Things" Bra: Stretch- y nylon lace cups, and Jet sides and back. In . A cup sizes 34 to 36; o 38. Warner Consul- the Foundations el, on Thursday to 5:00 p.m. to ecting the gar- to your figure aunrchase! ried ish ly 5.00 L, each 29 L.99 OPPING ONLY one or Mail Orders) ater is news again, this saving oppor- © your collection ! r pullovers in classic Ity styles -- in mach- ics or soft wools, -- \bow of Fall colours beige, pink, yellow, 2s 36 to 40 in the PER LEVEL, DEPT. 545 BRITIS SCARBOROUGH, (CP)--Britain's Labor today decisively endorsed the bid by Prime Minister Wi government to lead Britain into the European Common Market. A move by some big unions to lay down new conditions for British entry was voted England NINN IME Ny H LAB by the party's annual party tion by a 2-to-1 margin, lson's b: challenges posed by down Home ran Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- erio and Durham Counties. 'VOL. 26--NO. 231 10¢ Single Co) In a series of four' se ; s parate allots it became clear that the Labor movement as a whole is Teady and eager to meet the entry into the six-nation Euro- Pean Economic Community. PRM UL ccc OR DECISIV conven- minister led the dissidents at council convention. British Entry into the Common Mar- ket, Cousins said, would mean higher prices for British con- ASTINRED ERENT" 11 IMLS CASS HEA sumers, Britain's foreign and the party's ins and two ot Hee ELY ENDORS Frank Cousins, leader of the big Transport and General Workers Union and a former in Wilson's cabinet, a worsening of more unemployment. said he had no faith in a Euro- pean organization by right-wing governments." Party members led by Cous- former cabinet ministers-- ie ere errant Douglas Jay trade deficit He "dominated her influential ne ES BID Shinwell--said they would ask the convention to adopt a reso- lution attaching stiff conditions to the membership application Wilson made last spring. Wilson's controversial foreign secretary, George Brown, led OTT eR LSU FT nA and Emmanuel the govern The vola' ernment's ence, and sion to d TO JOIN common market bid. cian Tuesday defended the gov- cy in Vietnam at the ruling Labor party's annual ui IR HINT ment's defence of its tile 53-year-old politi- support of U.S. poli- hopes confer- then went on televi- iscuss the Common HALT NEN ELAN ARR C Market--and also his own con- troversial off-duty behavior. Brown was expected to put an optimistic gloss on Britain's for early negotiations when he discussed the Common Market problem, despite the reported gloom of some senior ministers a MA MART executive commission report on British entry, The. report, which advocated early negotiations, was hard on the British economy and point- ed out the disadvantages of British membership if the coun- try did not achieve a stable bale ance-of-payments position. Syememmmyeaems ey OMMON over the market's She Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1967 5Se Per Week Home Delivered Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office rt Ottawa and for payment of Postage er decid MT a ' " UNAM nT (ai ai Weather Report Sunny and cooler on-Friday. Low tonight 50. High tomor- row 60, TWENTY-TWO PAGES Federalism Plug Seen By Johnson MONTREAL (CP)--A state ment by Premicr Daniel John ton of Quebec appearing to! allay fears that his Union| Nationale party advocates Que- bec's separation from Canada interpreted by a prominent provincial Liberal as has been an endorsement of the concept of Canadian federalism. Pierre Laporte, a government of Jean Lesage, said Wednesday night Mr. Johnson's statement constitutes "a plug for a based on a revamped constitu- tion. His comment came after the Quebec premier broke a long silence on the separatist debate by issuing a statement to a Montreal French-language newspaper from an undisclosey retreat in the Hawaiian Islands. The statement appeared in a copyright story from Hawaii published in La Presse, Mr. Johnson, from a bout with phlebitis, a vein disease, said his party did not receive a mandate to build a wall around Quebec with its victory in the June, 1966, prov- incial election. He said his party promised the people to exercise its rights under the British North Amer- ica Act, Canada's constitutional base. The Johnson statement apparently gave encouragement to federal politicians in Ottawa. Johnson Stand Pleases PM OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Pearson said Wednesday he is "happy to learn' that Premier Johnson of Quebec does not wish to isolate the f cabinet | minister in the former Liberal federalism"| recuperating | | g Using a single horse to . cut the last furrow in the horse drawn plow category of the South Ontario Plow- ing Match, is second place finisher James Lee, 72. The two-horse team is broken up for the last cut so the sec- ond horse will not trample the adjoining furrows. Twenty-eight plowmen com- peted in nine categories PLOWMEN VIE FOR TOP HONORS ON FARM NEAR BROOKLIN yesterday at the farm of John Batty near Brooklin. The event, which has been run for more than 60 years, is important in determining who will compete at the _ international match in Barrie, Ont., from Oct, 10 to '14. Prizes at the mieet ranged downward from $30 for a first. a: (Oshawa Times Photo) - province from the rest of Can- ada. The Liberal leader's com- ment came after Mr. Johnson broke a long silence on the separatist issue with a state- ment to Montreal La Presse. Mr. Johnson, recuperating from phlebitis on a Hawaiian Island, said his Union Nationale party did not receive a man- date to' build a wall around Quebec with its 1966 electoral victory. The Johnson statement said his party promised the people to exercise its rights under the British North America Act, Canada's constitutional base. The Union Nationale prom- ised also to put BNA rights to work to obtain a made-in-Can- ada constitution to make every- DARK HORSE CANDIDATE FAILS TORONTO (CP) -- For a while Wednesday a dark- ho rse independent candi- date named Wood Turner appeared on the official list of Ontario's chief elections officer for the Oct. 17 prov- incial election. Who did he turn out to be? Nobody. A list of candi- dates in Toronto's River- dale riding gave the occu- U.S. Casualties In Now Top The 100,000-Mark SAIGON (AP)--Heavy fight- ing, particularly around the besieged marine base at Con Thien below the demilitarized zone, has pushed total U.S. cas- ualties in the Vietnam war past the 100,000-mark, the U.S, com- mand reported toay. The d said 150 Amer- pation of each d The occupation of the last candidate on the Riverdale list, independent William Hendry, is wood turner. The corrected official list now totals 366 candidates. body, regardless of ethnic ori- gin, feel at home in Canada. icans were killed in action last week, 1,758 were wounded and three were missing in action. . This brought the over-all combined total of the war to 101,034, including 13,643 killed, 86,635 wounded and 756 missing Head Of Financial Company Defendant In $2,500,000 Suit TORONTO (CP)--Three directors and a former vice- president of British Internation- al Finance Canada Ltd. of Toronto Wednesday started) action in a $2,500,000 law suit against Marc Bienvenu, presi- dent of the company. A writ issued at Osgoode Hall, names Mr. Bienvenu, Aubert Brillant, Fernand Lal- onde, Bienvenu International Corp. of Montreal, York Lamb- ton Corp. Ltd. of Toronto and British International Finance as defendants. The plaintiffs, Peter Charle- bois, William Mollard and Andrew Wofford, and William Hawkins, claim to act for them- selves and other shareholders in the company. Five Thugs Get $534,000 MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Five armed men _ wearing cloth masks and gloves, escaped with $534,000 in rare coins, jewels and cash from the palatial Wil- lis Harrington du Pont estate on Biscayne Bay early today, police said. The five men bound du Pont, his wife, their four-year-old child and the butler and_his wife during their two-hour loot- ing of the huge estate which They seek payment of $2,- 500,000 in BIF shares under an agreement made in March, 1967. The writ states the shares were set aside and the defend- ants have refused to pay, notwithstanding de mand and call. in action, by unofficial count. The figures released here could be revised slightly later based on fuller statistics car- ried by the defence department. PASS KOREAN TOLL At the current rate of slightly more than 6,000 casualties a month, the Vietnam war could pass the Korean conflict in about six months as the fourth bloodiest war in the U.S. histo- ry. The U.S. lost 33,629 killed in Korea and 103,284 wounded. In the air war, U.S. planes smashed at bridges in Hai- phong and returned to within 10 miles of China for the second) straight day Wednesday. The U.S. raiders also hit four major railway links in the Hanoi-Haiphong area. ; Vietnam For the first time, U.S. planes bombed the single-lane Chien Chiang highway bridge 15 miles below the Chinese fron- tier. It had been on the Penta- gon's list of restricted targets. Buddhist Monks And Nuns Threaten Suicide By Fire SAIGON (Reuters)--Militant Buddhists said again today that 10 monks and nuns would com- mit suicide by fire if the gov- ernment refuses to meet their faction's demands. The govern- mnt, meanwhile, placed anoth- er leading critic under house arrest after releasing him from prison. Truong Dinh Dzu, who fin- ished second in the presidential house arrest after he was released from a week's impris- onment. = He had staged a hunger strike in jail after his arrest on charges of holding press confer- = ences without permission and defaming a judge. The chairman of the Unified Buddhist Church, Thich Thien Hoa, told reporters that the jnames of 110 monks and nuns, |who volunteered to kill them- \selves, would be placed in a bowl and they would die in the order their names were pulled out. The self-immolations would ibe to back up militant Buddhist jrescind a charter promulgated Car Dragged Half Mile As Six Die STRATFORD, Ont. CNR passenger train arrived five minutes late at a_ level crossing nine miles east of here Wednesday and smashed into a station wagon, killing six per- sons, five of them high school students, Dead are Mrs. Carl Seltzer, the driver, her son Karl, 16, Terry Swartzentruber, 19, Rob- ert Sparling, 16, and Robert Schlitt, 16, all of Tavistock, and (CP)--A| Ronald Zehr, 16, of Shake- speare, Ont. CNR officials said the train, which dragged the car a half- mile along the track, was unusually late because of bag- gage and passengers taken on at Kitchener. They also said the train was held up at Breslau Ont., near Kitchener, to allow another train to, re 'The train was } a for Huron, Mich., froin Toronto, GUARDED BY SIGN The crossing has no wig-wag lights but is guarded only by a crossing sign as it is little used. ing make it difficult to see westbound trains, but the cross- e Prime Minister Harold Wilson was the target of ing is not idered - ous. The last fatal accident there occurred 30 years ago when a motorist was killed by a, train. CHINA SHOP CHESTER, Pa. (AP)-- Three bulls broke out of a slaughterhouse Wednesday and--no kidding--got into a china shop. At least everybody thought that's how it was. Then some spoilsport from the packing- house reported the animals were steers. But anyhow, the steers crashed through the store, overturned a jewellery counter, luckily missed most of the china and exited through a rear door into an alleyway. Frightened shoppers in Chester's downtown business area found Market Street was more like a rodeo as police and packinghouse employees chased the 1,000-pound steers. Two of the creatures were cornered on a parking lot and shot dead by police, The other was trapped in a machine shop and led back to lin July recognizing a pro-gov- ernment faction as the legal voice of the Buddhist Church. the slaughterhouse. YOUTH'S MIND IMPAIRED want him least of all. that will not focus in hostility. boy and then vanished. She turned ut mother, Maynie Thorne, contains nine bedrooms and 19 bathrooms, it again." HAD THREE PENNIES, SANDWICH Parents Reject Boy, 16, Nobody Wants MIAMI, Fla. (AP )--Ricky Thorne, the boy nobody wants, went back on public welfare this week because his parents Ricky, now 16, faces a world impaired mind. The simple friendliness he displayed when the was found abandoned at the Miami International Airport two years ago has turned to Ricky, who nad three pennies and a half-eaten sandwich in the pocket of clothes that had the labels snipped out, was the centre of a week-long search for the red-haired woman who witnesses said accompanied the to be his said at the time she "would do This week she and her hus- band, Victor Thorne, did. The Thornes dumped Ricky by refusing to pay for: his upkeep in Miami and moving from their suburban Detroit home to a remote section of Canada where they cannot be readily reached, the judge said. Their new home is on an iso- lated Parry Sound island called Sans Souci, French for "without care." When Mrs. Tnorne and her husband, a well-to-do tool-and- die company executive, were located in 1965, Mrs. Thorne said she brought the boy to Miami and left him '"'because we love him" and because he had been a burdea. By court order, Rickey was put in a county home and final- ly taken into a school for the retarded. His mother agreed to \ \ submit to psychiatric treatment in Detroit. For a time Rickey did well at the school, learning to write his name and utter tne sound of "S" on command. Then he became hostile and began assaulting other children and attendants. Ricky was ordered confined to a county home temporarily. That, however, causes a legal problem because Ricky's par- ents never resided in Florida. Similarly, the state of Michi- gan has declined to accept the boy because his parents have moved to Canada. Canadian authdities likewise decline. Canadian authorities have however, agreed to extradite the couple to face Florida felony charges if the warrant is approved, said one juvenile authority. RICKY THORNE ing microphones yes- terday as he addressed the Labor Party conference in Scarborough, England. The address was his annual par- "WILSON AT LABOR CONFERENCE SHARP PROPOSES INFLATION CURBS Government May Cool Off Economy OTTAWA (CP)--Unless infla- jtion is beaten back with a great | voluntary effort, the govern- ment may have to cool off the | Canadian economy, Financa@ | Minister Sharp said Wednes- |day. The implication of his mes- sage: Higher taxes, if neces- sary, to cut spending power and brake production, with an inevi- table loss of jobs. In a major speech to the Commons, Mr. Sharp laid a new emphasis on his concern about rising costs and prices. He pledged more deep cuts in federal spending to soften competition for money, but he said the government alone can- not arrest inflationary trends ual ae, Sates, Joy ae se Xy 5) tua tive position in the world." lamentary report, and he designated the "dying" areas of the first industrial revolution as Britain's "'new frontier." (AP Wirephoto by cable from London) 5 std employ. ed, the budget_debate, delayed four. months by the summer recess, to deliver an up-to-date economic review and some spe- cific forecasts to Parliament. He said the country's gross MONTREAL (CP) -- Expo 67 and Montreal's exasperated publie today begin a third week without bus and subway serv- settlement of hte transit work- ers' strike dasned by Wednes- day's turn of events. | A note of cautious optimism crept into an otherwise bleak strike picture late last week when the provincial govern- ment anonunced appointment of a mediator 'n the dispute between the Montreal Transpor- tation Commission and five unions representing about 6,000 transit employees. However, Mr. Justice Fran- eois Chevalier quit his post Wednesday uzight following union rejection of his. "fina! recommendation" for a settle- ment, SOLVE OWN PROBLEM Mr. Justice Chevalier of Que- bec Superior Court at Hull told a press conference Wednesday night that the unions, affiliated with the Confederation of National Trade Unions, and the MTC now will have to solve the problems themselves, Paul Dozois, acting premier in the absence of Premier Dan- iel Johnson, said in Quebec City necessary to bring about a set tlement." He would not say whether the government would act by means of injunction or call a Two Die At Madoc As Cars Collide MADOC, Ont. (CP)--Two per- sons were killed and one seri- ously injured in a two car colli- ways 62 and 7 'Wednesday. Toronto, and Anne Johnston, 65, of Sterling. ries. Madoc's about 24 miles north o +» Rejected Again of Belleville "STEERS ENTER Hopes For Truce Dashed In Bus, Subway Walkouts special meeting of the legisla-;Pper sent in the 1967-68 fiscal ture. year. The prospective deficit is , 2 CNR and the CPR continue to ice, their hopes for an early|do a rousing trade while Expo,|board had already lopped the public and downtown busi-|$650,000,000 nessmen are taking it on the|spending plans "and this is not chin. Ithe end." darnrnagnstesniie i Wednesday night that the gov-| 2wiwinwn ernment is "'ready to do what is 3 sion at the intersection of High- Dead are Fred Hall, 61, of}: Mrs. Johnston's husband,}| = Wesley, 72, is in critical condi-| - tion in hospital with head inju-|- "Do we have ta watch baseball all the time?" naftonal product this year is likely to increase seven per cent, slightly higher than he predicted in his June 1 budget speech, with the difference eaten up by price increases. The same price pressure j would inflate government reve- |nues and expenditures by 144 unchanged at $740,000,000, Meanwhile tax! drivers, For 1967-68, the treasury es off preliminary NM TMNMNANTTANNNAAN MANN TAs 2 NEWS HIGHLIGHT Violence Flares In U.S. Strike PITTSBURGH (AP) -- State government and indus- trial leaders intensified their efforts today to end the destructive strike of independent steel haulers in eight states. But violence continued in troubled spots on Penn- sylvania, Ohio and Indiana highways. Pennsylvania Gov- ernor Raymond P. Shafer has asked representatives of the eight affected states -- Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, Illinois, New York and Pennsylvania --to get together on finding a solution to the violence- ridden wildcat strike, Two Killed In Sports Car HURLEYVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- Charles Henry Schafer, 18, of Sault Ste. Marie, and Dennis Calvin Carter, 21, of Portlock, Ont., were killed in a truck-sports ear collision on Highway 17 near here today. Hurleyville is 20 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie. yearns st Sn ..In THE T yo UNDA ih AA ab | tical IMES Today .. Leaders Visit--P. 11 Ajox Majorettes--P. 5 Pams Win Final--P, 8 Ann Londers--12 Ajax News--5 City News--11, 15, 22 Clossifed--16, 17, 18 Comies--21 Editorial--4 Financial--20 Obituories--18 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--21 Theatres--!9 Weather--2 Whitby News--3 Women's--12, 13, 14 wa AN |governments on ways to con- jtain wages, salaries and price, ' "to preserve Canada's competi-