n} i y ; 4 $ # \ ' To Meet | Z THOUGHT FOR TODAY To let a fool kiss you is stupid; to let a kiss fool you.is worse. Oshawa Sime eS BE Ss ie -- WEATHER REPORT Cooler with showers ending to- night. Partly cloudy Saturday with little change in tempera- ture, VOL. 92--NO. 110 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1963 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash, TWENTY-TWO PAGES PM Flies | Kennedy OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis. ter Pearson flies to Hyannis Port, Mass., today for two days of talks with President Kennedy on old and new problems in Ca- nadian-American relations. Mr. Pearson has said his main Purpose is to renew a personal friendship with the president and establish an atmosphere of co-operation between the Ken- nedy administration and his new government. jginning of our regime. They will meet in the cozi-| "I don't consider it primarily, ness of the Kennedy comp:und)a meeting for negotiating any-| on Cape Cod, Mr. Pearson stay-|thing; it's for an exchange of| ing in the home of Attorney-| views. The exchange of views | General Robert Kennedy andj might lead to the beginning of| meeting with his host in the} negotiations when we get back." home of the presideat's father.| 'On trade, Mr. Pearson said Mr. Pearson said Thursday|that while he agrees in prici- after a final meeting with his| ple with reduced tariffs and re- cabinet before going to Hyannis; moval of other obstructions to Port that the subjects to be dis-|trade, there would have to be cussed are '"'very far-reaching| exceptions in any across-the- in character." jboard tariff reductions which) One of the more urgent mat-! work unevenly. | - ' e ters will be violence involving}. Canadian ships in American NOT TOO MANY ; | In res ports, linked to an tnter-union| "I hope that there aren't too) struggle on the Great Lakes,|™any exceptions which will Pre-| Shots were fired at a Canadianj vent the principle meaning any- ° freighter in Cleveland Thurs.{thing at all," he added. 'We've mr arges ribery "This latest incident under-| On the Columbia treaty, Mr.| : e Re ee he i sik ae lines the necessity of taking) Pearson said he would suggest) NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)--| The grand Jury charged thatyier declared a mistrial, the whatever action can be taken to|changes in the treaty which the/Teamsters President James R.|the defendants offered $10,000 to|jury having reported it was| standings reached on defence | and other matters, but there will be no formal agreements, | he added, Earlier he told re-| porters he regards the Hyanis| | Port meetings as only the start} of discussion on many things. | "It's not a negotiating meet-| ing, any more than the one tn} London was. It's a meeting to establish relations between the president and myself at the be-| at the rear of the armory were 'IREFIGHTER INVEST- Black Watch Armory in Mon- in shattered. (CP Wireponto) IGATES the bombing at the treal. About 40 panes of glass y | accepted the fact that if we are | going to get concessions we Vill MUST TAKE ACTION have to make concessions." | avoid what may develop into se-! Liberal party believes should be|Hoffa today faced new chargesja prospective juror, a similar| hopelessly deadlocked 7 to'5 for) rious incidents," Mr. Pearson| made. He said, however. he has\--attempting to bribe jurors injamount to the Son of a juror|acquittal. said. "I'll be talking about this! not been in touch with Premier|his deadlocked federal courtiand a "'promotion" to a Ten-| In dismissing the jury, Miller to the president. It's an import-/Bennett of British Columbia,|conspiracy trial here last year./nessee highway patrolman|said he was "frankly astonished] ant issue." |who objects to restrictions in| A five-count indictment re-|whose wife was on the jury.|at the history of attempted jury Of wider implication, the/the present treaty. The premier|turned by a special federal/The two jurors were replaced|fixing in this case" and di prime minister said he would!claims these limit the province|grand jury Thursday accused before the case went to the'rected the U.S. attorney to discuss Gefence, trade relations|in its financing of power proj-jthe labor leader with '"'aiding,| jury. |launch an investigation. and the Columbia River power) ects on the Columbia. jcommanding and inducing" ef- TRY ON LABOR COUNT | A special grand jury was development treaty. Also before flying off to Hyan- | forts to influence two jurors) The O.voaraid Hoffa whip picked Jan. 17 by Federal Dis- There may be some under-|nis Port, Mr. Pearson put the|and a prospective juror to vote} Siege Magee jtrict Judge Frank Gray Jr. and | i Pc lfor hi ittal jheads North America's largest! ore than 100 witne final touches to a letter to pro-|for his acquittal. ; lsingle union, was tried on|™ore than _Witnesses sum- vincial premiers suggesting a| In Philadelphia, Hoffa said he} aoe }moned to. testify during the royal commissi bicultural.|was not guilty and declined|Charges he conspired to violate) .ox+ three months. The indict- ism. Details wit net be oalcamment because he had pot ee nay by at ments. were returned in a re- | sapaiad until the premiers haye|Seen the indictment. He ap-|funds oe if in ectea foe le: port to Gray. Ipeared before a U.S. commis-|'T@msport finm in return for Holfa: was Russia-China indicted in five -| He said this point will be con- MONTREAL BLAST SHAKES ARMORY Hay River - Damages Deal Made OTTAWA (CP) -- Govern. ment compensation for homes damaged or destroyed in jlast week's floods at Hay River |and Fort Simpson in the North- west Territories will amount to 80 per cent of the cost of repair and reconstruction, up to a maximum $5,000, Northern Af- fairs Minister Laing announced today. The compensation cost will be divided 50-50 between the federal and territorial govern- ments,, he said. Federal aid would not apply to minor losses of $100 or less. His 'announcement said the | policy is in line with that ap- I pli i i i ers such!= te a bs, Aes plied in previous disasters such |p itain's ruling Conservatives as the 1050 Winnipeg flood, |and other anti-socialist parties Mr. Laing said it is. recog- nized that compensation will |have to be paid for losses other than homes, including movable property ad personal lings in some Cases. ARTHUR LAING New Victories By U.K. Labor LONDON (Reuters)--The op- day. belong-/39 important towns and cities, to their chances of power in the general sidered by the territories coun- cil at its special meeting in Hay |River next Wednesday, when compensation policy will be con- sidered. Mr. Laing also urged public support of flood relief fund drive. He said the fund "can be the means of restoring losses and damage that governments October, 1964. position Labor party hammered in town council elections Thurs- Labor captured 541 seats and control of the councils of some Jubilant socialists hailed the jresult as a heartening pointer gaining election expected within a year at the latest. The government's five- year term of office expires in The runaway victory more than recouped the 472-seat loss suffered by the Labor party in the 1960 town council elections, / No Clue Found To Blame FLQ MONTREAL (CP)--An explo- sion that was heard as much as four miles around rocked the Black Watch armory in central Montreal early today. About 40 panes of glass in ar- mory windows were broken, a rear door was knocked off its frame, and back windows in at least half a dozen homes and) buildings nearby were shat- tered. No one was injured. Detective Sergeant Leo Plouffe of the Montreal police bomb squad called it "the most powerful explosion we've had yet."" He scoured the rubble in the lane behind the armory for clues, There was no immediate evi- dence linking the latest explo- sion with the separatist Front de Liberation Quebecois, the self-styled terrorist organization that has claimed responsibility for other bomb attacks on ar- mories and federal institutions, but police said they couldn't discount FLQ involvement, ADMITS BOMBINGS Two mimeographed state. ments purporting to be from the FLQ were mailed Thursday to news agencies and newspapers. In them, the organization said it set off bombs at an army re- eruiting centre in Montreal, in which one man was killed, and ported that "'it blew my kitchen window into the next room." Lt. + Col. William Redpath, commanding officer of he Black Watch, said all reasona- ble precautions had been taken. But he had ordered his night staff to stay out of-lanes and the garbage area, he said, be- cause these were the most likely places for FLQ bombs. Watchman W. V,. O'Neill, 65, was killed by a bomb set off in the garbage area of the Mont- real army recruiting station April 20. The statements allegedly sent by the FLQ Thursday called O'Neill's death "an untoward accident" but. said revolution cannot be carried out without eath, The bombing today did not follow the usual FLQ pattern-- usuaily a call to The Canadian Press to announce an impend. ing action, and signs calling for Quebec's independence at the site of the explosion, Today, there were no calls and no signs. The statements also had an- nounced that "operation Jean Lesage"--the name the terror. ists gave to their last wave of bombings -- had finished, and they did not announce any new operation. at a Royal Canadian Legion hall in St. Johns, Que., 25 miles south of Montreal. Mr. Pearson Talk Planned For Moscow = is.reren 'i cua TOKYO (AP) -- Premier|€?s' International Union of Can- Khrushchev has won a prelimin-|@da on the Great Lakes. ary tactical skirmish in his ideo- jogical war with Commaniet! on. coe ee China. The first peace talks will). eel » nang ; "| minister will likely point out the be held in Moscow, not in Pe-| angers to labor amity betw king as Communist Chieftain) (278 jador amity between Man Westarng Bad Nooed ;Canada and the United States if v Math» aa Choi En lai soon aU aie ik ai ~Ni-lal| porting the SIU and its Ameri- iteemed Soviet BP agg snort ta can-born president Hal C, Banks we ervonenko Sday)continue to harass Canadian that his government accepted| shipping. * chance to study the letter. } briefed on the long and violent/for a hearing next Monday. bor peace, The International Brotherhood Six other persons, most of;of Teamsters has more than| them close friends or associates|1,500,000 members including of Hoffa, also were indicted,|some 20,000 in Canada. and justice department attor-| The trial, which began Oct. neys indicated still more indict-| 22, ended Dec. 23 when Federal ments might be forthcoming. District Judge William E. Mil- Result Uncertain In Racial Dispute sioner and posted a $19,000 hond counts, Indicted on single counts were; Ewing King, president of Teamsters Local 327 here; Al- len Dorfman, close friend. of Hoffa and a Chicago insurance broker; Larry Campbell, busi- ness agent for Teamsters Local 299 in Detroit, which Hoffa heads; Thomas Ewing Parks of Nashville, Camphbell's uncle; Nicholas J, Tweel, Hunting, W. Va., insurance executive and president of the Continental To- bacco Company of New York, and Lawrence W. M. Medlin, Nashville merchant, POLICE 725-1133 Khrushchev's invitation to send! The Canadian view, it is un- a delegation to Moscow to dis-/ derstood, is that the dispute be-| BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-- cuss ideological differences!tween the SIU and the CLC|Prospects for a final settlement splitting the Communist world.!over union representation on/of the Birmingham desegrega-| Khrushchev had proposed that ships of the Upper Lakes Ship-|tion campaign were uncertain) Mao head the Chinese delega-|ping Line of Toronto is purely|today despi te an optimistic tion, but nobody expected the Canadian and should not be "'ex.|Statement by Negro integration Chinese boss to agree to that.) ported' to the United States for|leader, Dr. Martin Luther King, Chou said the delegation will be} settlement J headed by Teng Hsiao-ping, top| Mr. Pearson is also expected f theoretician of the Chinese|to raise Thursday's shooting in.|2% agreement virtually had party, and Peng Chen, mayor|cident involving the Upper|Deen worked out except for of Peking. Lakes freighter James Norris in Sina steered series of state- , as if to dispel any illu-| Cleveland. Aah ath See aha si , Ph gat Peking's "hard line" is| Informants indicated that Ca-| City officials immediately said weakening, the. official! Peking nadian concern about the re-/any agreement worked out by People's Daily published a long! sumption of violence in the la-\2 biracial remains was "0 denunciation of Yugoslavia's| bor struggle was communicated|Pinding on them ; e ea new constitution. |to U.S. authorities in Washing.|tee, composed of business and Peking calls Yugoslavia's| ton. civic leaders, hasno official Marshal Tito a revisionist, the| One official here said there | Status ; same label it applies to Khrush-|is "instantaneous communica-| The committee resumes work would be resumed if no agree-|tempting to influence a jury is! ment is reached during the day|five years in prison and a $5,000) there were no massive demon-|fine on each count. | Strations Thursday earlier; This was the sixth federal in-| demonstrations resulted in the|dictment against Hoffa in as' arrests of approximately 2,400;many years. Two of the cases| and use of fire hoses and police'ended in mistrials, two in ac-} dogs to disperse Negro crowds.|quittals and one--a mail fraud| jindictment in Florida--is pend-| Jr King said Thursday night that cannot possibly: take into ac- count." : day were last when the vacancies filled Thurs- contested, . Haiti Threatened By U.S. Warships PORT - AU - PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters)--The government al- lowed a group of Americans to have sought asylum. States ambassador threatened t call in a U.S, naval force|reported to have gained asylum to ! a warned that demonstrations) The maximum penalty for at-|cruising off the coast, an em-jin the Brazilian Embassy after bassy source said Thursday. disguising himself as a bread The source confirmed exit/deliveryman to evade a guard visas were issued Wednesday] on the building. to a group of civilian evacuees} Newspaper men in the capital following a threat by Ambas-|were being closely watched by sador Raymond Thurston tojthe authorities and military cen- bring in the naval force. jsorship of telephone calls and The U.S. warships with 2,000)cables appeared tighter than a marines aboard were reported/week ago. Some reporters said sailing in Gonave Bay outside|they were followed by "tonton Haitian territorial waters dur-| macoutes"' (bogeymen) the ing the current crisis between|president's personal henchmen, Haiti and the neighboring Do-| Several diplomats charged at- minican Republic which has}tempts were made to monitor come close to war . jtheir telephone calls. The source also said Thurston} Two reporters said that while was told to stay in Port aulthey were in the telephone of- Prince instead of returning tO/fice here they heard a conver- Washington as previously|sation between Thurston and planned 'in view of the critical/the state department in Wash- situation" in Haiti, -- ington amplified over a loud- Henry Niblock, British charge| sneaker, bi statements also threat- whose workers. are on. strike and announced the appointment of a revolutionary tribunal to LT *'fore! Tesso) and VK BRUSSELS bot's wife agd four children Col. Max Alexis, deputy army leave Haiti only after the United) chief-of-staff and third in line to succeed Duvalier, also was Today's bomb was set off in|france and her five European a onefoot gap between the|Common Market partners hame Black Watch building and the|mered out a compromise "ac. storage area of a building next| 'on plan" on future market pol. door. It blasted a hole about|icy in a marathon 15-hour ses- three feet across in the brick ye which ended here early toe facing of the storage building . and made the wall sag over a| Conflict arose in a lengthy 10-foot-area, but hardly chipped| Council of ministers session be. the stone foundation of the ar-|'Ween France, seeking comple mory. tion of the community's farm policy, and the other members, The explosion took place de- spite extra precautions taken since the start of the wave of bombings two months ago. Army Provost Corps and city police patrol armories every 20 minutes and there is someone on duty 24 hours a day, but no one was seen in the lane. HEARS BLAST Only caretaker W. W. Thomp- son and the armory's fireman were in the building at.the time. Sgt. Henry Dollard, steward of the sergeant's mess, had just gone out for something to eat in a restaurant next door when the explosion.shook the build- ing. He said he thougitt at first it was an explosion in the kitchen of the restaurant. So did restau. especially West Germany, who wanted chiefly to make the come munity more outward looking. Eugene Schaus of Luxems bourg, current council chair- man, said the ministers reached agreement on a farm policy up to the end of the year. They also decided on a seven- point mandate to be given to the community's executive com. mission at tariff negotiations opening in Geneva May 16, and said they were ready to nego- tiate tariff cuts on farm pro. ducts. Diplomatic observers said this was an important move to. wards the United States stand that farm products must be in. cluded in the wide-ranging Gen- eral Agreement on Tariffs and rant owner Stan Woo, who re- Trade negotiations, d'affaires, said Thursday he managed to get exit visas for| po- three more British citizens, but Canadian Charge d'Affaires Peter Jennings, said the issuing of the visas had come to a halt. One diplomat said he believed the government was slowing up on visas to "play down the exodus of foreign nationals." Meanwhile, Clement Barbot, President Francois Duvalier's former security chief, was re- ported fast bec ming the sym- bol of opposition té the presi- dent. Barbot's brother and sister-in- law were arrested and troops were stationed outside the Ar- gentine Embassy, where Bar- Pro Football Hero's Death A Mystery CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS CALL A TRUCE ing. | The Negro leaders had called | a truce Wednesday while the} | Thursday that agreement had been reached on two of the four goals of the integration cam- paign. chev. The People's Daily reiter-| tion" between Canadian andjtoday. Rev. Ralph D. Aber- ated that it is "an inescapable} American authorities on inc'-|nathy, one of the --- gee duty" of all Communist parties} dents erupting in the long bat-|said a press conference wou sono couniere and aihar (ubilc GEORGETOWN British Gui- © Get Me Cumoslay, rene: 88 tor labor supremacy on therbe held ater facilities in the downtownlana (AP) --A British frigate stores, and improvement of job stood by in Georgetown harbor | opportunities for Negroes. today to back up Prime Minis- |dropped, and for the formation|can colony. ay ; |of an official committee of Ne-| The frigate Whirlwind carried groes and white persons to deal|a@ contingent of Royal Marines }with racial problems. jready in the event of violence INGTON (CP)--A state, Ohio, early Thursday. No one, against Upper Lakes Shipping| ' a a nhs er fficial said Thurs-| was hurt. 3 |Limited ships and personnel,"| Charge of parading without a tepholelans fo Uele: Keep Sae6n | ee ai t} A spokesman for the Seafar-| Leitch claimed |permit. Grgory was arrested/tial services going should the he department is not) 5 -| : : | ; : | 5 . strike} Sixie that any new acts of vio-| ers International Union of North| Vessels of the Canadian com-|Monday leading the first group|three-week-long general | strike > all in Britain fo concerned and would deplore} received no word of violence. |picketed in Toledo, Ashtabula | Gregory said at a press Con. ossible poten service i if th ffect Canada-} Ohio, Milwaukee and Chicago in|ference that he was beaten|/0°* ' 7. ae such acts if they affec i MMENT Rigel : 2 ea ial the territory on the northeast S. relations HAVE NO COMMENT a jurisdictional dispute. while confined in jail. Police t of South Ament a carat was commenting}, Officials of the SIU in Cleve-| 'The Norris was unloading irnn|Chief Jamie Moore denied it/©®@St of South America. problem of violence with Presi-| The dispute involves. the SIU| sewage plant. The vessel sailed) | versive pamphlets. Jagan rein- dent Kennedy at Hyannis Port,|of Canada, which represented] 3% hours after the shooting. . . \forced guards around essential] Mass., today and Saturday. | Upper Lakes Shipping Limited) Edward Neumann, attendant Magazine Claims jpublic utilities such as electri-| ' A 'sniper 'armed with a high-|« "ews until two years ago when at the plant, said he heard the} (AP)--The weekly|made a radio appeal to the! was being picketed by two) Congress. uae cont members of the Seafarers Inter-| The Canadian SIU has at- "He was thin and tall andithat Mao Tse-tung, 70, leader supplies are dangerously low national Union 'at Cleveland,|tempted to regain its lost|young by the way he ran,"\of the Communist party of/and the health of the colony is | ground and has brought the dis-| Neuman said. "He ran over to|China, has an incurable disease |threatened. ae Under the state of emergency,| dispatched a telegram to Prime| without turning on their lights."'|dated dispatch says the ruler of|gan's request to maintain pub- Minister Pearson calling atten-| Police found seven empty} Red China will be succeeded by|lic order, suppress rebellion and} tion to the_firing-on-the Norris,|} cartridges on the pier. Investi-| head of state Liu Shao-chi "who|ensure maintenance of essential lan ore vessel, gators said the shells were for|belongs to the right-centre of|services. The state of emer- biracial committee worked for sation 'U.K. Vessel King had said at a press con-| 2) bd Points on which agreement had been reached, he said then, gades."' | Great Lakes. Both King and Abernathy | bed The other two points sought|ter Cheddi Jagan's proclama- reat Lakes Violence = iti, i fused Sara Negro comedian Dick Greg-|to bolster the battalion of Cold- ory also was released on bond|stream Guards garrisoned in | ; : ; jresult in serious breakdowns. | | j repens i d twice last| Of an estimated 1,000 marchers resu ; have taken place in con-| America, meeting in convention) pany were fired upon ee | By tx OF battalion of iam with the Great Lakes|here, said the report also took| year in Toledo, This-year other) --™0stly teen-agers. They also hapa see thay - 'no| land said they had no comment| f Sept-Iles, Que., when|and asked U.S. Attorney Macon} A FOR GUNS m an Ottawa report quoting ' ore from Sept-lles, Que., when) la | SEARCH xU} Prime Minister Pearson as say-|'? Make on the shooting nor on|the shots were fired from a pier|0. Weaver to investigate the) Police raided homes in rt . city and water plants. ] 1 : : " | ; vered rifle fired buv'ets|it was replaced by the Canadian| shots and turned a flashlight on} Jagan, who proclaimed the pt the sides of a Canadian| Maritime Union with the ap-|the sniper, who fled the pier| Mao Will Resign ; LONDON pute into the U.S. lakes ports. |the boathouse and jumped into|and will retire before the end John Leitch, president of Up-|a car. Another man was driv-|of the year. |British Governor Sir Ralph} | 'It is clear that the Seafar- surplus .303 - calibre British the party and who believes in| gency falls short of martial law po International Union is re- Army rifles, some of which are|jpeaceful coexistence with the|and the constitution remains ge ference shortly after noon} provided for desegregation of Y g jagainst the 2,400 arrested be|theg strike-bound south Ameri- e . Deplored--Washington | after being held four days on.a|the colony. Also aboard were} } g ; | Inniskilling Fusiliers shipping dispute but it would be| the SIU by surprise. It also had| Upper Lakes ships have been| Were arrested. oy Bt Hens ee. 2 rusts ing he intends to take up the the labor troubles. jutting out from the westerly| charges. IGeorgetown for guns and sub. ' state of emergency Thursday,| ship, the James J. Norr.s, as it}proval of the Canadian Labor| and covered the rifle with a top- Beth magazine Time and Tide says|strikers, saying food: and fuel per Lakes Shipping of Toronto, | ing. They drove off in a hurry| The magazine in a Moscow-|Grey can issue decrees at Ja- suming its campaign of violence] sold in Cleveland stores. |west."" |force. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 é BALTIMORE (AP) -- Gene (Big Daddy) Lipscomb, a giant among giants of professional football, died today under mys- terious circumstances in a west Baltimore house. A defensive tackle with three National Football League teams for 10 seasons, the 31-year-old Negro was pronounced dead at Lutheran Hospital shortly be- fore 8 a.m. Former teammates, including one with whom he had been living for four years in Balti- more, identified the body. It = was sent to the morgue to de-| Television ptrsonality Pierre termine the cause of death) Berton plays the piano as which was listed by the hospital} chorus girls look on during as unknown. : rehersals for the Ottawa Phil- , > KLONDIKE CHORUS harmonic Society's annual Springtime party. Mr. Berton, now a resident of Toronto was born in Dawson cy, Yukon, The theme of this years party, taking place tonight, is the fabulous Klondike gold-rush days. (CP Wirephoto), 4