TODR THONCHT. FOR Many a social climber builds a new home out on the outskirts of his income. as TAaAR NV 68584660565 68486 Were Sa anand wour sunny and al Winds light. daminks BDuldnns eror rs 'Bsave 2 2s ightly warmer. ee VOL. 92--232 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1963 THIRTY-TWO PAGES ae 1 ae HOCINE AIT AHMED, polit- orders from the front seat of ical chief of the anti-govern- a car to an armed civilian ment revolt in Algeria, gives who has joined Ait Ahmed's Possible Charges For Labor Chiefs forces in the mountains east GUELPH (CP)--A mother of two teen-age daughters was shot to death Wednesday night while sitting in a parked car with a friend outside her home and po- lice believe it.was a case of mistaken. identity. Mrs. Isabelle Matthews, 32, was killed by two blasts from a double-barrelied shotgun. Her companion, Ronald Ford, 28, was wounded. A friend of the dead woman, =\Mrs. Mary Teider, 47, of Tim- mins was injured by a shotgun blast when she drove up in a car with her husband shortly of Algiers. --AP Wirephoto Ben Bella To Curb after the first shooting. | Franklin Joseph Kostal, 29, was charged with capital mur- |der and two coutits of attempted the back and Mr. Ford in the arm. Mr. Ford was said to be in satisfactory condition today in hospital. Moments after the shooting, the Teiders drove up, saw a man with a gun and Mr. Ford running across the street. The gun was turned on the Teider car and blast hit a side door, sending pieces of metal into Mrs, Teider's right thigh. Mr. Teider drove away. His wife was treated in hospital and released. Police say the accused mani is a brother-in-law of Mrs. Wil- liam Kostal. A witness said that after the} jmurder. He was r d in 'custody until Monday when he) appeared today before Justice! jof the Peace Rose Bridge. Police said that moments be- } fore the shooting a man carry-' jing a gun went to a house a |few doors away and asked for South Viet Nam War Progress sheeting a man shouted: "T'vej shot the wrong woman." 3 | | | | | | OTTAWA (CP) -- A secret re-jreports and affidavits on their a port on possible criminal|evidence. utiny charges against waterfront oe iat Rad Pcad people inter- bor leaders has been. delivered|viewed by the police ar2 re-| : to the government. ported to be those who were} ALGIERS (AP) -- President Justice Minister Chevrier told|brutally attacked by unknown| Ahmed Ben Bella announced to- the Commons Wednesday thatjassailants during the struggle|day he has assumed full powers the report is under study by of-jagainst the SIU. | jto deal with the Berber mutiny ficers of his department but he} Mr, Justice Norris said spe-jin the Kabylia mountains, He gave no details of its contents.) cial counsel should be appointed| indicated he intends to try per- Mr. Chevrier's disclosure was|by the government to "review|Suasion and moral. pressures made after Labor Minister Mac-jall the facts available" to de-|from Algeria's Arab majority. Eachen brought forward his res-|termine whether charges could I Pledged to avoid bloodshed, olution dealing with a govern-|be laid against Mr. Banks, Mr. jhours behind schedule. Failure \place in Honduras. jlems exist, but if they are to military forces. a resolution of support. LA YOU LL FIND Civilians, many of whom 4 - B Ben Bella said regular army ment ggg 2 ag marine|McLaughlin and "others."' troops will not be used against fuer, b I " lit. we vt pinasanints ana lof 30 to 40 deputies to show up jeaused the delay. ey id it was|¥@. discussed let this be done in aidan Gare ea ptt calm, not in the mountains with President Ramon Villeda Mor- lales, the s 5 The action came as Berber jales, the state department said, civilians in the mountains were jfought for Algeria's independ- INSIDE nue jence, grouped at assembly Fair Crowd Drop Blamed juni 'the resolution immediately. With the government planning to deal today with its spending estimates, indications are e resolution will not come up for debate until Friday. The delay gives further time to United States and Canadian Labor leaders trying to work! out a private plan for cleaning} up labor hoodlumism on the) Great Lakes, instead of a gov- ernment trusteeship. In a last-ditch effort to break @ stalemate on the private un- ion solution, the CLC sent a plan to AFL-CIO officials Wed- nesday with specific conditions which it feels must be met in any voluntary posed. Im'S THEIR MOVE | The proposal, contained in a letter from CLC President Claude Jodoin to AFL-CIO Pres- ident George Meaney, puts the mext move in the hands of the nouncement before a reduced national assembly, meeting two |U.S. state department said to-\59 back to their homes. Prob- j\day a military coup has taken! shortly afterward the presiden- RECEIVES SUPPORT tial palace was surrounded by! The assembly then voted him Charles R. Burrows, that the trusteeship im-\CUP was under way. a revolt in which so far not a }shot has been fired. president" made his ae gee rgb (AP) -- The} jover the government and that|Bella said. |telephoned the U.S. ambassador, ers to join the four-day revolt-- _of Algiers, Fort National and | 'Mrs. William Kestal, a widow! R ed jwith seven children aged be-| eport tween one and 14 years. | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres Told Mrs. Kostal was out!. IN (id . bowling, the man approached|ident Kennedy's military advis- the car where Mrs. Matthews|¢ts have told him the war in and Mr. Ford were sitting and fired through a closed side win- dow, hitting Mrs. Matthews in Haiti At Mercy Flora's Fury + MAMI, Fla. (AP)--Hurricane Flora, potentially the most |deadly storm to roar out of the tropical Atlantic in two years, aimed her 140-mile-an-hour fury today at Haiti. A heavy loss of life and great property destruction was likely in Haiti, the weather bureau said, because there are few jplaces where her people can |hide from the storm. | Beyond Haiti, in the path of jthe hurricane, lay Cuba's Ori- jente province and the big United |\States Navy base at Guantan- jamo Bay. | Around Flora's éye raged the |most vicious winds any hurri- cane has generated since Carla slammed Texas and Louisiana Sept. 14, 1961. Carla killed 43 persons in four states and launched one of this country's greatest migrations, the flight of 400,000 persons from the low- Of Hurricane. 0° icy | government, South Viet Nam is going well penough that it may be possible to withdraw most of the U.S. forces there in two years, the | White House: reports. In a statement issued shortly "~-- i return from Viet Nam of Secretary s. and Gen, é he South Viet The two military officials said the political situation in South Viet Nam remains "deeply serious.' But they predicted that by the end of this. year the U.S. train- ing program for Vietnamese would have reached the point where 1,000 American military personnel assigned to South Viet Nam can be withdrawn. The White House raid Wed- nesday night's declaration was approved by Kennedy on the basis of recommendations of McNamara and Taylor, chair- ;man of the joint chiefs of staff. South Viet Nam's security re- mains "a major interest of the United States as of other free nations" and putting down the |Viet Cong war is the chief ob- |jective of U.S. policy, the state- |ment said. the; insurgents. + "T-call upon all militants to forces issued orders to take machine guns» in. hand, Bet answering the call of rebel lead- points in Michelet, 90 miles east On Election AFL-CIO -- particularly Paul ge 17 Hall, president of the SIU of : North America, who has balked acy rg Charged " at the prospect of giving trus- Fall » Page 17 -- unassailable power to make|Brooklin Clothing | changes. s 7 Mr. Hall is reported to - be! Store Robbed ...... Page 17 holding out for an appeal pro-/Truck Burns On cedure that would, in effect, al-| Highway 401 ........ Page 4 low the SIU a veto on decisions of the trustees. County Plowing Match The report to the justice de-| Held ........ Pancsasa partment made known by Mr. Chevrier contains recommenda-| e 5 other mountain towns. They. were to be taken to rebel army units in the mountains. The recruits were to be formed into guerilla units. There was no way to estimate how many were answering the rebel call. Ben Bella said he still intends to fly to New York next week to address the UN General As- sembly. lands of the. gulf coast. Possible Ban -- kaart poy at es | |Juan -repo! ora centred) Of A-Bombs In Satellites jnear latitude 16.5 north, longi-| tude 72.0 west, or about 140) miles south-southeast of Port au| Prince, the capital of Haiti. | Barring a shift in direction, | UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- |U.S. State Secretary Rusk and |Soviet Foreign Minister Gro- |myko have indicated a possibil- _jity of agreement to ban nuclear jeight to 10 feet above normal, 'and torrential rains. tions by two special lawyers ap-| pointed by. the government to! decide whether criminal action| could be taken against Hal C.| Banks, president of the Seafar- ers' International Union of Can-| ada, and his chief Heutenant, | SIU executive vice - president} Leonard J. McLaughlin. | The two lawyers--J. J. Rob-| inette of Toronto and Jean Mar-| roe! Bo Montreal--are ex-| TORONTO (CP) -- A mellow-} pected to come to Ottawa soon|voiced farmer who has failed) ter meetin Cent _ Jus-|twice before to lead Ontario's ent officials. Liberals out of the political One informant described their|wilderness has been chosen to ae, eos head the party sg while it e s unders regroups and seeks a new mes- to contain some startling revela-|siah. 4 tions. Fifty - nine - year - old Far- 16 gamelan ee aR yer b ' he/sented Grey South in the legis- te kivertigating: tang. of, thelial ncalneanee Cokote § jna violent and unsolved incidents|py the Liberal papas as tem- that plagued sailors, marine un-|porary leader until a party con- jon leaders and others in recent/yention can be held 'in about years. six months. RCMP officers interviewed! He promised an approach. to many witnesses who appeared|the opposition's role which may eer of ie eae differ from its former one, uiry Mr. Justice 1--NOF-| stressing the need for a consist- ris into labor strife on the Great ent seanean cienpristhe equal Lakes and submitted detailed| parts of critical examination for }government policy and _ con- CITY EMERGENCY The caucus hashed over for} Oliver Named To Lead Liberals Temporarily was 'no resentment, no bitter- ness" about the way John Win- termeyer conducted the cam- paign. The Liberal leader was defeated in his own riding of Waterloo North. 4 "We have nothing but praise for the way he carried on and spent himself and hi& talents," Mr. Oliver said, as Mr. Winter- meyer stood beside him. Nei- |ther he nor the defeated leader would specify what the caucus had decided, Mr. Wintermeyer maintaining that the reasons "are all speculative." Mr. Oliver was quick to as- jsure reporters clustered outside jthe chamber that "'it is not my present intention' to seek the permanent -leadership at a con- |vention which the Ontario Lib- jeral Association's management committee will discuss within jthe- next 'month. Mr. Oliver, dean of the leg- forecasters said, the hurricane} ;weapons from orbiting space }will strike Haiti tonight with de-| |structive winds, storm tides jsatellites but their talks so far |have produced no specific ac- \cord on that or any other issue. Rusk and Gromyko met for a |three-hour discussion over din- jner Wednesday night at the So- jviet mission to the United Na- | tions. - | U.S. sources commented on |the 'cordial atmosphere" of the first woman member of the Ca-|parley, the first exclusively nadian Parliament in 1921, Mr.|U.S.-Soviet high level meeting Oliver was a high school de-|since the signing of the limited bater who remains one of/test ban treaty two months ago. Queen's Park's most self-pos-/ They said Gromyko appears sessed speakers. jinterested in some further lim- He entered the legislature un-jited disarmament accord, der the United Farmers of On-|though just what remains un- tario banner in 1926, became an Independent, then joined the Liberals in 1941 for a brief car- eer as a cabinet minister in the dissension - ridden government of the late Mitch Hepburn and his brief successors, The Lib- erals fell from power in 1943. He became party leader after 1945, when the Liberals were reduced to 11 in a 90-member House, but he resigned when the party gained only two seats in the 1948 election while the CCF took 21. Walter C. Thomp- son fared even worse at leader in 1951. voting and, at a 1954 leadership convention, Mr. Oli- clear. |. It was tentatively agreed that Gromyko would go to Washing- ton sometime next week for fur- ther talks, including a meeting with President Kennedy, Princesg Margaret of Brit- ain arrives at a London theater last night just after a hit, really a slap, performance took place offstage, Margaret and her husband, Lord Snow- don, entered as an actress working as an usher slapped a 53-year-old man because he VALACHI WIL QUESTIONS F 'Wrong Woman Shot To Death | | Canada WASHINGTON (CP) -- The 'ULS. justice department today jagreed to make mobster infor- imant Joseph Valachi available ito the RCMP and the Ontario | Police C ission for questi ing after he completes testi- |mony and makes several grand |jury appearances in the U.S. The department announced this following a meeting by members of the OPC, U.S, As- sistant Attorney-General ley, chief of the department's jorganized crime division. | Judge Bruce Macdonald, com- mission chairman, said he was elated with the decisions reached and in view of the de- partment's agreement on Vala- chi, it will not be necessary for c 4 |Attorney-General Robert Ken- nedy at this time. '| Hundley told reporters that Valachi, who has been testify- ing before a congressional sub- committee on the operations of the underworld Cosa Nostra or- ganization, will be made avail- able to Canadian authorities for here in Washington. grand jury appearances" a) Her- bert Miller and William Hund- confidential interviews probably Hudley's disclosure that Vala- chi is to make a "couple of US. Will Allow Session vese, Vincent Mangano and Dutch Schultz. : The man who drew up the list was Salvatore Maranzano, said Valachi, but he was killed him- self after a short reign as Cosa Nostra's "'boss of bosses." Maranzano grabbed power, Valachi said, after lieutenants of rival boss Giuseppe Masseria, gunned down their own chief in a Coney Island restaurant. Masseria's death ended a 14- month gang war that cost the Masseria gang 40 to 60 dead by | Valachi's count. RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP)--A Suffolk County grand jury Wed- nesday night indicted two men, harging them with the Cosa Nostra murder of a Brooklyn the commission to confer with] 0d! jum. . Anthony (Fat Tony) Regina; 29, of Commack, N.Y., and John J. Brooklyn, were charged with first-degree murder in the Aug, 9 slaying. of Louis Mariani, 26. They were held for arraignment Friday. (Moose) Battista, 47, of Battista and Regina were de. - scribed by authorities as mem> bers of a Brooklyn: gang for. merly headed by the late Ji Profaci and iow led by brother - in - law, Joseph Mage P| liocco. peared to indicate that the de- partment may use the convicted narcotics smuggler and killer in an attempt to prosecute those ;\named by Valachi as having 'OFFSTAGE prodded her with his rolled program, The girl burst into tears, the princess looked and» turned away and the man was charged with being drunk and disorderly. The performance? "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum..' --AP Wirephoto dian law enforcement In the dian police officials. Violence In Plant HANOVER, Ont. (CP)--Vio- lence erupted again in this striketidden town Wednesday when five club-wielding assail- ants ambushed three brothers |driving to work at the Hanover |plant. | Police said the ambush was the worst incident since a 4%4- month strike against the com- pany flared into violence in this jcommunity 25 miles south of {Owen Sound last week. The assailants blocked the lear, dragged the three men jout, beat them into submission and then drove the car over an embankment. Five men were later charged with assault caus- ing bodily harm. Meanwhile; female workers from -the Peerless Textile Lim- ited plant here joined the strik- ing members of the Interna- tional Woodworkers: of America (CLC). The women, armed with tomatoes, pelted police cars and non-striking workers going into the plant Wednesday night. THINKS JUST STARTING Hanover police chief Frank Illingworth, whose four - man force has been reinforced by 10 provincial police: officers, said Wednesday's incidents are "just the start of the violence." Treated in Hanover Hospital for a broken wrist and multiple bruises and scratches was iLorne Koenig, 21, youngest of Earl, 22, escaped with minor injuries. All live at nearby Ay- ton. Held by police in.Owen Sound Rusk was to see K dy this) morning during a half-day trip to Washington for the visit of Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selas- 'sie. The secretary was to return |to New York for an evening ses-| lsion with Gromyko and Foreign| |Secretary Lord Home o: Brit- jain. This is to be the second and last of the current three - way parleys. Lord Home is return- ing to London. 3% hours the results of lastlislature by.a country mile, has Wednesday's general election--|been notably unsuccessful in the seventh in a row which re-|two previous terms at the Lib- |structive alternatives. PHONE NUMBERS ver again took over. Gromyko. told - reporters The 1955 election again saw|'agreement is quite possible" on the Liberals reduced to 11 mem-|outlawing orbit ing. nuclear POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL, 723-2211 turned the Progressive Conserv atives to office--and the ques jtion of interim leadership eral helm Coached in politcs by the late|Oliver resigned to make way for|is promising' because Agnes Macphail, the formidable|a convention which chose Mr |stance, I think our views coin-|her tormentors when attacked|cutting settlers the strikers sus-| bers and two years later Mr. But, said Mr, Oliver, "there|/schoolteacher who became the|Wintermeyer, |weapons, He said cide." jare Herbert. Zippel, 25, George Cripple Set Afire; Police Seek Boys SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Po-| lice and school officials are seeking two boys who were said 'to have set fire to an eight-year- old crippled girl's clothes, caus- ing burns over 40 per cent of her body. The girl, Cathryn Reeves, "the question|crippled by polio, wears braces|workers raided a camp being|settlers and the strikers has not "in sub-\on her legs and could mot flee|maintained by independent |og-/abated. Tuesday. | the three brothers. Jack, 28, and) Valachi has an awful lot of in- formation about Canada." WASHINGTON (AP)--Joseph Valachi is billed for another 1% days in the limélight--longer if he can sing well enough about the narcotics racket, In a switch of plans, Senator John McClellan, the Arkansas Democrat who heads the Sen- ate investigations subcommit- tee, put off until next Tuesday the questioning of Valachi about the big money narcotics rackets in which members of the secret criminal society known as Cosa Nostra were involved. The convicted killer and dope pediar's testimony ran longer than expected Wednesday as he told of murder 30 years ago. McClellan disclosed that in questioning the 60 - year+ old mobster about narcotics the sub- committee will have to play things by ear. Its staff has had no opportunity to question Va- lachi in advance about the ille- gal traffic in drugs. Valachi continued his lecture on Cosa Nostra's history. He told of a secret list that marked for doom such under- world kingpins of 30 years ago as Al Capone, Frank Costello, Charles (Lucky) Luciano, Geno- Erupts Strike Spielmacher, 35, Robert Harron, 24, Glen Sickel, 29, and Kenneth Noble, 32, all of Hanover. Police said Spielmacher is the only one who is a member of the CIWA. The others are employees of a bakery they said, There were other incidents in the strike Wednesday. | A union official's wife was threatened over the telephone. "You watch your kids or. they are going to get into trouble," was the message. Mrs. William Bueglas, mayor of Hanover, demanded action by the Ontario department of Ja- or, Company General Manager A. E, Starke accused the union of deliberately inciting riots and acts of violence. The Hanover kitchens strike) began. May 21 when 65 mem- bers of. the plant's union could not come to an agreement with the management after being certified in February. ' | | | been involved in crime opera- tions. has in- rivilege like! will be extended to other tana agencies, meantime, the depart- ment plans to summarize the evidence they have been able to obtain from Valachi and will send this summary up to Cana- "We had not gone into depth on the Canadian situation 'be- cause we don't have the neces- sary background," Hundley said, 'and we don't know that tn eae eta eae 2, -mak- in his first World Series ap- conrad was the New York 'ankees' hope to get even with Los Angeles in today's second Fe ~, sg the veteran ohnny res, a of 1055. a Inshaken Wednesday's opener, won by Los Angeles 5-2, manager Ralph Houk started bag lineup, also -~ atage lineup was FIRST INNING Dodgers -- Wills singled to centre. Wills stole second. Gil. liam singled to right and took second on Maris' throw to third. Wills safe at. third. Willie Davis doubled to right. Wills and Gil- liam scored. T. Davis popped up to right. Howard bounced out to short, Willie Davis took third, Skowron struck out. Two runs, three hits, no errors one left on base. Yankees -- Kubec lined to cen- tre. Richardson bounced out to second, Tresh singled to 'left. Mantle flied io right. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left on. SECOND INNING Dodgers -- Tracewski struck out. Roseboro struck out. Pod- res singled to centre, Wills boun- ced out to the pitcher. No runs, no hits, no errors,- Yankees -- Maris grounded out to pitcher, E. Howard singl- ed to second. Pepitone walked, Howard to second, Boyer struck out. Downing struck out. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left on. & COCHRANE, Ont. (CP)--Pauljlumber firm in defiance of the Coulombe, manager of a set-|strikers' boycott. tlers' co-operate, one of 20) Mr. Coulombe, manager of the men cleared, here Wednesday/Val Rita Co-operative near Kap- by an Ontario Supreme Courtjuskasing, who led the work grand jury on three counts of|party of settlers the night of non-capital murder and rioting/the raid, will be tried with two charges, said after the hearing: other settlers on a joint charge} |'"Everybody. is relieved. lof possessing offensive wea- All 20 had been charged with| Pons. non-capital myrder in the shoot-\ FREE ON BAIL ing deaths of three striking un-| He was the only one of the ion bushworkers at Reesor Sid-feo charged to appear in court ing, 37 miles west of Kapuskas-|Wednesday, All were. free on ing, during a violent strike|/$5,000 bail. against a lumber firm in Kap-| Mr. Coulombe, father of six uskasing last winter. |children, said although people The loggers were shot when|were relieved by the court de- a small army of striking bush-|cision, ill-feeling between 'the He said construction of a $22,- Court Clears Loggers From Murder Charges jdead strikers at the scene of the shooting will cause aggravation, The monument--life-sized fig- ures of a mother, father and child on huge cement pedestals --was to have been unveiled on Labor. Day, but will not be erected and unveiled until next year. z The jury Wednesday returned "no" 'bills against the 20 set. tlers on the non-capital murder and rioting. charges, but re turned "'true"' bills against Cou- lombe, Herbert Murray and Leon Tremblay on a charge of possessing .offensiye weapons. The 20 men are expected to appear in court next Monday, when the murdér and rioting charges against them are likely to be dismissed and a trial date fixed for the three charged with pected "of cutting wood for the/000 monument to the three Possession,