Plaid care properties of ed cotton. It's fast- resistant and sheds ie fabric for the With mock flap ind self tie. Gay red, s' sizes 14 to 20 and 2. PHONE 725-7373 VOL, 26--NO. 227 UNITY CHEST CAMPAIGN Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and 'neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Ghe Oshawa Cimes 10¢ Single Copy BSc Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Moil Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash OPENS HERE Weather Report Sunday will have sunny skies and warmer temperatures, Low tonight, 40; high tomor- row, 62. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES leaders To add to his problems, he had to take time our from cam- with a crisis in}Monday. WE MUST CARE ike a ORDER INQUIRY Service an official affair. Preston created by the forcible removal of two foster children from the home of Mrs. Arthurjing, radically - designed Cit Timbrell by the Waterloo/Hall, Mr. Nixon envisaged in campaigned|county Children's Aid Society, a}his plan an enlarged Canadia Friday in the Toronto area for|8°vernment body. the Oct. 17 proviacial election. ucting school teacher with blackboard and pointer, outlined a glitter- ing plan to redevetop Toronto's congested downtown and water- front areas. It was the Liberal's master plan, to allow Toronto to "catch-up" with its progres- sive rival Montreal. Premier Robarts, meanwhile, found himself facing angry demonstrating against government's controversial Home Ownersnip Made Easy Minister inquiry MacDonald, leader of the New Democratic Party, charged that ridings the party is' not' well . |organized. For the first time in 'Many people of Swedish ori- PRINCESS CHRISTINA, 24-year-old -- granddaughter of King Gustay Adolf. of Sweden, was a guest Fri- day at a banquet and ball in Winnipeg given by the Junior Committee of the Winnipeg Symphony Or- chestra. She is shown danc- ing with Arthur Fahlgren of Winnipeg. The princess was to leave Winnipeg Saturday ending a two-day visit which concluded a_ week- long state visit to Canada. (CP Wirephoto) Robarts' vative candidates. About 20 members of the Building Trades Council carried placards saying: "HOME goes 100 per cent for non - union spe- culators" and "HOME sweet deal." A similar picket line marched before Mr. Robarts two weeks ago in Kenora, pro- testing the awarding of a gov- # ernment contract to a Winnipeg firm for the building of 25 homes in a new mining area. Mr. MacDonald told his Sar- nia audience that government giveaways would encourage voters to examine Conservative policies to see why extravagent promises were necessary. He said the zovernment was endangering development by making promises it can't keep. "In an informal -moment, Mr. MacDonald told reporters the NDP could win 67 seats in the election, adding that in some a provincial election, the NDP will 'contest all 'seats. Claiming Toronto had lost the impetus created by the excit- National. Exhibition grounds, a giant shopping centre over the! Chinese rule. 5 4 __,|Union Station, rail yards, a new After consulting with Social|qpc headquarters, a large bh John|trade centre, a new transporta: Yaremko, the premier ordered|tion terminal and a waterfron the!public housing development, Mr. Nixon blamed _ bickerin In Sarnia, meanwhile, Donald among borough and ceatecoart ee ees cons. tan officials for the slowdown in M Nal/the city's development. Some of Fst i i biepe ager Sate the blame must lie with the ntario's development "'to bai!/provincial government for not " himself out of an election jam." tving Metro 'Toronto needed) Washed and scrubbed away. Both Mr. MacDonald and Mr.|planning powers. Nixon campaign in the Windsor - Chatham area on the week-/CONFRONT PICKETS end, while Mr. Robarts takes 3 Mr. rest to resume his campaign confrontation with pickets, the second since his campaign began, occuired when he arrived at a reception for three Toronto - area Conser- COMMUNITY CHEST IS CARING ' Nixon Shines In Metro, Wall Posters ..Robarts Finds Gloom By THE CANADIAN PRESS Liberal leader Robert Nixor came up shining but Premier Robarts found only gioom when Disappear In Peking Yiof Peking amid a genera N/ celebrations Sunday of the 18t anniversary of Communis t ters telling of the progress o Chairman Mao Tse-tung' dynasty in 1911, Radio Peking was broadcast- success that contrasted sharply with analyses from Hong Kong. Experts there said China's har- assment of the British crown colony has cost Peking $49,- 300,000 in four months, Grossman Rescues Man TORONTO Friday night, was saved from} serious injury by Allan Gross-| area for the Oct. 17 provincial election. ' Mr. Grossman covered Mr.| Demalo with his trenchcoat and} the flames went out. TOKYO (AP)--Fire engines are hosing down the main walls] official appeared to be turning)plan to enter a slate of peace|has announced, since the letter scrubbing-up to prepare for| thumbs down to such a propos-|delegates in next June's Cali- Japanese correspondents say/> walls once plastered with pos- purge of his political enemies "It was a surprise," Kyodo news service said, "to find the|people of South Vietnam." wall posters, symbol of Mao's cultural revolution, have been|the New China news agency and monitored in Tokyo, | A clashed specifically with John-| Johnson was telling the public| Vietnam Peace Moves. son's later assertion in his San|"'the absolute truth about the b Fy aa : ane up for the National Founding|Antonio, Tex., speech that the|many efforts the administration| erg said in nis policy speechy Day with huge portraits of Mao|United States would 'assume' |has + : c : and Sun waraer, Sun is called|that during any bombing halt|accord with the. North Viet-|, CoMtinues to seek active par- the North Vietnamese would|namese and Viet Cong." reciprocate by a military slow- Tienanmen (Gate of Heavenly Peace) Plaza has been dressed the father of the Chinese| Republic which began with the overthrow of the Man Chu|down. TRIO FOUND ASPHYXIATED | AT HURON STREET ADDRESS | Three people -- an elderly man and woman, and a girl about 13, were found suffering from the effects of asphyxia- tion by fumes at 276 Huron Street this morning. It is understood the man is dead | and the woman is in critical | condition. Neighbors say the people were Thomas Moore, his wife, Verna Moore, and their grandchild, Lorraine. A fire rescue crew, police and two doctors fought to save the lives of the three. | Mrs. Pearl Gilroy, a next | door neighbor, said she had | the key of the house because | she had some goods stored in | the basement. About 10 a.m., she noticed a son of the couple trying to get into the house, and then the grandson, to whom she gave the key. Mrs. Gilroy said the son called police after entering the garage of the house, which is underneath a bed- room. She said the Moores were a quiet couple, but she had not known them long . It is believed the man was found in the garage and the two females in an upstairs bedroom. PRESIDENT JOHNSON Rejects Offer ««. Makes Policy Speech North Vietnam Pope Asks UN Effort UNITED NATIONS (AP)--| would get talks started. WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi-|today with plans to oppose|Pope Paul has added his voice a bipartisan gathering here--| and for a nation wide televi-|tually rejected before it was sion-radio adopted language that sounded! mier of North Vietnam, said in cp conciliatory. LBJ OFFERS TO HALT BOMBS IF TALKS OPEN 'Still On Notice, Hanoi Warned SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (CP)--jed any of these proposals" for President Johnson offered Fri-| peace talks in the past. s day night to stop United States! bombing North Vietnam on con-|have said privately in the last dition that it 'lead promptly to| few days that the North Viet- productive discussions' aimed|namese have given no indica- at a peaceful settlement of the|tions through secret diplomatic war. jchannels of an interest in open- High officials in Washington Reviewing Vietnam policy for|ing peace talks. Johnson's statement was vit- audience--Johnson| made. Le Thanh Nghi, vice-pre- ja speech to Chinese officials in But it did not weaken his|Peking that the U.S. "must expressed determination to see| unconditionally halt its bombing the war through to an acceptable|and other war acts'? against ending. He gave that determi-| North Vietnam, "once and for nation and peace talk almostjall." He said the U.S. must equal emphasis. withdraw its forces from South One administration source) Vietnam and recognize the Viet said the softer language was|COng as the sole representa- not accidental; that the govern-| tives of the South Vietnamese. ment, in both public and pri-|. And, while Johnson was talk- vate messages to Hanoi, has\ing in his speech of improve- been probing for a formula that|ments in South Vietnam, milt- tarily and in promoting consti- But he suggested that John-/t{utional government, there dent Johnson's latest enuncia-|Johnson with a peace candi-\to calls for active United) con's "we assume" statement| ete anti-government riots in |Nations efforts to end the war| amounted to putting Hanoi on|>"12- tion of his Vietnam policy drew | date. an apparent advence brushoff 2 from North Vietnam and mixed|for new directions jcomment from Congress. Even before the spoke Friday night, offering to} halt U.S. bombing of North Vietnam in return for prompt.) /"'productive discussions," high-ranking North Vietnamese "Once again we have hoped|in Vietnam, a move opposed by! notice once again that: the U.S.| and have|the Soviet Union and France, A committee of the Legisla- tive Assembly rejected the would expect something more) had these hopes dashed," said| A letter from the Vatican] than talks if it were to stop the | Tesults of the recent. presiden- | alin Vietnam. fornia primary, and other lead- h} Vice-Premier Le Thanh Nghi/ers of the council agreed. " said in Peking that the United/ acts against the {Republic of Vietnam once and | n withdraw its forces Ford of the House of Represent-/dominated the general policy \from South Vietnam and recog-|atives, hinting at an issue the|@ebate, which Friday complet- ed its second week. The mes- S/for all," nize the Viet Cong as '"'the sole Republican party is expected to} enuine representative of the|hit hard should Johns sage from the spiritual leader : 2 pe yor of the world's inore than 500,-| armistice was signed. ) h + by|vinced t ' |000,000 Roman Catholics was} Johnson held out no hope of|ence of State Officials--Johnson Nghi's. speech, reported by|vinced the president spoke the pelieved certain ¢o' give a hast! Ford told reporters he hopes|!° the pressure for a UN role in| his frequently-applauding listen-|on U.S. determination to perse- jre-election, appeared |whole truth. made in liberal group which has consist- } L ently opposed U.S. involvement| Working to halt the conflict, A high Vatican source noted, Hill predicted approval of a|however t,hat the Soviet Union| Congressional backers of the| r ates "must unconditionally|president's war policies|U-S. said they ha t its bombing and other war|applauded his speech while|"€W Peace initiatives. Democratic opponents rapped it. : : " asians teehee Gerald R.|Assembly's agenda but it has|Panmunjon--the site of Korean) saw the speech as a direct plea seeking some He said he would support a halt in bombing--but only if the The California Democratic|North Vietnamese and Viet Council's leader, rejeeting/Cong scaled down their military | Cong Shells ing glowing reports of economic Johnson's policy, went ahead | activities. jticipation of the Unite ear settlement: Brace For Flood Crest BROWNSVILLE, Tex. 153,000 Texas Residents | Hit US. Base (AP)--Communists| SAIGON president|a statement from Gerald Hill,|made public here Friday said) bombing. president of the 33,000-member|the pontiff offered to assist Sec-| lretary-General O Thant in was sent Sept. 22, plans to give , ' North Vietnam more military| 00d faith that Hanoi would not! affairs Minister Martin--have aid. Diplomats here and State! | Secretary Dean Rusk of the| acy troops into the south ifling in the hope that Ho would had heard of no| negotiations began. | Vietnam is not on the Generaljnot prepared to see another | jlast week the United States |Nations" in the search for a opened up with mortars in the Mekong Delta south of Saigon today, shelling the main Ameri- can base in the area and four (AP)| Flood stage is 18 feet at} South Vietnamese camps. --The Rio Grande, which leftiBrownsville. The weather Sixteen Americans were destruction and human misery;/bureau said the river had) wounded in the attack, which} in its wake, hurled its floodwa-|reached 16.58 feet early today. jters today at the mouth of the The river was at flood stage in the Rio Grande Valley from was receding in some spots. Brownsville, Mexico, area at the Rio today. WINNIPEG (CP) -- Sweden's attractive Princess Christina was obviously touched Friday when 600 guests at an annual dinner dance sang the Swedish national anthem as she arrived: gin were among the guests and ; the singing started after the playing of God Save the Queen at the black-tie affair given by the junior committee of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra. The princess joined the sing- ing, the guests started shyly but ended singing lustily, as she walked to the head table on the arm of Lt.-Goy. R. S. Bowles, The 24-year-old granddaugh- ter of King Gustay Adolf drew admiring glances; slim and suntanned, wearing a semi-fit- ted long dress diagonally striped in green and shocking pink, From a high neckline, wide straps fell to a low-cut back. A glittering pin at the Empire waistline, long earrings and silver shoes completed a picture of simple but youthful elegance. 'Following the banquet, the princess, in a short, informal speech, expressed thanks for a "wonderful and warm wel- come" and pleasure at meeting ¥ Princess Christina Touched | As Swedish Anthem Sung some "old Swedes" at a recep- tion given earlier by Per Lind, the Swedish ambassador to Canada, and his wiie. The princess arrived here Friday from Quebec City after visits to Montreal and Expo and Ottawa. Today the princess was to visit the Manitoba Centennial Arts Centre with members of the Manitoba Centennial Corpo- ration. A seat in the concert hall is to be dedicated com- memorating her visit. She was expected to leave for New York about noon. | followed intensified U.S, air Upstream, residents began|strikes deep into North Viet- }Massive cleanup. man, reforms institution minis-|Rio Grande City eastward for) rach with ta tive ter who was campaigning in the|almost 200 miles, although it) Were covered with one to five) ite a bridge inside the port FLOODED TO EAVES In the Harlingen area, streets inches of silt and mud. Land- | The 153,000 residents of the SCaped gardens were mud pits. Tex.-Matamoros, S0me houses that cost up to $65,000 had been filled with assisted by a police constable,/Grande's mouth braced for oe le aga to the Net Residents rolled him on the ground unti)|flood crest, expected sometime |! rooms and mops were ard at work making their homes fit for habitation. Only a few homes remained flooded in the extreme south- west portion of Harlingen where the Arroyo Colorado went on a rampage after Beu- lah was followed by heavy rain on the area. Attempt Alleged To Buy New Trial BATON ROUGE, La, (AP)--! One of three grand juries inves- ligating alleged Cosa Nostra activities in Louisiana, has accused a contractor of bribing a governor's aide in an attempt to buy a new trial for Team- sters Union President James R. Hoffa, The East Baton Rouge Parish grand jury indicted New Orleans contractor D'Alton (CP)--Tony|Gulf of Mexico where the trou-|returning to their silt-covered/nam. Demalo, whose clothes caught|ble began 10 days ago when|homes in the beginning of a fire as he worked on his car /Hurrican Beulah hit. U.S. Air Force planes blasted the frequently-hit MiG airfield jat Hoa Lac west of Hanoi, and jnavy pilots flew through sur- |face-to-air missile barrages to of Haiphong. Transit Strike Talks Continue mediator reported Friday he from both union and manages ment in his attempts to settle a transit strike that is costing Expo 67 $900,000 a week and causing countless aching feet. Mr. Justice Francois Cheva- lier said Friday night he will continue to meet with both today and Sunday if necessary. }when 6,000 bus and subway |workers walked off their jobs to back up demands for higher ditions. Expo's director of operations, reported Friday that the world's fair could lose as much} as $7,000,000 if the strike lasts) until the end of the fair, Oct. Smith Friday, |29. \ \ Philippe de Gaspe Beaubien, j j | | | MONTREAL (cP) -- Ala was receiving full co-operation | = sides in the dispute all day|_ The strike began Sept. 21]: wages and better working con- ee mm tial election. : .._| Presumably, Johnson wanted The source said U.S. policy| to put his position. in a form as jthus remains basically/agreeable as possible to domes- unchanged, : |tic and foreign critics. Recently Administration officials saw 8/in the United Nations General jmajor concession the presi-/ Assembly several speakers--in- dent's willingness to rely on cluding Canada's External launch a@ new offensive or pour|calleq for an end to the bomb- then be willing to enter peace But they said the president Is! talks, Some congressional observers }peace talks which dragged on for support from the country. while the United Nations troops) While emphasizing peace suffered heavy casualties dur-jefforts in his address--deliv« ing continued fighting before an|ered before 1,600 delegates to |the National Legislative Confer- an early solution. He reminded/put approximately equal stress 'ers that 'Hanoi has not accept-| vere in Vietnam. | Ambassador Artiur J. Gold-| Hotel Fire Kills Two Sisters EMBRUN, Ont..(CP) -- Two sisters died here today in a pre-dawn fire that destroyed their father's 10-room main street hotel. Anne Forgues, 6, and her sister Lucette, 10 were asleep in an upstairs bedroom of the two-storey frame building when fire broke out at 2 a.m. The 60-year- old hotel in this town 30 miles southeast of Ottawa burned to the ground, Hotel guests escaped. Deposed Premier Lashes Junta ATHENS (CP) -- Deposed premier Panayiotis Kanel- Iopoulos lashed out anew today against the army colonels ruling Greece, saying '"'the best thing they could do is rid Greece of their presence." Three days ago, Kanellopoulos gave a press conference at which he warned the govern- ment must quickly restore political freedom or expose Greece to dangers which might destroy everything. Crown To Drop Abduction Charge PRESTON, Ont. (CP) -- Crown Attorney Harold Dauf- man of Waterloo County said today he will withdraw a charge of abduction against Mrs, Arthur Timbrell of Pres- ton when she appears in Galt magistrate's court Tuesday, Mrs. Timbrell was charged Thursday after she refused to surrender her two foster children, Peggy, 5, and Valerie, 3, to officials of the county Children's Aid Society who want to put the little sisters up for adoption. ..In THE TIMES Today .. ed Stors Generals Lose--P. 6 Tm Ann: Landers--10 Churches--12 E City News--9 Classified--14, 15, 16 Comics--21 Editorial--4 Obituaries--16 Sports--6, 7 ol? "ls he a dove or hawk?" Television--20, 21 Theatres---20 Weather--2 : Whitby News--5 E Women's--10, 11