-- ' read by Chief Justice Robert Taschereau in the absence of ailing Governor - General Georges Vanier, heard nothing New Kin ' 'THOUGHT FOR TODAY reet Sidewalks @ | : - Sasi fig dan ia Be Stalled -- P. WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy tonight and Money still talks, but it doesn't . Saturday with a few scattered ; seem to speak with the same showers. Winds light, : authority any more, : : : oe ree, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1963 Cttene, and tor "commen" af feneee hr Cans TWENTY-FOUR PAGES . 92--NO. ' sat ¥ A NAVY WHALEBOAT shoves off from astronaut Gordon Cooper's space cap- baa a Ba sule after towing it to the side of the carrier Kearsarge southeast of Midway island in the Pacific yesterday. Navy frogmen who attached a flo- tation collar to the capsule il, ih ai stay with it. A line used to haul the capsule out of the water leads to the carrier. Improved Economic Climate Aim Stated By Throne Speech OTTAWA (CP)--The new Lib- eral government set out Thurs- day to create an improvede co- nomic and political climate with a throne speech that was, in es- sence, a dignified official con- firmation of what Prime Minis- ployment in Canada." was the 25th day since the Lib- ter Pearson has been saying for) erals took office. weeks. the keynote was the oft-stated Pearson objective of "increas- ingly high confidence" in Can- PA economy and currency, both at home and abroad. The speech warned that "new paths nomic proposals. Meanwhile, a that surprised them. High unemployment was la- belied by the speech as Can- ada's most urgent domestic problem. The speech was bluntly imperative in offering the solution: "We must create new industries." All the key} proposals seemed to be aimed at that target. | Among these are plans for the| new department of industry; a capital fund for the Atlantic De- velopment Board; creation of a municipal development and loan board; a Canada development corporation to channel savings to new industry; establishment of an economic council; a pro- gram for national fishery devel. opment, and revival of the for- mer Conservative gov- Commons sitting of the 26th Parliament, a gentle hint of the bitter debates ahead. The first barb in a sitting that otherwise followed the opening- day tradition of sweetness and accord came from Opposition Leader John Diefenbaker. Supporting the nomination of Alan Macnaughton, MP for Montreal Mount Royal, as The budget has been promised|board will within the much-heralded "60 laround $500,000,000 and the At-| spokesmen said the new speech days of decision." Thursday|lantic Development Board about/jacked decisiveness, was empty The budget will outline the) The accent was economic and|cash side of several of the eco-| First Political Barbs In House OTTAWA -- A subtle touch of Solel acrimony was injected into Thursday's first tered neatly a few increasing production and em-|would be "not unreasonable' to| ispeculate that the municipal] have capital © of} | $100,000,000. | | It remains to be seen how the business and investment com-| munities respond to the throne| Prime Minister Pearson coun- minutes later, Congratulating Speaker Mac- naughton on his unanimous elec- not offer him any hope forAn- come tax relief "because terrific deficit" the Liberals in-| herited from the Conservatives.| That barb was aimed at aj sore spot for the Progressive} Conservatives who ran up a Speaker of the new Commons, Mr. Diefenbaker noted that) Speakers of the British House} of Commons enjoy immunity| from income tax. Such was not! the case in Canada. | "But in these '60 days of deci- sion', the Speaker who is chosen will be included in the benevo-| the Progressive leader added. ernment's 'manpower. adjust- ments" scheme over the proposals, forthcoming budget the throne The remark was a sly dig at) string of budget deficits during} their term of office, including one that was a peacetime rec-! jord The rest of the Commons' sit-) ting followed ancient ceremon-) ial. New Democratic Party may live in the hope that this|Leader T. C, Douglas noted that| moved Mr. Macnaughton would have: to ish parliaments when the| in our : built not on uniformity 'but on continuing diversity, and par- ticularly on the basic partner- ship of English-speaking and be put before you to assist in}government spokesman said itjspeech proposals. The political, air, meanwhile, was turbulent. Credit, Party Conservative, Social and New Democratic of solutions to current problems and of small consequence. In the non-economic sphere, the throne speech attached heavy emphasis to Mr. Pear- son's plan for the commission to study "thoroughly, but ur- gently, how the fundamentally bicultural character of Canada may best be assured and the contribution of other cultures recognized." "The greater Canada that is er to m will: he French - speaking people. My tion, Mr. Pearson said tA ena are determined that the the partnership: shall be truly equal.' Nuclear Arms Negotiations Move Quickly WASHINGTON (CP) -- Can- ada and the United States have quickly to initiate mil- tary negotiations to provide lence of those who hold office," |be "dragged" to the Speaker's|Canada with nuclear warheads. Conservative|chair as part of an ancient tra-|/ jdition dating to the early Brit-|Phursday the stockpile agree-| 'Wildcat U.S. informant estimated ment should be completed in a the Liberals' proclaimed "60|Speaker, as spokesman for the month, Keeping the cloak of secrecy|days of decision" in which, they;|Commons in dealings with the said, their government added that "other measures will/ministration. | GENEVA (CP)--Canada day threw its support to-;special .conference of the Gen-; would) monarch, faced possible loss of|tions have been speech|do more than any previous ad-|his head, Sometimes the Com-jhere and at Ottawa and that! mons irritated the king. | |Kennedy at Hyannis Port, Mass.|« The informant said negotia- opened both lconsuming details involved,| jeach requiring a certain amount/Ford Motor Company laid off of bargaining. At his meeting with President! cussions with the U.S. govern- Some of the points raised by|ment, an "ac-\eral Agreements of Tariffs and|the program do not apply di-|towards the fulfilment of Can-| "leading without delay tion program" of new scope and|Trade, Sharp praised speeches|rectly to Canada which, for in-|ada's existing defence commit.) urgency designed to help the Thursday by Christian Herter of/stance, does not now apply in-)ments in North America and} trade and development of the the United States and Frederick/ternal revenue duties on prod-|Europe, from the less-developed|dian parliamentary iu poorer countries. Trade Minister Mitchell) Sharp, addressing history's big-| gest trade meeting, said "We intend to play our full part in making the action pro- gram a success. "In our view, a test of the success of this ministerial meet-! ing will be whether we can/ reach agreement here and now on substantial progress in car- rying forward the action pro- gram proposed by the less-de-/ veloped countries." The program was drawn up last year by delegates of the developing countries, with Ni- geria playing a leading part. It Erroll, president of the British Board of Trade. He added: "We would be prepared as dation for a standstill on tariffent phase of ucts countries "We welcome the recommen-| consistent with Cana-| proced- res. | The informant said the pres.| ironing out the} part of a general movement in-'and other trade barriers for|!ong - standing nuclear difficul-| products of major importance to|ties between the two countries) volving major importers to work for duty-free treatment for all the products listed . . . for whieh less-developed countries are the principal suppliers to Canada--tea, coffee, cocoa, ban-! anas and tropical hardwoods "With respect to seeds and vegetable oils, there are for us, as for others, a number of prob- lems. For example, a large pro- portion of our imports come from _ industrialized countries and we would have to examine this item in the framework of the less-developed countries,'"'/Could be described as negotia-| Sharp said, "I can say that the Hons rather than discussions Canadian government is. not Astronaut - Big TV Hit In Europe LONDON (Reuters) -- Ameri- can astronaut Gordon Cooper's "magnificent piloting "thrilled Western Europe early today as millions of television viewers stayed glued to their TV sets un. til he was safely aboard the air- craft carrier Kearsarge. | The 22-orbit flight of his space |ship Faith 7 filled the front | pages of British newspapers this |morning, with the -mass-circula- |tion Daily Mirror expressing |Britain's urge to cheer for a man in trouble in its headline: "Rocket control goes wrong, but Gordon does it by the seat of his pants," "Glorious splashdown!"* The Daily Herald said in its head- line. "All by himself!" ran a Daily Mail banner. In cities and towns across Western Europe, Europeans fol. lowed the thrilling story on ra- dio and television links with Cape Canaveral and the carrier Kearsarge. K CONGRATULATES Russian Premier Khrushchev and other world leaders sent congratulations . Cooper's space flight to the United Khrushchev said in a tele. gram to President Kennedy quoted by the Soviet news agency Tass: "Esteemed Mr. President, ac- cept our cordial] congratulations on the occasion of cosmonaut G. Cooper's successful flight in the cosmic ship Faith 7 which has made a new contribution to the exploration of the outer space. "The Soviet people send the courageous American cosmo. naut Gordon Cooper their con- gratulations and best wishes." Television viewers in Britain and 10 European nations saw pictures from Cape Canaveral phere. via the Telstar II satellite, and heard a play-by-play account of the spaceman's hazardous re. entry into the earth's atmos. MRS, L. GORDON COOPER appeared relaxed and re- spon, culside bet Ne aROE men out er ey t - flight. of her = Keine cane' gant and Ln pt teenage ughters, Jan a Cam spent the time duri the in the seclusion '(AP Wirephoto) oe) Capsule ABOARD USS KEARSARGE (CP-AP) -- Astronaut Gordon Cooper's 22 - orbit flight into space and his pinpoint return may have hastened the day when man lands on the moon. Cooper--who landed less than five miles from this recovery| Ship in the Pacific's vastness after 34 hours aloft--expressed confidence Thursday that "we have learned a lot from this mission for future, more ex- tended space operations." The spaceman's perilous de- scent to his exactly-predicted impact point 96 miles southeast of Midway Island Thursday afternoon was full of drama, He had to use manual controls when the automatic guidance system for re-entry developed trouble, and he performed the hand operation magnificently. But his physical condition was what most pleased space agency doctors examining him today. Ben James, National Aero- nautics and Space' Administra- tion spokesman aboard this 41, 000-ton aircraft carrier, said the medical men were "very happy with Cooper's condition." "In. layman's language, you would say his condition is nor- COOPER 'NORMAL' AFTER SPACE TR Lands -- Right On Target evaluation, but optimism was evident that the main stated ob- jective of this longest U.S. space journey had: been reached. This was: "Study the effects of approximately one day in orbital flight on the astronaut; verify that man can function in space as a primary 'system' aboard the spacecraft for an ex- tended period of time, and eval- uate the combined performance of the astronaut with a Mercui spacecraft modified for a day mission," The Russians remained far ahead in orbits and flight lengths, with a record of 64 and 48 revolutions last August. But they have divulged little of their cosmonauts' condition. U.S. space agency doctors had expressed fears beforehand that Cooper might faint~or worse-- when he came down, ob- ad were delighted he did not, President Kennedy, who con- gratulated the 36-year-old Okla: homa air force major by telee phone a few minutes after he landed, said over radio and television that Cooper's feat "represents a great achieve- ment for our society and <a mal. The he did ex- poor Bake: nt Ph seconds F land Leja, 42, of Jacques-Cartier, was fatally in- jured today by a bomb blast as he tried to dismantle the bomb before hundreds of horrified spectators in suburban West- mount, He was given emergency treatment on the spot and died en route to hospital. He was the only casualty re- ported as the result of a wave DEARBORN, Mich. (AP)-- thousands of workers at Michi- gan and Ohio plants Thursday. t was the initial result of a wildcat" strike in Chicago the jlast weekend, Prime Minister|firm says may idle 40,000 in 11 |Pearson confirmed his govern-|States. ment's intention to initiate dis: Half the assembly line work- ers at two plants in Michigan and 2,400 of the 2,750 employees at the Walton Hills stamping plant in Ohio were laid off by midnight. All vehicle assembly sched- uled for Saturday--except at one plant--has be@@ cancelled, the company salé, Spokesmen said the layoffs were caused by a strike at the Chicago stamping plant that be-| gan last Saturday and caused a parts shortage. Some 3,000 hourly employees, contemplating restrictive action of any kind for these goods." "trices TPE NEWS FLASHES that sharp endorsed the pro- grams recommended for elimi-| nation of tariffs.on primary} products, since Canada, ds he! put it, is "not an insignificant exporter of such products.' * "We believe that the removal includes duty-free entry every-ithe general Kennedy negotia- "a duties on such products would! where for tropical products by 1965 at the latest tions." Sharp questioned the wisdom e of advantage to the users of primary products as well as to : Nav In a speech prepared for more of one recommendation in the the suppliers than 70 delegations attending a CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS | | POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | action program that less-de- veloped countries might make preferential trade treaties among themselves where semi-| processed or manufactured) goods are concerned. "I doubt whether the weaker dian minister said "The proposal to reduce or eliminate tariff barriers on ex-| ports of semi-processed and pro. cessed products from less-de- veloped countries is, we know, of special interest'to these coun-| tries .Industrial countries have) countries would be the ones/indicated that they would be most likely to benefit from the prepared to ensure, as far as jundermining of the principle of possible, that products covered jnon-discrimination," the Cana./by this proposal 'would not be left out of such negotiations." Penitentiary Riots Report Sought OTTAWA (CP) -- Harol d Winch (NDP--Vancouver East) is asking the government for a full report on peni- tentiary riots. Mr. Winch filed a motion in Commons jour- nals today calling for the tabling of all reports on the causes of penitentiary riots during 1962 and 1963, Car Rolls Over Killing Farmer LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Alexander Hill, 24, an RR 2, Parkhill farmer, was killed when the car he was driving rolled over on Highway 7, about 1% miles east of Parkhill today. Committee On Defence tee on defence is to be estab meetings outside the Police said Hill, a bachelor, was alone in the car. Strike May Idle 40,000 discussions so far are satisfac-/ mare jtory. But there are a lot of time-/ Trade Action Program Supported By Canada Ford said, will be laid off Satur- day at the stamping plant in Woodlawn, a suburb of Buffalo. Layoffs in Michigan were at the Dearborn frame plant and the Monroe parts manufacturing plant. Ford said a total of 7,500 pro- duction workers will be made idle on Saturday in the Michi- jgan, Ohio, and New York | plants. 'REFUSED TO. REPORT' The company said workers re- fused to report for work on the first shift in Chicago last Satur- day in an "unauthorized work layoffs last Thursday of five un- jion officials. | The union officials prevented jOperation of a press, suspend. jing operations on a major pro- /duction line, the firm said, | The Chicago plant, employing |4,250 hourly and salaried work- ers, is the newest and largest of the Ford stamping planty and produces hoods, doors, /floor panels, trunk lids and other) stampings. A company spokesman said nearly all assembly work will) jhave to be stopped early next! }week unless production is re- jsumed at the Chicago pant. | A spokesman for the United! |Auto Workers Union said the|@PPprehensive about the week- union's international had not au-/¢"d, A 24-hour guard has been thorized the strike and added) Posted throughout the area of that Ken Bannon, Ford depart.|!ast week's rioting. About 200 ment director, has wired the State patrolmen strikers to return to their jobs, | ion department officers are pat- Ford said Saturday overtime/ Tolling a 24-square block area, work also has been cancelled| lat the Wayne, Mich., plant and jat assembly plants in Atlanta, |Ga.; Chicago, Dallas, Kansas! OTTAWA ( CP) -- An 18-member Commons commit- \City, Lorain, Ohio; Louisville,! lished with authority .to hold Mahwah; NJs Parliament buildings, if it wishes. and St. Louis Prime Minister Pearson gave notice today in Commons Journals of a motion to appoint the special committee "to consider matters relating to defence." | Montreal Blast Kills Sergeant MONTREAL (CP)--An armyjof bombings that began In early engineer, Sgt.-.Maj. Walter Rol-/morning and were directed at suburban|mail boxes in Westmount. Shortly after Leja's death po. lice received a report that an- other bomb had been found at Christophe Colomb and St. Gre- goire Streets in the northeast- ern section of Montreal, several miles from the Westmount area. Police did not immediately at- tribute the bombings to any per. son or organization, but an out- law separatist organization--Le Front de Liberation Quebecois-- has claimed responsibility for similar bombings in recent months, It was the sixth blast in West- mount mail boxes since early morning. The first five explo- sions occurred in the dead of night and injured no one, One explosion, in a box within a stone's throw of the police sta- tion broke stained-glass win. dows and tore open the door of St. Matthias Anglican Church at Cote St. Antoine Road and Churchill Avenue. Windows of some nearby houses were shat- tered. Another explosion, which po- lice said appeared to be the most powerful, caused heavy damage to a telephone booth be- side the box and broke nearby of ey after he out of his Faith 7 capsule. was and expected." he stood up for the first time in 34 hours. Dr. Pollard and Dr. Charles Upp put their hands under Cooper's arms and supported him until the dizzy spell. passed, then helped him to the ship's dispensary for rest and exam- ination, He quickly drank four glasses of pineapple juice and called for a dinner of steak, green salad and milk, He ate several hours later, A space agency spokesman said Cooper was somewhat de- hydrated after his 560,000-mile trip but otherwise showed few effects of his adventure, The tests will continue until Cooper is flown to Honolulu Saturday afternoon for a parade and public reception. Their results will require long norma' : "Dick, I don't feel too good," he told Dr, Richard Pollard as reat achievement for free. tnd women." se Cooper's spirit did not falter when near the end of a "texte book" flight his capsule devel» oped electrical difficulties. He was in the 19th orbit when a light snapped on which was intended to do so only as he fired his reverse-rockets, The automatic control system was haywire in some inexplicable manner. : Tension mounted aboard this big ship and at the launch head- quarters in Cape Ne pcm | Fla., where Cooper had blast off Wednesday morning. Cooper would have to fire his rockets manually and also per> sonally adjust the vital descent position of Faith 7. John Glenn, Cooper's fellow astronaut and predecessor in Space, undertook to talk him down, Glenn was aboard the th YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Henry House Museum Opened .. School Addition Contract Awarded . Page 13 Auditorium Parade Discussed ........ . Page 18 Scouts Forecast Busy Summer ..... Page 13 Bay Ridges Woman Hurt In Accident .. Page 3 Page 13 windows. n Japan, Manual re-entry was not @ novel situation. Astronaut Scott Carpenter experienced similar trouble--but as a result landed well off tanget. A mistake of a single second in firing any of the three retro- rockets could mean a landing error of seven miles, A few sec- onds awry could spell disaster after 560,000 miles of smooth Sailing, Kearsarge, where a happy outlook had turned to tension, . sent up her search and rescue planes. Imperturbably, Cooper fired his rockets as he soared Shanghai. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-- | Birmingham's jand Attorney-General Kennedy's! jturned to Washington. The federal government shows signs of relaxing its vigil in racial situation adviser on civil rights has re-| Sheriff Melvin Bailey said, however, that authorities are and conserva. "It's an uneasy quiet,"' Bailey said. "The weekend will cause more concern, It will be a criti- cal period." Assistant Attorney - General Norfolk, Va.;|Burke Marshall, who went back} 'to Washington Thursday The only plant not affected is he has no plans to return to}ship and promised to file suit in jthe truck assembly plant in Lor;| this racially troubled city im-|federal court to test legality of ain, Ohio, the firm said, said) mediately. He said he believes weekend, Kennedy in northern Alabama the situation will be calmed} through the co-operation of Birmingham people. The headquarters unit of the Army, which at one time in. cluded between '25 and 30 men, has been reduced to a watch. dog group of about five men, Marshall said. About 3,000 soldiers are stand. ing by at bases in Alabama, where they were ordered by President Kennedy after bloody rioting in Birmingham last Alabama's segregationist gov- ernor, George C. Wallace, who challenged the president's right to send in the troops, may meet Saturday. Wallace has accused Kennedy of setting up a military dictator- the president's action. Signs Of Easing US. Vigil In Birmingham > Kennedy is scheduled to ate tend the 30th anniversary cele- bration of the Tennessee Valley Authority--a publicly-owned hy. dro-electric power project--at Muscle Shoals, Ala., Saturday, Wallace is among southern gov. ernors invited. If the president and the gov- ernor meet, they almost cer- tainly will discuss racial ten- sions in Birmingham. No progress has been reported in investigations of last week- end's bombings, which hit a Negro leader's house and a Negro motel used as headquar- ters in the recent desegregation campaign. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., southern integration leader, said he still is hopeful that the agree. ment between white business leaders and Negroes would be carried out, tracking ship Coastal Sentry off © over the Red China coast near_~ ae i