ln * THOUGHT FOR TODAY y @ case, the person whe- feh't "getting what is coming to him" should be grateful. WEATHER REPORT Clearing this evening. Wednes- day sunny with cloudy periods _ and @ little cooler, y « YOu 92--NO. 206 . UK. Union Rift Over Incomes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1963 Authorized Ottawa and for payment @s Second Class Mall Pao as ty EVEN SPLIT $ FOR SOCRED BRIGHTON, England (Reut-,scale of benefits and pensions ers)--Union leaders represent-|under British welfare services. ing 8,000,000 British workers} Robert Edwards, chemical] ™% clashed head-on here today over/workers delegate and Labor acceptance of the principle of| member of Parliament, criti- wage ceilings. 'cized government regulations The crisis in the second day|on testing new drugs and what of the convention of the TradeS|he called free-and-easy sales of| Union Congress hinged on an/tranquillizers without economic report prepared by General Secretary George Woodcock. The report maintains Each Leader To Get | Il Members In House GRANBY, Que. (CP) -- Twojin a caucus held after the distinct groups of Quebec Social|Mr. Chapdelaine did not C Anti-U.S. Move + + % ¥ nant women which were con- that incomes should not rise in the future as quickly as in the/ past. demned 13 years ago are still advertised in medical journals,/ The report was challenged by; ~ Frank Cousins, head of Brit- ain's biggest union, the 1,300,- 000-member General Transport Workers, and Ted Hill, leader) of the powerful Boilermakers} Union. Behind closed doors today,) Woodcock was reported to have tefused flatly to alter his report| in the face of demands by Cou-| sins that the wage ceiling para-| graph be modified, and Hill's demand that it be deleted. Cousins was reported to have demanded the addition of a sen-| tence, lifted from a report by the government-sponsored Na-| tional Economic Development} Council, that said incomes) would rise faster if national| economic expansion was main-| tained at four per cent.a year. WON'T YIELD | Woodcock was said to have) conceded only that he would ex-| plain the implications of the} wage-ceiling paragraph when it| goes. before the convention's 1,000 delegates for debate Wed- nesday. Delegates will be called on to} vote on three resolutions: Qne/ for total support of Woodcock's' report, one for a compromise; resolution calling for 5 In Pickering Family Burn To Death ' TORRANCE, Ont. (CP) -- A rented summer cottage on Lake Muskoka near here was turned 'into a fiery inferno early Sun-| |day, burning to death a woman! and four children. Dead are Mrs Viola Hope, 29, of Pickering, her children, Anna Maria, 2, Richard, 5, 1nd Da- vid, 6, and a visitor, Terry Do- rian, 6, also of Pickering. Mrs. Hape's husband, Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Melville Reed of Toronto, and Ralph Farrow, 16, also of Toronto, escaped, The fire, believed to have started from an _ overheated wood stove, spread quickly. "It went up so fast you would onto, who was staying in a cot- tage next door. Mr. and Mrs. Reed were be- doctors') ih ae : f : ee ees e |prescriptions. os 5 £ id He said some drugs for preg) ' a 4 S 1et Nam i , " ' n . | Credit members of Parliament/Le Ralliement meeting. " --one supporting Robert Thomp-| The statement of the six said son, national party leader, and|they could not endorse the the other Real Caouette, deputy SAIGON (Reuters) -- South|actions now seem to be toeing Viet Nam's secret police chief,|/the line, observers said. Ngo Dinh Nhu, today appeared/ United States. Nhu, brother and adviser to President Ngo Dinh Diem, has emerged as the most powerful man in South Yiet Nam follow- ing the crackdown on anti-gov- ernment Buddhists and declara- tion' of martial law Aug. 20. | ¥ Nhu now appears confident | , the internal political situation is tes well on the way to being -set- tled and that the possibility of a coup against him has dimin- ished. He is reported to have started Eiplans to discredit the United States, which is pumping in $1,- 500,000 a day in the war against Communist guerrillas. On Monday a newspaper re- garded as closely representing Nhu and his influential wife ran a banner headline story claim- ing the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency was planning a coup against the regime. The U.S. embassy denied it, | | | | | MERRYMAKER SUBDUED youths arrested during a of youngsters in this Upstate Labor Day weekend that was resort two years ago. | relatively quiet compared with : the wild rioting by thousands --(AP Wirephoto) Sheriff's deputies and village | police at Lake George, N.Y., | subdue an unidentified merry- | maker, one of about 150 seve Governor Shuts School i sere = line," said F, M. Rayner of Tor-| jexpected to be stepped up over |the next few days. At the same time, Brig. Gen. Ton That Dinh, Saigon military profits|lieved to have been sleeping on governor and rated the nation's ready for a showdown with thejhere continued to shelter a top Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy anti - Communist Budd- hists, Thich Tri Quant, regarded as one of the leaders of the Buddhist agitation against the government, The new U.S. ambassador, Henry Cabot Lodge, was under- stood to be pressing ahead with a policy aimed at getting rid of Nhu and settling the religious feud between Catholics and the majority Buddhists. Trade Surplus For 7 Months $138,100,000 OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has rolled up a $138,100,000 trade surplus in the first seven months of this year--a sharp improvement from the $131,600,- 000 trading deficit in the cor- responding period of last year. The: bureau of statistics re- ponted today that exports for January-July were up 7.5 per cent to $3,841,500,000 while im- national leader, are the result of the weekend conyention of the Quebec wing of the party. The split in Social Credit ranks is expected to leave each man with 11 followers in the House of Commons, and two dif. ferent Social Credit parties in Quebec province. Mr. Thompson moved quickly after 500 delegates at the meet- ing of Le Ralliement des Credit- istes overwhelmingly voted Sun- day to disown him as national leader and issued a 'call for a national convention to elect a new one. He flew into Montreal Monday from his home in Red Deer, Alta., and a press conference was held Jater at which six Que- bec Social Credit MPs pledged support to him as_ national leader, Dr, Guy Marcoux, who re- signed from the party after the April 8 federal election follow-|» ing differences with Mr. Ca- ouette, also indicated he would rejoin the party to swell Mr. Thompson's forces, whose non- Quebec support in the Com: mons comes from two British Columbia MPs and one other from, Alberta, Granby resoltuions their voters elected them @s party members, thus implici recognizing Mr, Thomp son's leadership, é Dr.. Marcoux, sitting as an dependent Social Credit mi ber, said "the reasons forcing me to resign from the party last spring have disappeared and I foresee myself returning to the party in the near future," - Mr, Thompson, present when the statement was head, said the Granby resolutions "concern just one province and: have fie effect on our overall plans or on my position as Mader." : The national leader expectéd other Quebec MPs in addition £ those who supported him M day will join his forces, "some sooner, some later," " pite Federal Threat 2. 2h.i min arom mate & j a | that the army was ready to|'enth of one per cent to $3,703,- There was no indication ofjhave left Mississippi as the only|crush any plot by "Communists| °0,000. control along with the wage/a rear porch. They were ming Des ceiling, and one proposed byjened by screams and fled to| Hill totally rejecting wage re-|safety. RECEIVES SUPPORT Mr. Caouette received public|trying support from nine MPs and twojary & straint. | Informed observers here be- lieved the first two would rel ceive majority support, 'but as/ many as 2,000,000 votes r them. The, ex- defeated. Farrow was sleeping on the TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP)--Gov-| ernor George Wallace, risking/ federal intervention. state with a completely segre-|and international adventurers." front porch with Anna Maria) federal retaliation, kept the Tus-| A U.S. Hope and Terry Dorian. Thejkegee public school closed by|spokesman said Monday that} The governor sent 108 armed two other children were sleep-|force today despite the local|'the dispute is between Gov-jand riot-trained pa rolmen to board's reluctant bie nd ewe Wallace and the local school officials" ~~ og in a be school Mr, end_Mrs, Hope. were|ness to obey aie de- or one j { | } justice department|gatd public schoo] system. Other generals who were. cool Export gains were recorded in all major markets, with the changes we want: i toward the Roman Catholic-led| regime's harsh anti - B circle and enforce an utive t order postponing the opening of Wallace. invoking his police}schouk for' on? weer : 'Tesolution to be| rooping in a second bedroom. | segregati State troopers, redoubled in) powers, intervened Monday, two, However, the Macon County| Rescue Teams ' wy ST i Firemen had to restrain Mr. | tr In routine business today, the! ength and 'supported for the| hours before 13 Negroes were to|school board, under federal} congress voted to call on the|Hope from returning to the cot- wife-It_was be-deputies, kept students and fieved Mrs. H attempted to} te chers out of the school to en- save the children? fonce the governor's orders to} Conservative government for) an immediate increase in the}, Suspect In FLQ BackIn Canada' NORTH SYDNEY, N.S. (CP); Richard Bizier, 18-year-old sus- pected member of the terrorist Front de Liberation Quebecois, arrived in this Cape Breton Is- land port early today from the French islands of St. Pierre- Miquelon. | Later at Sydney Airport he boarded a TCA flight for Mont- real. Bizier is charged with ex- ploding a dynamite time bomb at the RCAF technical training depot in Montreal last March. Travelling alone, he arrived here aboard the French supply vessel Miquelon. Crown authorities were to present a brief in Quebec Su- perior Court today asking can- t \first time by. mounted sheriff'sjenter the white public school./coyn order to integrate its ranmce were summoned by neighbor and fought the blaze| ee | for more than three hours 8 ssa high school bb fore. extinguishing it. age for his postpone the start of the fall! term -until next Monday. Students in the consolidated) Volunteer firemen from Tor-| |turned back as they approached |the building for the second| Torrance is about 30 miles| north of Orillia Arson Suspected {Macon County board of educa- tion said that as far as it was concerned the school was open. Thus the 12-grade school--for whites only before the -desegre- straight day even though the) s Ld It would hav been the first de-|schools this year, defied Wal-| Sift Debris segregation in Alabama schools/jace's order and said in a state, below college level and it would) ment: "The members of the board determined their primary duty is to operate the schools No Hope Left . . For Victim jof Macon County. Therefore,, al] In Cavecln 'schools of Macon County are HAZLETON, Pa. (AP )--Hope In Montreal Fire MONTREAL (CP) -- Police said they suspect arson in a two-alarm fire in east-end Montreal Monday in which three members of one family and a 57-year-old woman died. "Police, who recently arrested two suspected firebugs in the district, said they feared an- other may be loose in the area. "Only this time we want him for more than setting fires,"' an cellation of $1,500 and $950 bail bonds on which Bizier was re- leased after being charged. Bizier told reporters here he officer. said. "As far as we're }concerned the man is a killer." Mr. and Mrs. Roger Thi- jopen as originally' scheduled by} the "board." i | The possibility of 'federal in- tervention was strengthened by gation order--was ready for the|for Louis Bova, trapped by a jreturn of pupils from the' sum-|coal mine cave-in Aug. 13,. is jmer vacation. but the 215 armedjall but gone, state mine offi- svate troopers surrounded the|.cials said Monday of the board Monday but de-| clined to say what the justice/@- department planned. la In Washington, Attorney-Gen- fe For 100 Dead PRINAGAR Army, po- lie and civilian rescue teams today sifted through the debris of 58 Kashmir Valley villages, hit Monday by a violent earth quake which killed an estimated 100 persons, Another 500 persons were be- lieved injured and latest reports said 73 bodies were recovered. The tremors began at 7:10 m. local time, Monday and sted for 40 seconds. The brunt of the shock was It in rural districts not fre- the presence of John Doar, dep- uty director of the justice de- partment's civil rights division. Doar conferred with members | building refused to let them in.| Even the Bova family ap- * peared resigned to the loss of ; MGol, AL Lingo, commanding|(be 54-year-old miner, trapped) ure wen he feceived, word of the troopers, said only Princi-|2!0ng with David Fellin and|Watiace's eadice aiaee pal E. W, Wadsworth would-be|Henry Throne by a subterran-) 7 a : admitted 'to the buitding ean slide, Fellin and Throne) Wallace himself did not ap-|lapsed in the disaster area and Even teachers were turned Were Tescued Aug. 27. pear in Tuskegee, but sent siX)many persons were buried in away because, Lingo said,| Dt. H. B. Charmbury,. state of his top aides to act im his/the debris, according to reports "school is closed and they have| Secretary of mines, said virtu-|behalf. |here, oo ah tnisiness tn there? lally all hope of rescuing Bova| Wallace also ordered the| Large-scale losses in livestock Wallace issued a strongly-| WS' 80ne. Following a meeting|Huntsville school board to delay,were also reported, -- worded executive order direct-|With officials and experts in|the start of school until Friday.) At Gumbarg, 15 miles south- eral Robert F. Kennedy quented by tourists, There were no reports of foreigners being in the quake area. More than 1,000 houses col- sharpest increases in: sales $ 4 i * coun Seven-month 5: to 'the United States were up 4.4 | per cent. July ptoduced a $20,600,000 trade sunplus compared with a $2,200,000 surplus a year ear- lier. Exports were 8.2 per cent higher at $607,400,000 while im- ports rose five per cent to $586,- 800,000, Since there {is normally a trade surplus in the last half of the year, today's report indi- cated that Canada likely will end 1963 with its third trade sur- plus in a row and the best trade picture in at least a decade, Last year there was an $82,000,000 trade surplus and 1961 had a_ $125,000,000 'surplus following eight years of trade deficits, Exports in the January-July period were up 4.4 per cent to the United States, 15.1 per cent to Britain, 27.4 per cent to other Commonwealth countries and 6,4 per cent to all other coun- tries, - January-July imports showed declines of 0.8 per cent from the U.S. and 12.4 per cent from Britain, and increases of 12.8 per cent from other Common- wealth countries and 6.3 per cent from other Commonwealth countries and 6.3. per cent from more, Charlies Eugene. Dionne,|party"' would move Kamourastka, and. Robert! they would "Following the Granhy conyen.|influencé" fo get Mr. Tha tion. vote Sunday, the following|@lected leader in the 1961 -Ot- publicly supported Mr. Caouette|wa leadership convention. = from the assembly platform;| He told the convention he would waste no time in organtz- Gilles Gregoire, Lapointe; Gil- bere Rondenis, Shefford; Ray-|ing a new national party if the mond Langlois, Megantic; Ge- delegates wanted one. * rard Perror, Beauce; Charles} The convention was the first Gauthier, Roberval, Pierre-An-| meeting of Le Ralliement since dre Boutin, Dorchester; Antoine|the 1 8 election setback Belanger, Charlevoix; Gerard|when Quebec Social Credit rep- Laprise, Chapleau and Henrijresentation in the Comm Latulippe, Compton-Frontenac. ome to 20 The six Quebec MPs who is-|in the June, sued a statement of support fol-/patty further dis- lowing a meeting with Mr,|tupted when six Quebec Social : said was|Credit MPs pledged support to held at their invitation, were: |the Pearson government--later Maurice Cote, Chicoutimi; Mar. Marcoux wn--and Dr. rard Ouellet, Rimouski; party whip Jean-Louis Frenette, Port- neuf; Gerard Girouard, Labelle, and Gerard Chapdelaine, Sher- cel Lessard, Lac St. Jean; Ge-|Tesigned. Mr. Caouette said early last week he supported an independ ent Quebec party aligned "right wing parties incl brooke, ; spearatists,"" oS Lucien Plourde; Quebec West, also attended the meeting in Montreal with Mr. Thompson|wards Social Credit prisciples, but did not sign the statement} Mr. Thompson publicly struck although he was reported on the out at Mr. Caouette for the verge of supporting the national/time Friday when he said. : leader. deputy national leader Of the six who backed thejresign because of his ' statement supporting Mr.|sible statements." The na! Thompson, five of them and Mr.|leader said Mr. Caouette te Plourde did not support thejlonger considered himself @ He accused Mr.. T! le group of being 'hikcwote ee ay ing the school board to postpone) the start of fall classes in the charge of the operation, Charm-|One of its schools was to ha@e|west of Srinagar, the quake de- bury said he would not send alaccepted Negroes . today. The| stroyed all homes and killed/all others, Granby convention resolutions'member of the national. party, more than 25 persons. . volunteer into a new €scape|board voted to comply with the gor ge yg ni |governor's order. | fo inhabitants of the "The cavity is unsafe . -| 'Three schools at Birmingham|stricken area were working in pear a alle race her coal and one in Mobile also are un.) the fields when the quake nit. : ae a telecast bye eoncta ian, (der federal court orders to ad-| Many rushed home to find]; ing a telecast by a camera low-| F jtheir families buried under de- A mit Negroes this week, Wallace) (1°! ur under de ered more than 300. feet into Bias snotleaid what he planned| ris, lieved to be. | ; ; Charmbury's deputy, Gordon|_ Negro leaders in Plaquemine, "Tt's all over as far as a rescue| demonstrations after a wild Sun.) is concerned," he said. day night melee, and in New! T k F J i trapped men's brother, Daniel,|tional director of the Congress| a en rom e and "gave it to him straight."|of Racial Equality, called the} LONDON (Reuters) -- Nine was returning to Montreal of beaalt, aged 34 and 39, and their|one school Monday because of his own accord, He denied re-|10-year-o'd daughter, Micheline. what he called the threat of ports he was <efused political|and Jeannette Syrie, 57, died| violence, asylum jn St. Pierre-Miquelon, ™ the fire. The Tuskegee school was th the French islands off New-| Police said the victims livedjonly one affected by Wallace's foundland's south coast, in adjoining third-floor flats. order, Labor Day Weekend chamber where Bova was be- for these schools. | | s Smith, was even more definite,|La., meanwhile, promised more Nine Gold Bars Smith said he talked with the|Orleans, James Farmer, na-| ; ig 7 Gloomy For Canada By THE CANADIAN PRESS jideas and a revitalized spirit, Demonstrations by labor or- ganizations, worried comments on the country's unemployment situation and a record number of accidental deaths marked La- could all help to offset the pos- sibility of a gloomy future, he | said, ; In Windsor, Ont., a prominent American labor leader called rather well, Smith said the brother took it|/Plaquemine police force lynch mob." 4/ gold bars worth more than $10,- |000 were stolen from a British |European Airways Comet jet Seasonable weather conditions, oe in most areas with) |temperatures fluctuating around the 60s. Except for the West LATE NEWS FLASHES which flew from London to | Frankfurt last Thursday night, |a spokesman for the airline dis- |closed Monday, |Coast where the sun was hid-| den until Monday, holidayers| bor Day weekend across Can-|for formation of national plann-|were generally free from fain. ada. _ Claude Jodoin, president of the Canadian Labor Congress, toid a luncheon at the Cana- "dian National Exhibition Mon- 'day the long-range outlook for employment in Canada is '"'ra- ther gloomy." He said growth of the labor force and simultaneous Pr in demand for producton 'workers because of automation present dismal prospects. : But economic growth, new jing agencies to combat unem- ployment in both Canada' and the United States. Emil Mazey, secretary-treas- urer of the United Auto Work- ers, told about 3,000 persons at- jtending the -city's Labor Day celebrations such agencies could assess the needs of the countries' populations and deter- mine the best potential use of national resources. WOULD RECOGNIZE. REDS More than 25,000 pergens col- lected in downtown Hamilton CITY EMERGENCY 'PHONE NUMBERS for the biggest labor-organized rally ever held in that city. In Ontario the weatherman's forecast of generally good |weather went unheeded by campers and swimmers as re- sort areas attracted only a third) of last year's Labor Day week-! end crowd, Fifteen thousand people at-| tended the Labor Day parade) in Windsor and 30,000 congre-| gated for a parade in the Nia- gara Falls area. In Toronto, 8,000 union members marked the holiday in a march to Ex- hibition Park, The annual Labor Day ban- Three Dead, 80 Hurt In Religious Riot _. BOMBAY (AP) -- Three persons were killed and -80 injured when police gunfire broke up religious rioting in Malegoan, 150 miles northeast of Bombay, Monday. A Maharastra state government spokesman said today the trouble was reported to have started when Moslems stoned a Hindu religious procession near a mosque. The Hindus retalitated with brickbats and bottles, Free School Text Books Plan Revealed TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario government will in- troduce a system next year it hopes will eventually pro- vide free text books for all elementary and 'secondary schools in the province. Education Minister William Davis said at a pfess 'conference' today that beginning in the 1964 academic year the present $3-a-pupil grants paid for textbooks would 'be increased to $6 for Grades 9 and 10 as a first step itt implementing the new plan, They heard David Archer, prés-| quet in Toronto was turned into ident of the Ontario Federation] a tribute. to 74-year-old William? }of Labor, urge Canadian recog-|Jenoves, president of the Tor- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | |nition of Communist China. onto ahd District Labor Council The number of accidental/for the last 21 years. Civic lead- ideaths across Canada soated tol|ers and union dignitaries for- jat least 121, a record for a La-| mally designated Mr, Jenoves bor Day weekend the city's Mr. Labor. Quebec Socreds To Meet Wednesday QUEBEC (CP) -- Real Caouette, deputy national leader of the Social Credit party who is trying to overthrow Leader Robert Thompson, has summoned Quebec's 19 Social Credit MPs to a meeting here Wednesday. | In Frankfurt, police said the jtheft was discovered when a mailbag was found split open during unloading at Frankfurt airport, adding it is 'almost 100-per-eent certain the robbery occured before the aircaft left London." But the BEA spokesman in London said: "Security officers at London Airport have made their routine inquiries and are satisifed that the mailbag was quite okay jwhem it left London." | Their report has been passed on to the Frankfurt authorities and the affair now is in the hands of West German police, he said, It was the second such theft from a London-Frankfurt air. liner within a year, Last No- vember, gold bars worth a sim- ilar amount were stolen. Police happened to them. / ¢ have still not discovered what) BE aor ade Tae re __GANAD Winnipeg lawyer Abe Yanof- sky won the Canadian Closed Chess championship Monday at the completion of a 10-day > HESS CHAMPION round-robin tournament of 15 IAN | became the first person to . the Canadian closed ei: S. matches. Yanofsky, who began tournament .play when when he was ll, Monday edhe her apheresis been ethers ag gle ep nets choo acy inate tater deena as te aetna thy ahi he At AEN ARDS al ah MRE te MS AS RENT ont