see them e Notions Fri., Nov. gs includ- Ministers he pillars being de- sweepers, Cleaner, Shredder, | charge. rance off ious loca ANCE s, baby dolls, yours. Broken 90 1g Shoes hone or Mail Orders) ack and brown in the group. EPT. 338 TABLE d enamel metal stove high -- 36". Ives. Has its own tlet. AL, each IONS 's used to create ox 52", Just ie iving room. PHONE 725-7373 ee F | Home Newspaper - Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and Ineighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, seheck all DL. 26--NO. 255 10¢ Single Copy 5Sc Per Week Home Delivered She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1967 Weather Report More rain moving in from west will cover Southern On- tario late tonight. Low night, 45; high Saturday, 45, to- Authorized as Second Class Mail Post' Office Department Ottowa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-TWO. PAGES W TYPE OF CRIMINAL THE CANADIAN PRESS * . Py . wee Police in various parts of Can- © are faced with a new type f criminal following a rash of plaints of deadly Halloween ats handed out to children. In Toronto, police visited Mehools in the east end while ind trucks toured the streets aring warnings to parents to treats received by their children. At least 12 apples containing parts of razor blades had been Ys » recovered Two children were cut by razor blades--one boy when he bit into an apple and a girl when a piece of blade in an apple sliced her finger. In London, Ont., police report- ed more than 20 incidents of booby-trapped treats, including Moth-balis covered with choco- Tate and apples containing razor Dlades and pins POLICE G A Inspector Len Elgie said one of the apples has given police a strong lead toward at least one suspect. He said the apple was handed out at one of four houses to a youngster accompanied by his father. "Several sections of the Crim- inal Code could apply in charg- ing persons responsible, but we will have to talk to the Crown attorney before we can reach a definite | decision,"' Inspector Elgie said. ~ In the suburban Ottawa town- ship of Nepean, parents were warned to cut open apples after| several people complained chil-! dren had suffered cuts from razor blades in apples In Edmonton, a police spokes- man said a number of parents) found razor blades embedded in| candy and apples. A small girl| and two boys, aged nine and 14| found pieces of razor blades in| their treats following the annual Halloween shellout. The only injury reported was to the girl who cut her finger on @ razor blade in an apple. Lucy Blonjeauz told police her son Collin, nine, returned home from a trick-or-treat excursion and bit into one of the apples. A piece of a razor blade was found in the apple before he could swallow it. § don, Council, Booby-Tra Found In Four Cities a L TWO-YEAR-OLD Michel Hazen of Toronto - displays a Hallowe'en aple contain- ing a razor blade, one of 26 police say were handed out warned Thursday the ped T to children in Hallowe'en. A blade was dis- it covered in Michael's snatched away another just Mr. Gordon said some govern Toronto on when apple one apple by mother who paign "Herman Nardell, 14, told Ed- monton police that a man car- rying a' box of. chocolate bars gave him one on Halloween night. The boy took the wrapper off and found a 14-inch piece of razor blace in the bar. He threw it away and called police. Police in Calgary reported! "one or two" cases of pins! no injuries, 1]1-Year-Old | | year-old boy placed pieces of|8 razor blades in some apples! given to children here Hallow- e'en night. police warned parents to exam- ine treats handed out to their|ture store burned in other areas Riot Police, Troops Sent To Gary, Indiana m:"="=. children Tuesday evening. Fifteen pieces of blade were found in apples in an east-end| area and another dozen in west! Toronto. Two 'children were injured.| One west-end child suffered al} cut mouth and another a cut fin-| ger. In the east end an apple} Snatched from the mouth of a two-year-old contained part of a police and National Guard|many blade. Nellie Elder broke open a soft! rac candy bar given to her son, | disorders during Tuesday's city) : : Richard, 11, and found a com-'ejection in which a Negro is!County " Democratic Chairman) we ourselves are engaged in it! John G. Krupa, who is not sup-!or not,"' plete blade. Rrabs Killed - In Aden Riot ADEN (Reuters)--Five Arabs were killed and at least 45 wounded in gun battles between rival nationalist groups in Aden! today. But as the dust settled after 12 hours of clashes, the South Arabian armed forces reconcili- atlon committee said represent- atives.of the two groups agreed to a ceasefire. Mortars, grenades and auto- matic weapons were used in bloody fighting between the Na- tional Liberation Front and the Front for the Liberation-of Oc- cupied South Yemen, apparently vying for position in anticipation of British withdrawal later this month. Fighting broke out a few hours after Britain announced it would pull out its remaining forces and grant independence to the South Arabian Federation in the second half of this month, instead of Jan, 9, as planned earlier, WINSTON - downtown mained sealed off today follow-) ing a night of racial violence|the violence on "a jand looting put down by 400 na-|hoodlums who have taken ad- \tional guardsmen and helmeted! vantage of a situation.' i | "This is the excuse they have Boy Suspect | Three Negroes treated for|been waiting for. : {gunshot wounds were among 16| "We're going to stop it. Wha- TORONTO (CP)--Police are |Persons injured, including seven |tever force it takes to stop it, investigating reports that an 11- policemen, and 51 persons were) we'll use it." Negro leaders also called for sec-|an end of the violence. tion was quieted by early morn-| Rev. J. T. McMillan of the ing, firebombings and reports of| Winston-Salem Broken pieces of blades were Sniper fire kept police and fire-| National Association for the Ad- found in 27.apples in two sec-/men busy in other sections of tions of Toronto Thursday after the city. : | police. rrested. running for mayor. Governor Roger D. Branigin|porting Hatcher, disagreed on \said he issued the callup alert|the need for troops election eve.|geous move' in the United Na-| Way: |Thursday because of "jnforma-| Hatcher said: "I am absolute- |tion, which I believe reliable, in-|ly. unaware of any imminent dicates imminent danger to the|danger to the peace of the Gary \peace of the Gary community." |commun IN.COLCHESTER-HANTS : 16 Hurt, 51 Arrested In Winston - Salem Riot SALEM, Winston-Salem Although the downtown GARY, Ind.' (AP)--State riot) Branigan refused to say howjbeen a change in policemen troops are being ordered into|would be sent in, or when, war in ally tense Gary to prevent) Democratic candidate rd Hatcher. and ; N.C.jbut there were no found in apples, but there were|(AP)--An eight-block section of|persons wounded outside the tic r e-/downtown area. Mayor W. C. vancement of Colored People,| | said: "This riot is adding injury A service station and a we the city, to the race and to racial understanding. | reports of Benton blamed bunch of| at a money ment charging chapter. of the Jentury most (CP Wirephoto) their 0 as he was about to bite into Police located this blade they cuit Medicare Dallying Could Defeat Liberals TORONTO (CP)--Walter Gor-jfor instroduction of a compre- president of the Privyjhensive medical care plan. Medicare was a major plank "But when you agree to gO ambassador to through with ohe, you shouldjhim only once during his three live up to it, especially if it was|years in Vietnam and that was Liberal government may losejin the Liberal election platform)made during an election cam-jto complain ahout. something| meeting Nov. 9 support of the ordinary people if|in 1965. it backs down on medicare | Speaking to a group of.Uni-;ment programs should be put/ment and members of Parlia versity of Toronto alumni, hejoff in the need to cut federal) ment are to retain the confi-| 'Cong Uses Human Shield To Attack Loc Ninh SAIGON (AP)--Herding civil ians in front of them as human Cong prolonged The number of Viet Cong reported aT-\ killed in six days of fighting for their services. Everyone dnsprwa|itroen past 200 sire bare Under cover of a mortar barr- Cong made a ground assault on newly arrived reinforcements shortly after midnight, and spo-) jradic action was reported more "T believe that if the govern said his government shouldjspending as a step in combat-'dence of the ordinary honor its July 1, 1968, deadline/ting inflation. ; vA chological reasons, others, they must again a program that can mean better health care and the ab-/ sence of financial worry for so! many of our citizens." He said doctors need not fear being treated like civil servants; under the medicare scheme, "They are entitled to be p: tularly* well remunerated for relatively |working lives, the members of : \the medica] profession must not only repay' the large sums of Gy Ss them art borrow for their education but jalso, to save up for their retire- f The former finance minister | 4m lashed out at British-owned Do-), minion Steel that shutdown of its Sydney, N.S., works would not have been car- ried out in 'ta rough, brutal 19th way" and the re lived in Canada. the | April 1. people in other countries." Gordon said there has Mr. and_ troops] public The | lion, he said. stance Vietnam that Rich-| heavily upon the consciences of! Lake free men everywhere whether He said he knew nothing of business prompted Hawker Siddeley Ltd. to close down Dosco by next reasons "But I do. question the wisdom of allowing decisions of this im- . . to be made by concerning government's tions in urging the United States) reats GO MAY GO BEYOND O TORONTO (CP)--The GO transit system, operated by the Ontario government, may be ex- panded eastward to Oshawa and The commuter trains now'run on a_ 60-mile route between Hamilton west and Bay Ridges, on the outskirts of Metropolitan = |Scholarships Bowmanville, today. it was repo OTTAWA (CP)--Dr. Michael C. Hall of Toronto, an_ or- thopedic surgeon and medical } |teacher who spent three years j jin Vietnam, said Thursday that #} |many Vietnamese students who train in Canada under two-year provided by this jcountry are draft-dodgers who never return home. This was only one of several charges made *by Dr. Hall, who served in Vietnam under a Ca- nadian external aid office con > |tract from 1964 until last April, lin an appearance before the Commons external affairs com- mittee He said nearly all his recom- mendations for Canadian medi- jcal aid to Vietnamese civilian | war casualties were ignored. He said Herbert 0. Moran, former director of the external aid office and now Canadian Japan, wrote ried Toronto, in the east. The Telegram says the gov- | Doctor Blames Martin. For Niggardly Viet Aid Dr. Hall had told a newspaper man Dr. Hall also questioned fig- ures given the Commons Oct. 11 by External Affairs Minister Martin showing that Canada ranks third in foreign aid to Vietnam with a total of §$8,- 300,000 since 1953 He said the U.S., France, Japan, West Germany, Austra lia and Thailand have all given more aid to Vietnam than Can ada and that he failed to under- stand Mr. Martin's statement Andrew Brewin (NDP--Toron- to Greenwood) said Mr. Martin should be called before the com- mittee to give an explanation The Liberals made a last-min- ute effort to put Maurice Strong, present director of ex- ternal aid, in the witness box but the Conservatives said Mr. Martin could speak for himself. The minister, Mr. Strong and Dr. Hall are all expected to ap- DR. MICHAEL HALL | ernment has chosen Oshawa, 13 miles east of Bay Ridges, to be the next terminus. Bowman- ville, another 11 miles east, will ' have the service in 1949, the newspaper says. OTTAWA SHAWA Government <4 comment ne newspaper' says official announcement of the expansion will be withheld until the legis- spokesmen de» laturi e begins its session, probae bly in late January. (CP)--Maurice; Mr. Martin sz Strong, director of the External' statement that Aid Office, testified today that | Saigon Reported Grateful Doctor Back In Canada d in his openin Hall wa the--oftiest-mot and that many of the th tivated bs 18 had said were not without justi. South Vietnam's minister of health expressed gratefulness that Dr. Michael Hail returned fication beast. to Canada. in Vietnam Mr. sph, enced in Vietnam. pear at the committee's next .».. Aid A Mess people! who elect them, then for psy-| as well' as not put off shields, Viet Jaunched a today on Loc Ninh short age, the Viet infantry have to {than 12 hours later. ericans and Coal annouticed its owners which | WASHINGTON National Liberation the} bears so Ambassador Arthur said Thursday. Reports today said three 28 Viet 7 were killed and 34 Americans Corp.. wounded, The defenders of Loc Goldberg Claims U.S. Would Join UN In Talks United States would join in a United Nations invitation to the the question & Front of South Vietnam to participate in| Johnson administration has. said|strike~deadline at Chrysler fol-| "Canada's |Peace talks on Vietnam if thelit would accept the front in an|lowing a_series of bargaining} ~|UN Security Council feels such|adyisory capacity to a North|Sessions between subcommittees a bid should be extended, U.S. Vietnamese delegation and that, Thursday. Goldberg jn any event, the issue of front participation is not insuperable. from Earlier in his testimony, Gold- the one it obtained at_Ford.The; itiate proposals for such an Mvi- herg promised to "preserve Férd pact..which included gains "coura-|tation but would not stand in its with all the resources at' my ¢@al to $1 an hour in wages| He-said the U.S. would not in- And, he told the -U.S forces|U.S. 25th Infantry attack have reported a total of total|Americans and 23 South ed in the six-day battle. U.S. officers said turally restricted" Ninh, grown to about 5,000 with arrival of a battalion from the Division namese killed and 66 Americans next and 74 South Vietnamese wound-|is the Viet/U.S Cong tactic of sending civilians ahead of the attack forces "na- strike against the defend-|said the union president, Walter ers' answering fire in the first p stages of fighting today around (negotiations Saturday afternoon the town, 72 miles north. of Sai-|in the' drive to reach a settle Chrysler | Next Target UAW Says DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto Workers union said Thurs- Viet-\day it will strike Chrysler Corp Wednesday, if no contract reached by then with the third-biggest auto-maker in the The UAW, in its 57th day of a Ford Motor Co., will join Reuther, Chrysler gon near the Cambodian border. | ment. Cong} id-fire gatling guns. (AP )--Th ake of the Viet Cong guerrillas, remains if its stand would be decisive on until local agreements are In previous statements, But the defenders hit the Viet Cong with artillery, air strikes auto-builder, remained out of and €-47 planes armed with rap Ford, second-biggest U.S. production because _local-level jcontract disputes remained un- jsettled at about a dozen Ford |plants in the U.S. The strike has resulted in the layoff of thou- jsands of Ford workers in Can jada | The U.S, national contract set- tlement reached at Ford} \last week and signed by com-| pany and union officials last) Monday. The strike, however,| technically in effect) | was reached at all Ford plants. The UAW announced the The union is striving to win Chrysler a. contract like command" to get the UN Secu- and fringe benefits at the end of} Senate rity Council to "carry out its to stop the bombing' in Vietnam foreign relations committee, the|clear responsibilities under the x could help mobilize world opin- United States would approve alcharter with respect to Viet- 'TY history, Reuther said ibid to the front, the politicall nam," Bribery Charged In Byelection" TRURO,. N.S. .(CP)--Robert Stanfield ended Thursday his. campaign for Monday's federal byelection in Colchester-Hants as the two independent candi- dates in the running charged they had beech offered bribes to withdraty from the contest Mr, Stanfield, national leader of the Progressive Conservative party, ended his campaign with a low-key reception at Windsor, in the Hants. part of the two- county' riding, Tonight he will be in Halifax to address the an- nual meeting of the Nova Scotia PC Association. Elwood Smith, a New Demo- i crat campaigning as an_ inde- pendent, said he has asked the chief electoral officer, J. M. Hamel, for an inquiry into the bribery charges. Mr. Smith said in a letter to Mr. Hamel that "on Oct offer of money was made to en- courage me to withdraw from the campaign ... . The offer indicated that I would be paid my nomination fee and possibly additiénal money to cover ex- penses."" Robert Kirk, running as an in- dependent Liberal, said he re- ceived not only bribes, but threats on his life, He said the 24 an- bribes were offered in person by individuals he would not name The threats were made by telephone and became so violent" that "I had to get a doctor to came and give my wife a needle for her nerves." Mr. Kirk said he would not make a pre-election protest be- cause it might hurt his chances and, at the moment, he thinks. he can defeat Mr. Stanfield. In Ottawa, Mr. Hamel said he has not yet received the letters from Mr. Smith although he re- ceived a telegram Thursday in- forming him, they are en route, He said that. the Elections Act provides that postponement of the byelection may occur only as a result of the death of a candidate between nomination day and polling day. As for allegations of bribery to a candidate to withdraw, he said that he is able to investi- gate these only if an elections officer such as a returning offi- cer, returning officer's clerk or deputy returning officer ap- pears to be involved. Legal action on the basis of a bribe would have to-be 'aken by the individual concerned through the norma! law enforce- ment agencies, the biggest auto indus-! the third year, is contract gain in U.S ~ CANDIDATE'S LIFE THREATENED Jury Rules Father Held ARCADIA, Fla. (AP)--A cor- oner's jury ruled Thursday night that James Richardson and "other persons unknown" |should be held for first-degree | murder in the parathion poison- ing deaths of his seven children. | The jury said it found the deaths of the Richardson chil-| > jdren occurred "by premeditated jdesign"' and were caused "by |parathion put in their food." eSheriff Frank Cline testified authorities. have linked the} | deaths of three other children in | | the Richardson family to poison- | jing. He said detectives in: Jack- | |sonville had reported the poison- | ing deathsCto_him by telephone Cline said he planned to fly to | jJacksonville today to continue the investigation, External Affairs Minister, Martin said Canada stands third He said before the Commons in April after three years work- ing for the External Aid Office He told the commit tee Thursday that Canada's aid program there is a mess Strong said he did not *, mention the view of. the Viet- namese minister in "'any person- Suitable al sense" but only as indicative Poses of the problems Dr. Hall experi- in foreign aid to Vietnam on a Hlist prepared by the Organiza- |tion for European Co-Operation jand Development. Canadians had nothi {0 apo- logize for in. tl oreign aid external affairs committee: that|now going to Gounthax the Saigon minister told a ( ana-| OECD ad. R ed out < inte dian official that he was person-! ¢o the quality of its aid ally grateful. that the External Ste Matin aa Th , ss Aid Office had- arranged for the! sae lh shies eived a Toronto doctor's return to Can-| MeSsase Thursday from a Cae ada nadian medical team in. Viet. Dr. Hall returned to Canada\"@™M Sa%ing current Canadian aid projects there are timely, useful and deserve support. He said the team: has recom: mended that Canada send more packaged hospital units despite Dr. Hail's criticism that some of the equipment in them is not to Vietnamese pur: Nasser Accuses | U.S. Of Obstruction CATRO (AP)--A frequent spokesman for President Nassef Later, however, he said Can-\accused President Johnson ada is "fourth or fifth' on the|today of deliberately blocking a |OECD list ment that Canada ranked third. He named at least six countries'a confidant of Nasser and edi« w Vv hich ietnam than Canada Mr. as $1,726,104,000 by $47,292,000 by | 244,000 by Canada jbutions of France, |many and Thailand, 'all coun tries named by Dr. Hall as big- play this role in the foreseeable ger contributors than Canada. Martin submitted a showing expenditures in 1960-66) Arabs the Japan and $3 provided more aid to list US Middle East settlement. His ace cusation came 24 hours after a meeting between Nasser and a Dr. Hall said Thursday he |coulc not understand Mr. Mar-j tin's Oct. 11 Commons state-| White House envoy, Mohammed Hasshnein Helkal, tor-in-chief of the semi-official newspaper Al Ahram, said Johnson cares little, for the and hopes the, Jewish vote will re-elect him. He said the United States is ; the only power that can achieve He did not mention the contri-|a decisive solution to the crisis lfuture. West Ger-jin the Middle East, but "it ap- pears the United States will not 'nn * NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 'Rotten Management' Sidestepped OTTAWA (CP) -- An oppo specified in connection with a request that names be State Secretary sition sharge by Judy LaMarsh that there are many ifstances of "rotten management" within the CBC was turned aside in, the Commons today. New Democrat Leader Douglas said a "very serious charge had been levelled by Miss LaMarsh in her statement 'on television Wednesday night Six Masked Men Take $14,000 FRANKLIN CENTRE, Que men entered a' dentist's home late the dentist and four members of his with about $14,000, the dentist reported today (AP) -- Six masked, armed Thursday night, bound family and made off A son of Dr. Irenee Frappier was shot in the left shoulder. The son, was discharged after treatment in a hospital, but pier said the bullet still has to be removed, Russia Launches Another Satellite ° MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Russia today launched Cosmos 190, the latest in a series of unmanned satellites, the Soviet news agency Tass announced. Russia scored a space first Monday by linking and separating two Cosmos 3 satellites by remote control. Both satellites, *188, were Jater brought back to earth. Cosmos 186 and ..In THE TIMES Today .. One Year in Jail --- P. 11 Treatment Plant -- P. 5 Whitby Victorious -- P. 8 12 Ann Landers--~12 Ajax News--5 City. News --11 Classified --16, 17, 18 Comics---21 Editorial----4