al CARBINE »mmemorative edition. Eight shot hamber), Over-all length 4442", . ine and one in chamber. Weighs 129.95 and Scope nish" walnut Monte C hte gem rear ght silver {not sketched) cope ced i reworked .to'"sporting Rifle grip and smooth amp ¢ ip 't olibre Aimmaster f s give bright, clear torget image, ge and elevation adjustments, pro- sand rings. (437) 79.99 i ard (18"" in diameter) rass darts with plastic High ou 4.99 'ip for control, Nylon 2 98 enews . vith @namel. Flexible corn bristles >it, aes on 6.99 ly as possible, a EARLY CURIOSITY LEADS TO GM PRESIDENCY By A. F. MAHAN DETROIT (AP)--In 1914, five-year-old Ed Cole climbed into a 1908 Buick on his father's farm in Marne, Mich., released the handbrake and sent the car rolling into a tree. The damage was slight, and the scolding the curious child James M. Roche, the new chairman, $730,000 in salary and bonuses last year. of the board of directors and of its finance committee. The top jobs, each of which pays around $750,000 a year, were filled at a meeting here of the firm's 25-man board of di- rectors, They were S. E. Knud- sen, 54; Edward Rollert, 55, and George Russell, 62. All are ex- elected a director and executive vice-president in charge of fi- nance to succeed Russell. Roger M. Kyes, executive vice-president, was placed in sible for the basic design con- cept of the Chevrolet Corvair, a yer and he entered Grand Rap- lightweight, rear-engine car, ids Junior College. But a sum- He is known about the GM mer vacation job with the building in Detroit as a man Hayes Body Corp., then an au- charge of GM's car and truck, who has a cheery "hello" for tomotive supplier, turned him body and assembly and the au- everyone, back irrevocably to his first tomotive components divisions. A vice-president since 1956, love--cars, Rollert was assigned the re- when he was named general In 1963, he was named '"Fa- parents that he become a law- NEW YORK (AP)--James M, Roche Monday was named board chairman and chief exec. utive officer of General Motors Corp., the biggest industrial Sept. 1, 1958 ment age, 6 metas firm in the world. Edward N. ecutive vice - presidents, as sponsibility for the corpora- manager of the Chevrolet divi- ther of the year' by Detroit's ae he yee in gd Cole, 57, was picked to succeed was Cole. tion's operations staff. sion, Cole had been an execu- Central Business District Asso- 8 ' BS - i pay : y rice-pri . 5 "iation, E a a riage. Roche as GM president. WIDE SCOPE FOR KNUDSEN CALLED OUT i (cee wal eh ee dee en Now, 53 years later, Edward Roche, 60, who had been Russell was elected vice- As Roche before him, Cole general staff acti it a "ee nie troit's charity drive beyond : Nicholas Cole is president of GM's president and chief oper- chairman and chairman of the carries no college diploma into Cor yoration oe seg Staggering goal of $19 700 008 General Motors Corp ating officer since June 1965, re- finance committee, Knudsen the president's office. Cole's eos mes for the city's suffering, needy Cole's election climaxed a places Frederic G. Donner as will be in charge of all GM in- ended at General Motors Insti- EARLY START and problem-weary, : GM career that began in 1929 the auto firm's top official. ternational operations outside tute. when Cadillac called him Cole, while still in his teens, Around his home in suburban when he enrolled in the General Donner, board chairman since the United States. He also will out before graduation and as- sold tractors during summer Bloomfield Hills, Cole also is Motors Institute at Flint, Mich., under sponsorship of the corpo- ration's Cadillac division. The reached - retire- Oct, 4. His retire- ment becomes effective Nov. 1. be in charge of all domestic and non-automotive and defence di- - visions. signed him to a special engi- neering project. Known as an engineering gen- vacations by driving them around the countryside and giv. ing on-the-spot demonstrations. known by his wife and his two grown children, Martha and job int hich he st d H ll b Richard C. Gerstenb his. Gol i it i : David as a do-it-yourself addict EDWARD N., COLE 5 0) ow s F rill cont ' shard C, ' e y us, Co rsonally was . yas t j pees Hees J E q j in hic e steps pai e will continue as a member icha serstenberg was e personally was respon was the ambition of his and as a green-thumb gardener. 'ese New president of GM 4 ' mT : . sat 'ea ] Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties. r Weather Report Low pressure centre will bring Ocas! nal showers tonight and | "4 Qa Q Wednesday. Low tonight, 45; high Wednesday, 48. 10¢ Single Copy SS5¢ Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 26--NO. 252 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1967 Authorized o8 Second Class Mail Past Office Deport Ottawa 'Ghd tar Garment ot he ss TWENTY-TWO PAGES loween, G. A. Laughlin has [ 3 b : _ | Australian Car D | | GHOSTLY INCOME RAISED ustralian Car Damaged, " s ren ~ ONT TP oe , i ant fue ae 4 . tg eer _ One Vietnamese Injured i dink are just, for skids at. Hale Expenses are a minimum dow, his wife slashed her news for you. He runs a haunt- ed house for a living and says he is showing a profit He bought a_ ramshackle 33-room red brick mansion last summer and spent $10,000 Laughlin points out, since bro- ken windows, hanging plaster, shattered mirrors and squeak- ing steps only add to the at- mosphere. Laughlin, a 41-year-old for- mer chiropractor, said he got wrists and their son was scald- ed to death. "It was hard to rent," Laughlin said, "so the price was right." Laughlin makes no claims By JAMES PRINGLE SAIGOD. (Reuters)--Four mortar shells exploded 50 yards|mediately but |. Hundreds of guests Inside the palace stopped conversation im- there was no from the Independence Palace|Panic as many went to the win- here tonight just as U.S. Vice President Hubert H Humphrey .| dows to see what happened. Thieu, his wife and Ky were stepped inside to sign the vis-\Present in the reception room to add cobwebs, cats, bloody into about ghosts, but he says a 4 V the ghost business be- U s i) * {when the shells expl dummies, incense, candles, cause of . longtime interest Certain percentage of his pay- en s vee 'a the 732, Pm ells ploded at offins and colored lights. rnatur ing custimers don' police spokesman said the|"" 0 yu: ; : j c stil duly 15, ha ake 2.000 in the supernatural, ag aoe rs don't complete | OOcnsiftinetre shells hit the carl jane ere ee U people have paid for a tour. HANGS HIMSELF of Gen. Douglas Vincent. com y ex} some Laughlin is capitalizing on | jeffort to disrupt the ina 4 Halloween tonight with a "| P' inaugura mander of Australian forces in| South Vietnam, and that at 'ee C. West least one Vietnamese was in- lind US omimnaniee in vie noeMle : : fe jured. /nam' who was present at the re- Gen. Vincent himself was in}ception, said to guests as the the palace reception hall where] mortars exploded: "It sounds President Nguyen Van Thieullike income recoilless to me." and Vice-President Nguyen Cao| He was referring to recoilless Ky were entertaining hundreds] cannons Similar to those used si 7 nn y | - - jof foreign and Vietnames e} by Viet Cong to shell Saigon on me jguests at a reception following] the South Vietnamese national Police Fear jthe presidential inaugurationiday a year ago, killing eight dl u learlier today jpersons and wounding 45. Humphrey had just arrived] A palace spokesman said the tate dinner tonight would pro- das planned The price is $1.50 a head in Local legend says the haunt- the daytime and goes up to ed house has been inhabited $2.50 each at night. by poltergeists since the build- fet dinner and live music at $20 a couple. NGUYEN VAN LOC « + + named new premier | ' with U.S Ambassador Ellis-/s LONDON (Reuters) -- The| Peers and peeresses--many|powers of the House of Lords} More Deaths [worth Bunker and was signing speech from the throne an-jof them sitting in the House of|and to eliminate its present he-| the visitor's book inside the pal-| lier in the day, Thien was nounced today that the Labor|Lords by hereditary rights/reditary basis--thereby en a-| struck. sworn in as the first South Viet- government will introduce new\going back for hundreds ofjbling it to develop within the} I T d A' Vietnamese + with blood-|namese president under the laws aimed at a sweeping re-|years--heard the speech dis-/framework of a modern parilia-| n orna OSs stained white trousers wasjcountry's new American style form of the House of Lords. |close plans that might mean) mentary system." | being treated for wounds, 'constitution. h: W: oad by the;many of them would lose their y eons | Stock pyr ated upper cham-|oting rights JOINT DISCUSSIONS Rescue workers searcheda ber and the House of Commons The speech, drawn up by the government will invite both the two-mile strip of devastation| at the start of a new year-long|government, _ said legislation Opposition Conservative " pre ay for r ssilble victims | een | a re Te tie tt te| NEWS HIGHLIGHTS session of Parliament. will be dinoauoed ip reduce the and the minority Liberal party of two tornadoes that killed ust iB woe to join an all-party committee three persons, injured scores of . Baby Taken From Hospital Found to agree on details of the re- others and caused an estimated TORONTO (CP) -- A day-old baby Israel Adamant, Stymies *;: so cama But informed sources said the Police said they feared other jace when the shel GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) -- The throne speech said the taken from the & {Boy ereruent is determined to victims may be buried in the| maternity ward of a Hamilton hospital Monday night by : . 2 press on with the changes--due rubble, his Jehovah's Witnesses father was located in a Hansen oak. sis se ss Sis UN Securit Oouncl an |to become law by the middle of National guardsmen, cordoned| oad home . e baby was taken to the Hose next year--even if the other off the area after the tornadoes; P!! rs a family court worker com- IRON HORSE FASCINATES CHILDREN parties do not co-operate blew in.off the Gulf of Mexico.| -Pleted neces making the infant a temporary UNITED NATIONS (AP)--|sion "prejudices the Israeli po- Politic al observers said the phe UN Security Council efforts to- sition." jmain Bun 48 to end a built-in eas : ' The 10 non-permanent mem-|Conservative majority in the jward a Middle East settlement \5-nation council |UPper chamber and ensure a vard of the Children's Aid Society, Protective Gate Pushed, Board States damage estimate was Mayor R. B. Mea advertise the gallery's sculpture ex hibit, which opens today and runs to Nov. 26. A preview of the charging stallion seemingly outweighs the aesthetic values of sculptor Bill Lish- To most children, a horse has fascination, even when it's a sculpture. Gregory made by dows. bers of the i jority i Twenty-five homes and appeared stymied today by new met twice Monday in an at-|Labor majority in the Lords as nty-fi romes ena 6 "Com fee ' ey : pape ; church crumpled as_ swirling OTTAWA: (CP) --- There is good evidence that one. or Bray, 8, 108 Colborne St. E man's welded seven - foot exhibit was held last night |{craeli insistence on direct talks tempt to resolve differences be-|long as it was in power in the winds cut ria separate paths) two people pushed up the protection railway crossing gate and Debbie Parker, 10, 127 horse. The horse, standing for gallery members and |with the Arabs and refusal to tween the two resolutions. Commons. j inward Mineen persons erireb at Dorion, Que., in October last year letting 5 bus load of Mary St., are no excep- on the sidewalk outside the néws media withdraw to pre-war bounda-| One proposal, drafted by Ar-| At present, there are more treated for injuries students run into tt 1 of a 10l-car freight train, the tions, as the image of a Oshawa Art Gallery, is to --Oshawa Times Photo pies, gentina, Brazil, Ethiopia, India,|than 1,000 peers--most of whom 2 5 $35 ~~ Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Mali and' Nigeria, spells out|never go to the upper chamber " e {Eban told Secretary-General U specific principles for a settle-|It is understood the aim is to De Gaulle Orders ; ). Report On Mrs. Timbrell Transport Commissioners said today. Twenty of he 46 people on the bus were killed. Board of hant Monday that Israeljment and asks the. UN repre-|reduce the total to about 300 ac- istands by its insistence on di-|sentative to "contact the parties|tive, voting peers who would re-| . rect peace negotiations with the|concerned in order to co-ordi-|gularly take part in debates. | Talks With lraq Anti-Trust Investigation Revealed 5 SHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. justice vt Arabs if any such talks are to/nate effdrts to achieve the pur-/ Apart from this major re- ' inane fy in eee mn : . iy aig eben : : = {be held. : pose of the resolution." form, the government's legisla-- PARIS (Reuters) -- President : a ; cat See Ase: | Fel ike " 'iga- Heard B V u 1c1a nquir " | Premier Levi Eshkol told the These principles. include Israe-|tive program for the coming 12 de Gaulle personally ordered uN autor ile inc Yr many é - but no been made as to whether any action should be department made the comments in a statement to a Wall Street Journal story which says the de- parliament that new li withdrawal-from' all Arab soil/months was much as expected. the opening of talks with Iraq The Conservatives previouslyjon the exploitation of [rac Rumaila region for oil} Te ited \Israeli . : aries w av -\seized in the June conflict and PRESTON, Ont. (CP)--Mrs.|Mrs. Timbrell revealed a strong | Waterloo CAS with some feel- er ta neat oa ae oh ead to the Arab state of bel-)served notice they would fight North i | : rest a ent Mea t tbe ; Arthur Timbrell, from whose|need for children and it ap-jings from a previous rejection| yl] back to positions it held at ligerency against Israel the other two main parliamen- despite British and U.S. govern- has in its files material for an anti-trust suit | home two foster children were|peared her "whole security is|y¢ ay adoption application in| the start ofthe June war. The other resolution by Can-|tary bills--one aimed at allow-/ment objections, French offi-) aimed at breaking up General Motors, the world's largest j forcibly taken by _ officials| children." |Kingston, Ont., in 1962. | Eban saléi Israel's attitude to- ada and Denmark states vague|ing the government to invest|cials said Monday. indu.trial corporation. Sept. 28, exhibited psychopathic) Jt said the basis for her reac-| "fhyen though her behavior is| ward two rival plans before the|principles and asserts that no|public money in specified indus-| The Irag Petroleum Co. as isn behavior and showed a strong/tion to the loss of the children quite psychopathic it is conceiv-|council--both of which would|nation in the area should "'per-'tries or even individual firms,;owned by British, American weg need for children, a jtdicial in-)was not the obvious cry about|ahle that this woman is uncon-|send a UN representative to the|sist in refusing to withdraw' {and another designed to inte-|and French interests, has al } ~ quiry was told Monday. {their separation from each| sciously motivated and is not/Middle East--would be deter-|troops that are on another's ter-|grate state-run road and rail/claim over the region which is| I THE TIMES ile d = A report prepared by psychol-jother but concerned Mrs. Tim-' aware of her real motives." mined by whether such a mis-/ritory against its will. transport systems more fully. (denied by the Iraqi government a ee fe] ay ae ogist Ruth Conley in August brell s personal needs. aera 7 CR ae Oe ee seat Beane cr aa 4g Grand Jury Repart -- P. 11 Merger Move -- P. 5 z Courtice Blanks Ajax -- P. 8 is of Mrs. 'Timbrell was 'ist {the 'Timbrell case by the cas) SOWIET UNMANNED SPUTNIK SEEN AS REHEARSAL entered as a sealed exhibit at/after the refusal to release the! je the inquiry last Thurs day.|girls. | ° Judge Harry Waisberg ruled it) ay analysis of an article writ- anding | : P Ann Londers--12 Ajex News--5 3 City News--11 | ® | be made public after urging|te, by Mrs. Timbrell in the round Station i omman ds newspaper men not to makelymilion Spectator shows it public anything pertaining 0]... designed to impress the the two sisters, Peggy, 5, and public with her having all the From AP-Reuters in orbit of a huge orbiting space Earlier in the day the Soviet 330 and 370 miles from earth. | : : nee Classified--16, 17, 18, 19 j Valerie, 3. ime in the world for the two MOSCOW. (CP)--Cosmos 186 platform, Union disclosed it had sent up The announcement on the soft a1 tim ( ' The ¢ 'ement. said Coss The inquiry was ordered by| girls and skillfully reminded the bie oF two" Soviet unmuned : Peet apak braus Rot an an still another satellite--Cosmos landing said: "'All systems on E ay ; ' aad Pi aca : ar OW mos as broug E = : : sa > Feehan BOD ts rate ag Pago 5 fog sal cig as Sputniks which docked and se- disclosed spot on earth at 189. It also continued in orbit, board Cosmos 186 have demon- F 20 nj 46 5 elease the s. Conley said. z bi , . . ' re at ce noae 1 Se ete Ae ea a | parated Monday, made a soft 11.20 a.m. after "automatic link- Tass said. strated at all stages of the Obituaries--19 children to Waterloo Children's} The analysis further shows Aid Society officials. lfacts twisted to suit ues. Tim- i two girls from brell's own purposes, she said. dee Sane goes, sine as de-| She said Mrs. Timbrell told veloped on the street and Mrs.|her that many people thought Conley was "thrown to the|Valerie was her own child and ground by two ot Mrs. Tim-|{she did not bother to correct brell's daughters. Mrs. Timbrell|them, aa oe was changed with abduction. Mrs. Conley said Mrs, Tim- 4 Mrs, Gonley,'s report saidjbrell obviously reacted to, the! Janding on earth today at the command of a ground station, an official announcement said. The use of a soft landing to end thé mission seemed to con- firm earlier indications that the docking was a rehearsal for a manned flight and the building up and other scientific tasks."' The other unmanned Sputnik, Cosmos 188, continued to orbit earth, it added. Tass news agency said Cos- mos 186 was brought to a soft landing within a pre-set area this morning after completing 65 revolutions of the earth, Cosmos 189 was the sixth So- viet satellite orbited around the in six days, spurring speculation that a third space spectacular in two weeks might be in the works Tass said launched into a- near-circular orbit at a distance of between Cosmos 189 was search, approach, berthing and docking with Cosmos 188 as well as during separation and the subsequent flight and land- ing on earth, a high level of re- liability in solving tasks radical- ly new to cosmonautics." It did not elaborate on these new tasks, Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--21 Theatres--14 Whitby News--5 Women's----12, 13