of North Vietnam's chief port, the U.S. command announced. It was the closest penetration of Haiphong in the war. The closest raids previously had been on a cement plant and power plant 1.1 miles from the centre of the city last April. Pilots from the carriers Oris- kany and Coral Sea hit four tar- city's centre in the heavy raids. Pilots from the Oriskany reported direct missile hits on a highway bridge eight-tenths of a mile northwest of the centre of the city and on a rail and At Haiphong highway bridge one mile west of the city's heart. The other two targets were a warehouse area 1.3 miles west of the city centre and the Hai- phong rail yards about 1.7 miles northwest. The navy pilots said they dodged heavy barrages of sur- face-to-air missiles and anti-air- craft fire. The U.S. command said dock facilities were not hit. It said two Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles fired at the raiders apparently went out of control and exploded near three ships, including one Polish and one Italian, anchored in the Red River 20 miles from the port. One missile exploded 1,800 feet above the ships and the other exploded in the water about 2,- 000 yards away. Indian, Chinese Troops Clash In Mountain Pass NEW DELHI (Cr )--India charged today that Chinese fir- ing at the strategic, 15,000-foot- high Nathu Pass on the disput- ed Tibet-Sikkim border contin- ued intermittently during the night. The shooting followed a sharp clash Monday--the most serious in five years along India's 2,- 000-mile-long in which artillery, mortars and machine-guns went into action. a The Indian defence ministry said, however, that the night- time shooting was on a smaller scale than Monday's exchange. Each side blamed the other for starting the fighting. India called for a ceasefire. A note, delivered to the Chinese embassy here Monday night, said sector commanders in the Nathu Pass area should meet to avert a serious situation. China said 36 of its frontier ards were killed or wounded in Monday's clash, the second outbreak of fighting at the pass in five days. : India said the Chinese opened fire with rifles and machine- guns and followed with. mortar Unofficial accounts in New Delhi said eight Indians were wounded and a lesser number killed. China has lodged a "most urgent and serious protest," alleging that Indian troops crossed the border under cover|crossed a viaduct of heavy artillery fire and attacked Chinese frontier guards. vicinity of the hotel to greet the' premier. | When Mr. Stanfield arrived] by car from nearby Shearwater naval airport where his private plane had landed, the crowd surged across the street in front of the hotel and surround-| ed his car. Chanting and cheering they waved and applauded as Mr. Stanfield stopped to shake sev- eral of the outstretched hands. On the steps of the hotel he paused and waved to the crowd) and as they chanted 'Speech, | speech" He laughed and said: "But you'll never hear me." The premier praised the "understanding" of the people of Nova Scotia and said: 'TI hope I never do anything to let! you down and that I will justify | the friendship and the warmth that | you have expressed to me. TO HELP NOVA SCOTIA He said although his new job would require him to devote much attention to national issues, "I hope I will be able perhaps to render service to the province of Nova Scotia as well." Three large reception halls inside the hotel were jammed with excited crowds, deter- mined to give the premier a wel home to r ber. He told them he would try to remember that he was leader of the party "'and not the whole party by myself." Premier Stanfield said his job is to "'generate support and not believe I can do the whole thing myself." When the premier stopped speaking, Finance Minister G. I, Smith, acting premier of Nova Scotia, together with sev- eral MPs and members of. the provincial legislature, be gan singing: 'This man is your man, this man is our man..." WIFE HAPPY Mrs. Stanfield, wearing a cherry-colored suit, said she was a "'little tired" but "very, very happy." The premier's hometown of Truro was represented by two busloads of friends and rela- ives, As he walked from the plane, Mr. Smith handed the premier a letter from Mr. Kennedy, e+-No IMMIGRANT MINISTER MARCHAND Area Of World Off Limits | 2 Strike Ban DETROIT increase (AP) agement relations ers Union. Some observers plants, will run at least into October. Company and union spokes- men fended off questions Mon- day as to when the strike by 160,000 Ford workers in the offering to give up his Colches- ter-Hants seat. The premier said at a brief news conference that he had talked Sunday with Prime Min-| byelection would be held ena-| bling him to try for a seat on| the Commons. "It won't be-before too long," he added. 'That's all I can say) at the moment." Whites Repel Marchers | MILWAUKEE (AP)--Crowds| of whites hurled bottles an\ rocks at a line of Negro march- ers in the virtually all-white South Side Monday night, bring- ing an abrupt end to Milwau- kee's 15th straight night of demonstrations. Whites packed the sidewalks along 16th Street as the demon- strators, led by Negro come- dian Dick Gregory and Rev. \James E. Groppi, a_ white Roman Catholic qriest, moved into the neighborhood. Two persons were injured, including Sydney Finely, a national officer of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People, whu suffered a head cut. Police made 13 arrests. The whites, some of whom had made unsuccessful attempts earlier Monday to start marches of their own into the Negro North Side, were waiting for the procession of about 500 Negroes. Even before the marchers into the neighborhood, bottles and fire- crackers were tossed at the feet of police. |cent more than 1967. models. ------~\paring higher price listings on U.S., would end. Chrysler Corp. citing increased costs of labor and Price Increase Injects New Factor For UAW The Big Three offers include hourly rate that the strike, which began atjeach successive year. midnight last Wednesday and is} The strike is not expected beginning to be felt in Canadian|delay Ford's price announce- An|mated the original offer wouldjment 'since the company has in car price was ajadd $4 an hour to the $4.70 an} 85,000 new new factor in auto labor - man-|hour in wages and fringe bene-| introduction by dealers Sept. 22. today but|fits the average worker now negotiators won't return to the/draws. bargaining table until Friday in the strike between Ford Motor/jincreasing the current average Co. and the United Auto Work-/straight-time d/the four Detroit car builders. s3.41 : of] RESUME TALKS TUESDAY |$3.41 an hour by 13 cents the; General Motors and the UAW ; speculated|first year and by 2.8 per cent/are to resume negotiations next \bY midnight Friday night, wilt Tuesday. Chrysler and the; to/union have not discussed when models ready for Chrysler's new models will go| d ial ma display Sept. 14 eaniest HA bog named under a special law they might start talking again. little likelihood of a voluntary|chand said ment, " IMMIGRATION REGULATIONS BROADENED. Rail Union |New Regulations Stipulate | | Three Categories For Entry | OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- unmarried sons or daughters | ll ested ment announced new immigra-junder 21; parents or grandpar- | tion regulations today that will|ents over 60--younger if they apply common, broad _ stand-|/are widowed or unable to work WASHINGTON (AP) ~-- The ards to potential immigrants}--and orphaned brothers, sis- U.S. railway industry's new] from all.areas of the world. jters, nephews, nieces or grand- chief negotiator, John P. Hiltz) The regulations set up three | children under 18. Jr., says Congress should strip|Categories of immigrant-spon-| Provision is also made for 25 rail unions of their right to|S0red, nominated and depend-| adopted children and, in cases strike ent-with easier access for indi-|where the only dependent is a "I would favor a law to per-|Viduals in the first two groups. | husband or wife, for the nearest petuate railroad service, rather) Those in the third category, |living relative." than having the threat of con-|most of whom will lack rela-| Sponsored relatives may \stant interruptions of service," tives in Canada, will qualify for|come into Canada if they meet Hiltz said in a talk with report- entry if they can compile 50|the simple tests of good health ers | ueeneamets wag gy on) and good character. s ; ' s \their education, skill, age and He said Monday this would) ix anther facto: B | ARE NINE CATEGORIES away. te oak | An immigration department! le assessment system for | some 600.000 rail eeene Man announcement said the new | for 100 assessment units in the junions have consistently regulations will go into effect | ile Categories, apportioned as | defended their right to strike. | Oct. 1. Immigration officers weld | 'The rail industry and six shop|20W,, are receiving training in| 1. 20 units, one for each suce Weare anisna are aaa The application of the standards. cessful year of formal educa- decision of a White House} The bsitad system will _ formal- tion or occupational training. board this week which Hiltz|¥ Confirm that Canadian citi-| 2. 15 Units based on immigra- jsaid may set the bargaining! <"s aa permanent residents of |tion officer's personal assess- pattern for the industry in: the|;="208 are entitled to bring) ment of the applicant's 'adapta hits. \their dependents to Canada," |bility, motivation, initiative and The presidential board, head-| S14 a ft similar qualities. ed by Senator Wayne Morse,|. 0. uture, no area of the| 3. Up to 15 units, depending world is "'off limits" for spon-|o, gemand for the : sorship of immigrants by their passed in July to halt a two-day| occupation in | relatives in Canada. 1 units maximum for jnationwide strike. 4. The board's recommenda-| LINKED TO MANPOWER professional status in an occu+ \ Vy , Yanging down to one -- taking the strike weapon lions, due to be handed down| 'The selection standards. pati also be linked closely to €co-|unit for the unskilled, become mandatory if the rail-) nomic and manpower needs. 5. 19 units for applicants roads and unions don't settle} 'With these regulations," under 35, with one unit deducat- Canadian Suggests Policy On Peaceful Nuclear Blasts new health and safety items) GENEVA (AP)--A treaty to : required by federal law, Mon-| halt ister Pearson on the telephone|day became the first of the four| weapons should be supplement- but did not know yet when aimajor U.S. auto-makers to|eq by an international agree- announce a price increase. It said 1968 models would cost an average of $133, or 4.6 per General Motors, American Motors and Ford also are pre- new models but it was not) immediately known when their) prices will be announced, The UAW had no immediate comment on Chrysler's announcement, but it was expected to study the new prices to get an indication of what kind of second contract offer the company might make. The union has rejected nearly identical offers made by the Big Three. One GM official esti- Bankruptcies To Be Studied | MONTREAL (CP )--Three permanent Crown prosecutors have been appointed to study bankruptcy records where fraud is suspected, Associate Chief Justice George S. Challies of Quebec Superior Court) announced today. i Speaking at the official open- ing of Superior Court for Mont- real district, the associate chief justice said continual surveil- lance over bankruptcies is needed to discourage fraud. Perpetuators of fraudulent bankruptcies, discouraged in Montreal, would try to work in rural districts where the bank- the spread of -- nuclear ment on peaceful: nuclear explo- sions, Canada suggested today. Chief delegate Lt.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns told the 17-nation dis- armament conference that Can- ada "generally is in agreement with the essentials' of the incomplete draft non-prolifera- tion treaty presented by the United States and the Soviet Union Aug. 24. The two peers are currently negotiating here in an effort to # NEW LEGISLATION Quebec Cultural affairs minister Jean - Noel Trem- blay prepares legislation to make French the official language of Quebec, See story page 8. ruptcy courts are less well staffed, he added. (CP Wirephoto) fill the blank article three on international controls. But Burns added: 'There are, nevertheless, some points of detail on-which we may have additions or changes to suggest in the course of negotiations." SUGGESTS FIVE AIMS On the question of nuclear powers providing nuclear devices to countries needing them for peaceful economic purposes, Burns suggested an \international agreement with | the following broad outlines: | 1. The setting up of an inter- | national agency to which a {state could apply for nuclear 'devices for paeceful projects. The agency would have the rseponsibility of assessing the practibility and economy of the voluntarily by Oct. 16. There is, Tommelpation 36 inte to' yi fe each jemcanee it wage agreement. t, "I believe we can 3 bb etek = "The public interest is para-jdiscrimination, pay mor 7.0; 10 mount," Hiltz said in urging a|regard to the claims of fami . Up to 10 units depending on federal ban on rail strikes. relationship, act with both| fluency in English and French. Hiltz said the wage settlement| greater efficiency and greater 8. Up to five units if the handed down by the Morse|compassion than in the past applicant has a relative in Can- board will determine whether ajand, through an fonist | ada ble to sp or nom pattern of povernennaeaiaies ee a policy, serve the/nate him but able to help him wage settlements develops. manpower needs of our growing| become established. -- Sy. oft Canadian economy." 10. Up to five units if appll- De Gaulle | based on a government white paper, although categories of relatives who may qualify for nomination os sponsorship are Canada where there {s a gener- ally strong demand for I2Ser. An interviewing immigration officer may recommend admis- The new regulations are/cant intends to go to an area of Ends Visit | broadened. sion or refusal of an applicant The first distinetion ts|regardless of the units he com- WARSAW (Reuters) -- between dependents and rela-| piles on the basis of the nine French President de Gaulle |tizes entering the working|categories, "if there are good today began a final session of force. reasons why the assessment talks with Polish Communist Dependents for tmmigration|does not reflect the particular leaders on the German prob-| Purposes will be defined as hus- individual's chances of success- lem, European security and band or wife, fiance or fiancee; |ful establishment in Canada." | other world issues. | The discussions took place in | jj aacida't'" NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Poland's head of state, Edward! Charged With Starting 34 Fires yg A Eanes tnt Ochab, who headed his coun- try's delegation. | Winding up a, week's official | visit, the French president was | prop 4 e : project. . he ;accompanied by his foreign) approved, the agency should/ minister, Maurice Couve de JERE i y t il- |then assist in negotiations; Murville, and the yredch | SUEEEO ICE) ire investigators eee et between the applicant state and one or more nuclear powers. 2. The nuclear powers would agree to provide, on request |from the agency, the explosive jdevices, technical assistance jand advice at the lowest possi- ble charge--excluding the cost of research and development. 3. These should be arrange- ments for international safe- |guards and observation to ensure the explosives were directed to peaceful application only. 4, The nuclear devices should always remain under the custo- dy and control of the nuclear powers concerned, 5. The nuclear powers should undertake to make available to non-nuclear states full informa- nuclear devices for peaceful purposes, as developed in their studies and experiments. KILIMANJARO VICTOR NAIROBI, bid to become the youngest in Tanzania, foot snow drifts. Eric Sheer started up day with his father Frank, three-stage climb. and artillery barrages, killing and wounding some 4 Kenya (Reuters) --A 10-year-old Ottawa boy's son to climb Mount Kilimanjaro Africa's highest mountain, was foiled by 'four- 19,240-foot mountain last Thurs- and Dr: Michael A. Wiedman of Boston. It was to have been a The elder Sheer said Monday, per- "Eric interview. the have gone on, , 40, extremely well." night a mountain guide leading the party refused to allow Eric to proceed past the 16,000-foot level because of heavy snow. is not too disap- pointed,"" Sheer said here in an "He would, of course, liked to but It was not immediately clear whether the entire party turned around at the 16,000-foot level. Thus ended a unique Centen- nial Sheer had nial he did project of $3,100 of the cost that was not met by Canadian companies. Because he saw the climb as a way to advertise the centen- and Expo. 67, declined any American money. He even paid the costs of Dr. Wiedman who had planned to study the effect of high alti- in tudes on a young boy. Eric had carried three flags in his 15-pound pack--a Cana- STOPS CLIMB AT. 16,000 FEET dia sco the Sheers. underwritten some Sheer in rer an the Snow Drifts Foil Boy Mountaineer n- Tanzanian and a boy ut. If he had reached the sum- mit, he had planned to give the scout flag to the scout museum Ottawa and present the Canadian flag to President Nye- e of Tanzania. Sheer had not spoken of snow telling of his preparations in Ottawa interview. He said major problem would be altitude sickness, tion on the possibilities. of using, year-old boy taken into custody Sunday night has started 34 fires within the last two years with total damage exceeding $1,000,000. Police said the alleged arsonist had during the last month taken on a nine-year-old boy as partner. Both were apprehended Sunday and questioned separately. ambassador to Poland, Arnaud! | Wapler. | | Polish Prime Minister Jozef Cyrankiewiez and Foreign Min-| ister Adam Rapacki also took| | part in the talks. A Polish spokesman told a} |press conference that Commu-) |nist Party Leader Wladyslaw | | Tera Hy f Gomulka, Ochab and cvran-/ Police Guard Doctor's Home |kiewicz accepted an invitation) jfrom de Gaulle to pay an offi-! TORONTO (CP) -- Police today are guarding the home beg visit ae ata date to, of sidney Solway, a north Toronto doctor, after a gunman Aen tie gana eg | fired two shots through his front door early this morn- | ing. Dr, Solway said the man tried to get him to the door by posing as a telegram messenger. He told him to Mountai 0 tains shove the message under the door. A few moments later T B l h | 'he shots were fired. The man then climbed into the ame Beulah | passenger side of a late model car and drove away. MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Mountain, |peaks reaching 8,000 feet into) ~, |hurricane Beulah tamed the once-mighty storm to 75 miles an hour today but not before! Beulah raised its Caribbean) -- death toll to 18 and headed for| = the tourist resorts of Jamaica. "In THE TIMES Today .. ee x Salmonbellies Win Agcin -- P. 6 : Hospital Plans -- P. 9 The weather bureau said Beu-|~ Whitby Teens Meet--P. 5 lah was expected to build up its |= strength on the march over)" An Londers--10 open water before nearing the! Ajex News--5 island of Jamaica. | City N 9 4 Early today the storm was| (a Sib adapts: : centred about 700 miles svuth-| Yj Clossified--13, 14, 15 2 east of Miami and was moving | Comics--17 A west. A slight turn to the north Editorial --4 west was forecast. Such a turn |= Finenciol---12 could affect Cuba, the weather) Okitinresncts 3 bureau said, is 67 E Hundreds of persons were|-- Sports--6, : evacuated from low-lying |= Television----17 E areas in eastern Cuba Monday |~ Theotres--8 as Beulah plowed close to the) Weother--2 "First of all, we'll get rid of poverty!" island's eastern shore. Two Atlantic hurricanes, |= Doria and Chloe, remained far from land, Whitby News--5 Women's--10, 11 di {dA i Baestiwnnoss itil i Wil usu t ¢ : i]