ACKET erentecese, ONO RLING PANT ck, brown, navy or brick i aa NG SWEATER small, medium and large exch"... 28,00 7.98 VEL, DEPT. 246 173 ATS hades of red, grey mix 0 7¥2. (200) 4.95 th laminated foam pad- tobacco, black. Sizes ge. (202) 8 fT ) shawl collar. Fine rib een or white with con- CKS 'aistbond. Colours ore oe Ae ' ag DEPT. 228-429 ITS 0 12. (271) 19 95 IR YG BOOTS ubber soles and heels, and half sizes 5 to a 12.00 | MALL LEVEL, NE 725-7373 ' (tO resem is wl DONALD MacDONALD TORONTO (CP) -- The New Democratic Party's Ontario provincial council was told dur- ing the weekend it is $88,776.94 in debt, nearly half of which is the result of the Oct. 17 provin- cial election campaign. Treasurer Edward Phillips re- ported the figuré to a meeting which rejected a proposal that the federal government should seize. the Sydney, N.S., steel mill without compensation to its owner, Dominion Steel and Coal Corp. "At the last meeting you asked for a review and now you are going to get it," Mr, Phil- t i lips told party members. The debt is made up of $47,- 571.08 in the current budget, which he said was boosted to accommodate preparations for an all-out effort in the election, and $41,205.86 in election ex- penses. * He said the central party's bank: credit is all used up and the only source of revenue is the riding aSsociations, each of which is expected to contribute 20 per cent of all campaign ex- pense money. The election debt -would be wiped out as riding associations came through with their quotas. 6 wt However, debts totalling more than $50,000 would be due within two weeks. Meanwhile, Julian Cwynn, NDP candidate in Ottawa West in the election, asked why the party had confidently predicted it would win when a secret poll clearly indicated it would place third. : The poll, which cost the party $7,614, showed the popular vote would be 39 per cent Conserva- tive, 39 per cent Liberal and 22 per cent NDP. The popular vote figures in the election were PCs 41; Liberals 32 and NDP 27. Provincial Secretary John od Harney said the pollsters warned that Liberals were tra- ditionally vague in their inten- tions between elections and there was Liberal confusion be- tween federal and provincial parties when the poll was taken last winter. The NDP was told the Liberal figure might drop by seven to nine per cent. The proposal that Ottawa #x- propriate the Sydney steel mill was made by Donald Nicholson, who accused Dosco of "shocking social irresponsibility in the Nova Scotia coal industry, the Wabana iron ore industry and the Sydney steel industry." " t mm Mr. Nicholson was referring to Dosco's announced plans to shut down its Sydney opera- tions. Party Leader Donald C, MacDonald said Finance Minis- ter Mitchell Sharp should im- pose spending priorities on the private sector of Canada's écon- omy as well as on the public. Mr. MacDonald said the fi- nance minister should take the advice of the Carter royal com- mission on taxation and remove tax concessions. to mines, oil companies and financial -¢institu- tions. : Ww TORONTO (CP) -- Leaders of the Ontario Conservative and Liberal parties said Sunday they are not prepared to follow the New Democratic Party's lead and reveal their financial accounts to the public. The leaders were commenting on figures made public Satur- day by the NDP showing that party was .$88,776.94 in debt. The figures, prepared for the party's provincial council meet- ing here, showed that the NDP came out of the recent Ontario election campaign with a $41,- 205.86 debt. The party budgeted $90,023.68 ELECTION HELPS PUT ONTARIO NDP $88,776 IN DEBT for expenses in the campaign, including $6,000 for the tour by provincial leader Donald Mac Dona!d and $53,723.68 for public- ity. The money actually spent was $80,444.19 Elmer Bell, president of the Ontario Progressive Conserva- tive Federation, said it is possi- ble for any party to give a set of figures '"'and yet have thoue sands of thousands of dollars spent by friends and sympathiz- a I If political donations were made tax-deductible it might be er to check the accuracy of figures on donations Home Newspaver Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Few brief snowf ies Tues. day. Variable cloudiness, Low tonight 25. High tomorrow 35, Che Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1967 Authe zed os Second Class Mall Post Office Deportment 10¢ Single Copy p Ottawa ond for payment of Postage in Cash 5S¢ Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 26--NO. 263 EIGHTEEN PAGES j| Pair Said Gravely Ill ~ In Dunnville District Strike ; , Signal |" <7 | | DUNNVILLE, Ont. (CP) --;mission would do a lJess-than- Dr. George Waldbott of Detroit,!complete job At Ford a specialist in allergies and de I can't think they (the com- scribed as a world expert on\mission members) would have fluorosis, said during the week-\taken the commission if they end that he has found two more,were going to do a whitewash Dunnville area residents seri-|job." ous ill with fluoride poisoning-| pr. Waldbott said he was not | He also said that people in|Surprised that doctors failed to this area 30 miles southeast of|find any traces of fluoride poi- \Hamilton believe a three-man|Soning in two area residents ex- investigating committee headed|amined by him. The two were by Dr. G. EB. Hall, former Uni-\referred to a Hamilton bone \versity of Western Ontario pres-|Specialist. jident, will do a "whitewash! 'Doctors are not aware of the \job."" disease unless it produces | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Workers at Ford-Motor Co. of Canada Ltd. have given their union negotiators a mandate to) call a strike if contract talks,| under way for 344 months, fail to achieve settlement. | The existing agreement. ex-| pires Dec. 1 but the United Auto} |Workers did not set any strike! aul i li ay } DONEVAN'S "BLUE DEVILS" TAKE COSSA HONORS \deadline. Dr. F. J. Donevan Col- Central Ontario Secondary along with co-captains Dane pionship 'Bev' Goulding 'goraq's Ontario plants at legiate Institute "Blue School Association senior Tutton and Mike Rose and trophy at Donevan this (oakyille. Windsor amaiea Devils" Saturday defeated high school football cham- assistant coach Ken Elas- morning. (See story on page and Ninwara Falls Quinte Secondary: School of chuk, displayed the cham- six.) Belleville, 15-6, to win the Rush Said pionship. Head Coach John Elliott of the Blue Devils, tres voted TORONTO ee inh puun| SAIGON (AP) -- North Viet. Prog a Fei rhiad se Men, Ha p(namese army regulars charged|sault after nightfall about six/there Nov. 1. mangled Friday by a time-bomb]i, force toward U.S. defence| miles southwest of Dak To. |REVISES FIGURES explosion while he slept, waS/lines near Dak To in the centrall Gommunist forces overran a@ | settlement its casualty figures, said 92 American and 635 North Viet- namese troops have been killed| in the heavy fighting. hospital igh as "holding |icans fired 105-millimetre how-/~o and held it for two hours, his own quite well. litzers point blank to hold them] yj eadquarters reported. U.S. headq i Rush was flung from his bed off. A military spokesman said an| in the Sutton Place Hotel, his) first reports of the fighting enemy force of unknown size as-| bargains for th the explosion He regained consciousness for|that paratroops of the Amer:can|pefore dawn brief periods Saturday, and}j73rq Airborne Brigade were awoke intermittently during! moving in to consojidate the po- Sunday. sitions. j 5 ad' reac! | y " 7 AT: lines had' been breached and!ynder an umbrella of mortars|W@S fought at such close quar ters that 92 North Vietnamese ri A outside the U.S. d D orime-' |daylight after inflicting light ag le the U lefence perim |casualties on the defenders, mil- Affected are 11,000 workers in In 'secret ballots cast Sunday, --Oshawa Times Photo the workers from the four cen- overwhelmingly to) give the UAW a free-hand in| Major New Conflict Seen "e835 wage parity | workers. Last week's settlement Holding On At U.S. Line Near DakTo jivscsco-g ee ' ae, feces ; ' 4, Wage parity by June, 1970, But brigade came under frontal as-|large-scale fighting erupted no firm agreement was reached with U.S. auto on wage parity in the Ford U.S scri Sunday ght by : 5 A 'a ES 1 : SS aD "We want parity now, not in| described Sunday night by a highlands tonight and the Amer-| yijlage only two miles from Dak The U.S. command, revising 1979) Fd Bruce, president of| {Hamilton Local 707, told 2,000 voting workers Sunday night in the Hamilton Forum. His local 7 | rj ate . i Sian 5,400 workers at} stomach and throat ripped by caid some of the U.S. defence saulted the village of Dak Ranh| An all-day battle ipibed he Ford Oakville plant | The Communists withdrew at bodies were found only 25 yards! Three Wolves Slain Police today held a sign-lan- guage interview with Rush and Associated Press correspond: itary spokesmen said. One civil- jent John Lengel reported from|jan also was killed Elsewhere in the ground war, ja base camp of the U.S. 25th In-} : |Peterborough Area | PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- the fight for) AS SOLDIERS GO BY | viewed. | ment. REBUKES CRITICISM Perry home Sunday, Dr. Waldbott said he has in {terviewed about 20 persons and has found four definitely suffer- |' jing from fluorosis and suspects Done changes take place. This another four or five cases. Three weeks ago he said on a| He suggested biopsies, the re- CBC television documentary;™0val and examination of tise two|Sue, should be carried out. Fluo- |that he had discovered inter-|Tide could attack the liver, kid- cases in nine persons | Dr. Waldbott said in an inter lview he instructed those persons problem, Dr. Waldbott said, are installation of further anti-air rosis to see their physicians and Pollution equipment by the Elec- seek immediate hospital treat with what he diagnosed as fluo In an interview from his Port | Minister Matthew Dymond changes in the bones," he said. i|"'What I am interested in is catching these cases before can take 20 or 30 years." neys or other organs, Two solutions to the Dunnville ric Reduction Co. of Canada Ltd. at their fertilizer plant or company subsidization of sus- pected victims so they can move away from the area. The disease is reversible, he _ Said, and can be treated by re-eliminating fluorides from jected criticism that the com-'drinking water, air and food. etna eer i) NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Bonn Terrorists Make Threat BONN, Germany (AP) A terrorist group which fantry Division 74 miles north-/Three wolves, believed to have jeast of Saigon was hit by 110) jain 26 sheep in the South Mon- rounds of mortar fire Sunday/achan Township area, were re- see Noe cage et a Phe (the battle zone that a major Srihing Ble ibr f oments (new action was under way after ombing. He had drier m Sia day of light skirmishes along of consciousness. the highlands 'battlefront Vietnamese boys peer through barbed wire of their into the camp at Que Son, 30 miles southwest. of Da Far-|l¥ have doubled their strength! night, wounding 33 Americans. ported killed during the week-| Tefugee camp to watch men Nang, after their village claims to have set off explosions at the Greek and Boli- vian embassies in Bonn announced today it is planning | new actions throughout the world to avenge the death of U.S. intelligence officers say the North Vietnamese apparent- who talked "fo Rash. since she ao Doge ite: one Sage a ae 20 eR Ory miles away, a platoonjend : | of the U.S. 1st Cavalry was burned. The village had ie bg tig stig wie 1 eas aha tat . rg gon moved from his home into the said the North Vietnamese had) Some 5.000 or 6,000 Americanjof South Vietnamese militiamen) 'The wolves were trapped in al" Division walk by.. Children hecn ce Hhoen borin ial ond Rg ake oo an ou ement in a ; in October. "|moved reinforcements in after|soldiers face the Communists on|and civilian engingers were am-|12-acre ficld: belonging to Bruce) nq their families, almost a Cong and North Vietna t the Bonn office ssociated Press. The pogn hotel tate in "Hlosing more than 600 men killed) what became known as the sec-|bushed while en route to a con-|Fisher where most of the sheep " " letter, typewritten in Spanish, did not: say when or The 44-year-old Toronto busi-|in 11 days of battle. ond front--the first is below the|crete bridge the Viet Cong hadiwere killed in the last three thousand in all, were moved army in the past where the new actions might take place. It was mailed at months. --AP Wirephoto a Bonn post office Sunday. hessman was to appear Friday | Lengel reported the airborne|demilitarized zone--after fierc2,| mined, for preliminary hearing in con- i : ii Pe ae nection with a $100,000,000 stock fraud. Montreal police Saturday picked up a young woman be- lieved to have visited Rush in his hotel room here. The girl was later released by CLERGYMAN ASKS EXPLANATION U.S. ROLE | Yecnund Conte-Five Otter iade SAN'A, Yeman (AP) -- One powerful tribal leader on 'Johnson Has Brisk Weekend the royalist. side has promised three tribal chiefs on the republican side that he will observe a_ ceasefire in the five-year-old Yemer? civil 1 ar, a conciliation committee Montreal police who arrested an said today. unidentified 33-year-old man. | , : | The man was brought to) } e e | . Bie on en Defending Vietnam Policies _%w,0tawa~ 1 Link Planned believe the man is linked to the | TORONTO (CP) A new freeway. linking Ottawa | and Highway 401 at Johnstown will be built initially as 'a tration's top officials have been|policy and appealed for united; two-lane highway, Highways Minister George Gomme "deliberately misleading th e!support in the war said today. Mr. Gomme said in a statement that 'when publi¢, the press and the Con-| Dr. Lewis, however, told the! traffic volumes warrant,'. the proposed new Highway 416 gress through flat lies, through|president "there is a rather; will be improved into a four-lane, controlled access route half-truths. and through clever|general' consensus that some- : oe : use of statistics that distort.'"' It/thing is wrong in Vietnam." called the president's news con-| The clergyman went on ference "well organized for a) "We wonder if some logical White House snow job. straightforward explanation | mel In THE TIMES Today <e = The report, released in ad-| might be given without endan- : vance of Sigma Delta Chi's na-|8ering whatever military or po City Womon Kiiled--P. 9 tional convention opening litical advantage we hold y : Wednesday in Minneapolis,|While pledging our loyalty we Bylaw Oficer--P. 5 Minn., charged the state and de-|aSk respectively why?" Generals Lose, 9-4--P. 6 e fence. departments and the Na-| The minister, described. by E tional Aeronautics and Spacejparishioners as a conseryative| Administration are the worst of-|Southern Democrat with roots! fenders in the public informa-'deep in Alabama, said tion field. "We are appalled that appar- For the president, the'sandy- ently this is the only war in our haired Dr. Lewis doubtless pro-|history which has had three | vided an unwanted climax to altimes as many civilians as mili-| 5,100-mile Veterans Day week-|tary casualties. It is particu-| end tour that took him from|/@tly regrettable that to most : : : nations the struggle's purpose} Fort Benning, Ga., to the cat-|appears as a form of neo-colo- rier Enterprise off the Califor-'nialism,." nia coast, then back east. When the record escorted} In appearances at military Johnson to the presidential lim-| bombing but did not place the bomb in Rush's bed. | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Johnson spent a whirlwind |weekend defending his Vietnam |policies, then listened in church as a Virginia clergyman bluntly suggested the president should publicly explain the American- role in the war. This challenge was put di- rectly to Johnson by Dr. Cotes- worth Pinckney Lewis during Sunday services at Bruton Par- ish Episcopal Church in Wil- liamsburg, Va. The Episcopal Church in the U.S. is part of the worldwide Anglican commun- ion. ' The president and Mrs. John- son, daughter Lynda and her fi- ance, Marine Capt. Charles S. Robb, sat in a front row pew-- barely 10 feet from the Episco- pal rector--as he put his ques- tions. The Johnson administration's jpublic information policies NEGRO 'MAYOR SWORN IN jcame under attack a few hours Carl B. Stokes, his wife eighth largest city. The |later from the Freedom of In- oath was administered by formation Committee of Sigma Municipal Judge Anthony |Delta Chi, an. 18.000-member Kim Philby Keeps Mum MOSCOW (Reuters)--Kim Philby, the Briton alleged to} have spied for Russia for 30 years befaye fleeing to Moscow in 1963, met three Western jour- nalists by chance here Sunday night. The journalists saw Philby at a_ concert in the Moscow Con- servatory. He was with Melinda MacLean, divorced wife of for- mer British diplomat Donald MacLean who. defected to Rus- sia in 1951. The couple seemed surprised and embarrassed by the encoun- ter and refused to answer any questions or to confirm reports ; that they married following) Shirley just behind him, Mrs. .MacLean's divorce last) takes the oath of office to- Friday and Saturday he- ousine affer the service, shook} summer. | day to become mayor of A. Rutkowski, a longtime {Professional journalism society, bases Philby at first refused even to| Cleveland, the nation's friend of the new mayor. The committee said in a re- REY. C. P. LEWIS fore going to Williamsburg, his/hand and murmured a few speak English, ' --AP Wirephoto |port that some of the adminis- «+» Blunt Sermon Johnson defended his Vietnam|words, Johnson simply nodded, li sii s 4 i t