; y ye B THOUCHT FOR TODAY The most difficult year of life Is always the one you rein. bata i M NYS? uy WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warmer with a few cloudy... intervals. Winds west __ Thursday at 15 mph. VOL. 92-237 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1963 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for Class Mail Post Office Departmen: Doyment ot t Postage in Cash. Stevedores Turn Down New Offer MONTREAL (CP) -- Striking|nied by Louis Laberge, presi-| 5 § longshoremen today rejectedident of the Montreal Labor| settlement proposals made by ajCouncil. | federal mediator in an effort to ' i" in ite sixth) POLICE ON WATCH | = -- ee Hundreds of police were on) The longshoremen rejected|duty at or near the building in the proposals at a mass et ae Mga Pap wn ieee ing in Atwater Market, a build-| oot oF 60.000.000 b shale i Cal ing in Montreal's southwest] Mi; gird itealgrbag be end. é nadian wheat to Russia. | Phil Cutler, counsel for the In-| Judge Lippe rae maine oy he ternational Longshoremen's as\Gcen mat on ink sd ge | meee) fin venaner|semed unti e last minute a} wa ce hc dete robe yp: | hopeful series of negotiations, | "The next step is to infrrm|Proposed his own terms to set-| alll bid es Roi 4 that th jtle the strike by 3,800 members| sicetin fa' waded he ren lof the International Longshore-| aihaisedatincs made by Judge Men's Associa tion (CLC) in| (Rene) Lippe and that tap jung-| Montreal, Quebec City, Trois- shoremen will stay put on the gs nig rag bong 4 tel stand they took last Sunday." Be EY oro ae Judge Lippe, federal mediator| "8 meeting to consider the pro-| in the dispute, made the settle-|ition alled an afternoon meet after disclosing that it was not!'"8 , . , a The strike, begun last Friday pee (9, grne, abou scemed on ie verge of sl iy : ;}ment several times Tuesday as bag ro a co nga and sources close to the closed-door aie pping dees negotiations kept indicating that| ; ae |broad areas of agreement in Paik yo not medial Sif! principle had been reached. Mr, Cutler said' "We have|. At nearly 1 a.m. today, Judge confidence in Judge Lippe. Un-|LiPpe announced that because fortunately he went right down of the "total impossibility of a the middie and that was not| Voluntary understanding," he good enough for the men." i"elt it his duty as federally-ap Mr. Cutler said the main bone| Pointed mediator to submit his of contention remains "'working|°W" Proposals of settlement. | conditions." He said there was), He suggested in his report to} no discussion at the meeting of|Labor Minister MacEachen that} the retirement plan which is|*%e longshoremen get a 10-cent| one of the areas of conflict. The|!ncrease in basic wages in each men were prepared to go along/Year of a three-year contract. with Judge Lippe's recommen-|~ ~~~ dations that the administration) of the retirement. plan be in- vestigated. During the meeting it ap- peared likely Judge Lippe's pro- posals would be rejected. Long- shoremen in steadily increasing numbers stomped angrily from the meeting hall. One report from the closed VATICAN CITY WHO YELLED 'FIRE'? we're agree When we get big gonna be firemen,"' five-year-old Ernest Kaleny, right, and Neal Gruntz, kin- dergarten pupils at Cedardale Public School, Members of the Oshawa Fire Department paid unexpected visits to this and other Oshawa schools Tues- day as part of their Fire Pre- Council Votes To Alter Latin Mass (Reuters)--),ern languages "in principle" to meeting was that many of the|The Vatican ecumenical council|/some parts of the mass--but not strikers walked out while their|/today voted overwhelmingly for|in the canon or most sacred} union president; Paul Asselin,|measures opening the way to re-|part. | was addressing the gathering.|Placing Latin by modern lan- Mayor Jean Drapeau was a|Suages in parts of the Roman ment' said id¢al, amedern jan: \guages' may be introduced key|parts of the mass for the read-| surprise visitor to the meeting| Catholic mass. and he was given a rousing re-| The prelates passe ception. jamendments to a liturgy' decree ings from the Bible The most important amend-' n auid the text 'Macmillan Faces | Surgery Thursday LONDON (Reuters)--Doctors,Butier is running the. govern- |said today Prime Minister Mac-|ment in Macmillan's absence. }millan, ill with a prostate ob-| The prostate condition is a 'struction, will undergo surgery|obstruction of the bladder fairly 'Thursday morning if a medical/common in men of Mr. Macmil- }examnation shows his condition/lan's age. : jis satisfactory. The prime Pe gy ante ea | A spokesman at the King Ed-|has thrown his Conservative |ward Vil Hospital said the 69-/Party into disarray as its an- lyear-old Macmillan.was resting}nual political convention began |*very comfortably" today. today at Blackpool. A flood of Sir John Richardson, Macmil- sympathetic ie ai Pianos gp - jlan's personal physician,, said the baat =) aga Bi ots |'*we shall know by this evering over the: world. 'i lwhat the situation is." He said) The Queen, Harold Wilson, op- \the operation would be a position Labor party leader, straig ir and that|mewspapers and others all ex-| le aarp gyal gg oe pressed their sympathy for the| . " Sonservative leader. cheerful and working. Conservative Deputy Prime Minister R. A.. PRESIDED AT MEETING : Macmillan became ill early) Tuesday, but after treatment) was able to preside over a cab-| inet meeting, although he was jin pain. Then his official residence at} 10 Downing Street announced! | Tuesday night: "The prime minister has to- vention Week program. While | fire alarms sounded in. the schools, fire sirens wailed in the school yards. Students filed out of .the schools in an orderly fashion on every oc- s s Canada Signs casion, despite the touch of | realis yhick lacking in | py try 'ire drills. Ray | Wheat Deal --Oshawa Times Photo | | night been admitted to the King | ws . With Bulgaria |Edward VII Hospital for Offi- OTTAWA (CP) Canada| cers for, an operation for pros- jadded another Communist coun-|'@tic obstruction. Twins Killed try to her list of grain custom-! "It is expected that this will) 4 ) HAROLD MacMILLAN Fact-Finding Group To Head For. Viet Nam UN fact-finding mission is ex- pected to leave soon for Soyth Viet Nam to investigate charges that President Ngo Dinh Diem's! regime is violating the rights of! Buddhists. | The assembly agreed Tuesday! j plant here as production lines were gearing for full output of 1964 models. {were stopped from entering the jplant by about 500 pickets who |barred the main entrance gates as they were to report to work around 7 a.m. | The United Automobile Work- ers of America (CLC), which jbargains for most of Ford's 4,200 employees, called a meet- ing of union directors and the plant committee and declared | le the strike illegal. Edward G. Bruce, president of Local 707, said officials were urging picketers to return t 0; work but expected little - suc- STRIKE GRIPS F 1500 WORKERS | Wildcat Illegal. 'Union Declares - OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- Ajfor striking a foreman brought wildcat strike today halted work/in from the U.S. iat the Ford Motor Company big | TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES *. Mr. Bru¢e said that while the union had «received no official. 'notice of the strike, it' was "no nh |surprise to us." About 1,500 day-shift workers|peen circulating Tuesday night. Rumors had Company officials said they had also heard the rumors, had called a meeting with the union | Tuesday but had been unable to |reach an agreement. Mr. Bruce Said the union's €x- jecutive and Ford officials have jbeen meeting weekly but have jbeen unable to make headway. | "The inability to settle prob- ms in the plant has built up where the men it any more," he fo the point fer take said. The plant was turning out 530 cess. He said a full member-|Cars in a two-shift work day and ship meeting will be called as|122 trucks in one shift daily. soon as possible. Meanwhile, union official] were meeting with the com-| UNITED NATIONS (CP)--a|Pany's industrial relations office} jto discuss the situation. |NO._ EXPLANATION Teaching Of Chemistry Said | Don Carlson, company. secre- tary and director of public re- lations, said the company has Out Of Date. |received no official explanation ' lers Tuesday with announcement|involve his absence from offi- jof a sale of up to 16,500,000 bush-|Cial duies for some weeks, and els of wheat to Bulgaria. he has asked the first secretary By Rifle Butt Near Kelowna The deal, part of a thtve-yeur|(G°ONy poe Sur dates al ENDERBY, B.C. (CP)--Donna|ttade agreement, provides for/the government while he is and Dianna Ring, identical 15. the East European -country to| away." year-old twins; always did ev-/buy 100,000 metric tons (3,675,-|. 4 British Medical Association erything together, /000 bushels) a ,year for thre@isnokesman- said treatment in Moriday the beautiful' gitls|Years aidan ional 150,000) such cases usually involved hos: died together, victims of a/metric (5.5) bushels) pital t. for about slayer; who police say bludg-/during the cu "erop year, three weeks and six to 'eight ecned them with a rifle butt. {depending on thy Canadian sup- weeks of convalescence. Com- to dispatch a mission to be ap-! pointed by UN President Carlos Sosa - Rodriguez of Venezuela with instructions to report to the 111-country body as soon as possible. Consent came without. a for- mai y te after hehind-scenes for the strike. | TORONTO (CP)--A Torente "We won't know what it is yn-/Chemistry teacher says it "Ys til they (the union). make. a |statement,"' he said. Traffic on Highway 122 backed jup for miles as hundreds of workers gssembled outside the plant on the Queen. Eliza talks succeeded in getting the Soviet Union to drop a gival pro- posal that would have biock Way bet a direct UN investigation. Uncir the agreement, Chile ry e. No. i reported. : One picket who declined to be Toronto and Haniy ilton. Leave for Oakville police was cancelled as a precaution- a idents were Ir' and doned as. a. subject. 8. R. Bu Toronto division: of t 3 Institute -of Canada ~ pres night * chemistry tor a full year press 3 only hinder the teaching of other sciences." ~ No fundamental explanations jtime tradition went over the thi 'Inca 'brief speech, Mr. Dra-|2/med at reinvigorating pubiic|recited or sang by Yhe eongre-) peau said he wished the men|W°rhip. jgation. i well and Roped their strike) A council source made it clear) These texts includé the open- would soon reach a satisfactory|the conclave at the most wouldjing psalms called the Mass of settlement. He was accompa- allow the introduction of mod-|Catechumens, the Gloria in Ex- The death of the two high schoo} gi uch look - alikes that they were often mistaken one for the other--shocked this ply picture. | HM is the first time Canada up to three months, the spokes- |bas ever sold wheat to Bulgaria.|man added. ; | launched. This iete return to health could take bf identified said office and super- visory personnel and probation- ary workers were being per- mitted to pass the picket line. He said the men are fed up and Costa Rica also withdrew a proposal that an inquiry be left the way clear for Sosa-Rodriguez to ac- of natural phenomena are given students in secondary schools, Mr. Huntington said, Chemistry could provide those explana- *- PHONE NUMBERS | Hurricane Flora | eads Out To Sea MIAMI, Fla. Hurricane, Public Health Minister Ger- Flora passed over-sparsely set-|ard Philippeaux said some) tled islands in the Bahamas to-|towns along the north and south) day and moved eastward into|coasts of the central portion of|remain in Latin, but the door)" bi the Atlantie away from the/Haiti's southern peninsula--the, United States mainland country's farm belt had! After one of the longest and|"ceased to exist." deadliest rampages on record.) He said 'entire families were the storm headed out to sea-/swept out to sea by swollen There appeared to be no danger! rivers. i 4 to Florida. Top winds of 100 miles an hour battered the southeastern islands in the 750-mile British! chain, The islands are about 500) ), - be miles southeast of here than 250,000 people The weather bureau said) The towns reported heaviest| winds of gale force were esti-|hit were Bainet and Cotes de mated 400 miles. to the north|Fer-on the southern coast,of the| and 150 miles to the south of the|penitsula and Anseaveau, Pe-! storm's eye. tite Riviere de Nippes and Mira- It warned of dangerous winds, gone .on the peninsula's north- igh tides and heavy rains in ern coast he southeastern Bahamas.) Seymour Celestin, secretary 'Same of the islands are sitesjof Haiti's Red Cross, said Red for tracking stations of the J.S.|Cross organizations in six coun- Atlantic miissile test range itries have offered help Flora moved off the northeast) -- 'i coast of Cuba Tuesday after) pounding the island with winds and rain for five days. Nearly Philippeaux said the worst} storm: in Haiti's history had af-! fected 99 per cent of the rural! population, representing . more UP TO BISHOPS sections from Latin. to: the ver-; lis best for its own area NDP BLANKED; LIBERALS RIDDLED ter, and other prayers. | The decision to change these| nacilar will rest with the var- ious regional or gational groups of bishops throughout the world, Council sources said- the cen-} tral part of the mass--the s0-| called canon of the mass--would} was not shut to changes even here. Another amendment said if bishops wanted even} more radical changes could apply to Rome for permis- sion. ' Catholics in several countries} including Canada lations on using Latin in the mass will be changed But some parts of the world) still favor Latin--either for tra-} ditional reasons or because of| technical difficulties such in one parish The council's decision will) mean a national hierarchy of! bishops can decide itself what! 40,000 persons abandoned flooded homes in Oriente Camaguey provinces. During the weekend the siow-| "moving hurricane devastated) Haiti, leaving 3,500 persons dead/ and 100,000 homeless. Flora also killed 17 persons on the island eee of Tobago, off Venezuela HALIFAX (CP) -- Robert With communications in east- Lorne Stanfield, who led 'the ern Cuba knocked out, there was Progressive Conservatives from no estimate of casualties on|the wings of Nova Scotia's po- Fidel Castro's island. litical stage to the spotlight, re-| Disaster survey team re- ceived what ported a pressing need for cioth.|standg ovation from the prov- ing, shoes and medicine in in-|ince's voters' Tuesday with a terior villages of Haiti. Officials, walk-away victory in the pro- said 40 per cent of the country/vincial election. was devastated. One opposition party was ob- Village huts Negro jliterated and another so riddled 1 and in the country offered only flimsy re-)j{ can hope only for bit parts in tne Liberals, under freshman|'wWe will try to justify this 'con-|4* sistance to the storm h 2 i A ae ce estat are The leaders of both the LiB- roof could be seen when he flew eral and New Democratic par- over Haitian towns reported|tis were defeated as the Con- hudviest. hit servatives increased their Churches, the largest' build- strength in the House by 12. ings in each town, stood silent} Final standings: memorials to the tragedy CITY EMERGENCY the next legislature Prog. Cons. Liberals | NDP 0 | Mr. Sanfield, who became the first Conservative leader to win three conseculive elections in the province, started his climb in 1948 when he was jnamed to head a party that had jno members in the House. 3. 27 | 4 ib LICE 725-1133 E DEPT. 725-6574 l4 a Conservatives Sweep N'S. The first victory for the party under his leadership came in 1956. Four years later he was returned The last comparable PC jand- amounted to ajslide in Nova Scotia was in 1925,He said it was 'impossible to|Premier Lesage's Liberals, ev- when only three Liberals were) elected tunes changed hand: and the Liberals held office for 23 years before falling in 1956, Tuesday's crushing defeat for Ear. W. Urquhart, fol- lowed a campaign in which most of the fireworks came from Liberal guns But the voters rallied behind leader the 49-year-old premier, - giving; his party am eight-point increase/won im 1960 while the Liberals|qidates in the field each won. 1963 1960 |in the popular' vote over the|/had reduced majorities in three|p,; George Burridge, 80, won 1960 result. Mr. Urquhart, a member of the House since 1949 and head- ing the Liberals for. the. first time, was defeated in his home riding of Richmond, Michael J. MacDonald, House jeader of the NDPs and their only member, was defeated in » 'Cape Breton Centre. He had/than 50-vole margins. passed} they} i have been day at the international and! Just hoping for years the strict regu- ; a5\Tran, 46, of Claremont and Wil-/ made avail several languages being spoken} Later the political for-| inivewes rosa in the a e e - anag; alley, 40 miles north) em 'Strikebound Liner Their beaten bodies were| found in bush a short distance! cede to the Diem government's request that a mission be sent. UN sources said he would start a apart and not far from where! E sy k N S t they alighted from a school bus} @) ee ew | e for the mile-long walk home, 7 | Monday afternoon. | QUEBEC (CP)--The possibil-; Passengers on the Empress} Lawrence Herman Haase, 25,\ity arose today that the Cana-\spent a normal night aboard of Kelowna, a service station at-'dian Pacific liner Empress of|ship. -- : ' | tendant, was charged with capi-/Canada oe = vege re Mr! liner ores in gi Poin tal murder i slaying. anchorage off the island of Or-/Tuesday a egan Ta- Me : Seine -_ wand leans 4 sail 85 miles down|tions for docking with the aid of ithe St. Lawrence to Murray/a tug. A small boat was sent out; |Bay and discharge her 409 pas-|from the Empress bearing 20 isengers there by tender. \seamen who were Claremont Plower | The Empress Tuesday aban-|helped in mooring her. Represents Ontario |," her attempt to dock at With about ie aries long: CALEDON, _ (Cpy--|the strikebound Quebec port and/shoremen wat: rom even jr hg oo seck. she moved 13 miles downstream to/pier, aldng with 125 municipal ian ¢ i ; |anchor. and 40 provincial police, Canadian championship here to- small boat put back. before word -reached The. 'Smpeeki : world. plowing matches. The|here that striking longshoremen winner will earn the right tojhad rejected settlement pro- compete for Canada in the 1964|posais, one official indicated the world contest. {Empress may go to Murray Ey Ontario will be represented in|if no settlement was reached. today's match by Joseph G.|At Murray Bay trains could be to carry | | liam Hostrawser, 33, of Malton. Sets to Montreal. Don Dunkeld of _Ciaremont; Meanwhile, the Greek liner won the Ontario championships|Arkadia was en. route with Tuesday and the right to enter/about 400 passengers and was next year's Canadian competi-'expected also to anchor off the tion. lisland of Orleans. cific officials went into a con- the liner started downstream. A NEAR-RIOT f A near-riot developed last. Fri- day night as about 30 longshore: men and the crew of the Steamship Company liner mania threw pennies and rocks at one another as the pared to sail with more than 400 passengers. | Cunard officials said a crew imember of the Carmania was jinjured by gunfire and 11 others |were treated for injuries caused |by flying bottles and stones. | Aboard the Empress, calm jreigned Tuesday night. to have! . the in midstream while Canadian Pa-|' ference and a halffhour later! ship pre-|. lining up the group today. Informed sources said Sosa- Rodriguez probably would name seven members, including three \from Asia, two from Africa and two from Latin America. Mean- while, assembly debate is sus- pended on the charge that Bud- dhist rights ate being violated in South Viet Nam. with increasing speedups of pro- duction and supervision by United States experts. Workers who protested or jcould not keep up with the faster rate of work were sus- pended, he said. WORKED DISMISSED One report said the strike was sparked by the dismissal Mon- day of one worker and the sus- penion of two others. A union official said the man was fired | tions, but if the students were forced to take chemistry as a subject for a full year the pur- pose of the course would be de- feated. "We must eliminate artificial 'boundaries between the sciences iso that the student will carry with him through life the basie¢ principles of science, not mem- ° orized facts. Chemistry should not be taught for chemistry's sake, but for science's sake." | .Passengers called relatives across Canada, lounged in bars,| danced or strolled along the; The government victory kept,deck to enjoy an extended view! held the seat since 1945 and was the dean " sitting members in intact a trend that has marked|9f i the last House. Canadian provincial politics in| Mountains, Mr. Stanfield heard the re-|the last 1. months. Since last "They are all settled down," sults in his home town of Truro.|Nov. 14 when Quebec returned|Said Capt, W. §. (Bill) Main wa: another day at sea." find words of gratitude." Fresh from a. five-week. cam-;Wan has voted and each has re-| paign in which he worked long|turned its governments. hours and travelled hundreds of|, The PCs and Liberals con- miles to 'defend his govern-|tested all 43 seats, the NDP only | q|20. There were no independents | ery province except Saskatche-| Ws | YOU'LL FIND | the autumn-clad Laurentian' - "We're carrying on just as iit, ment's record, the premier sai fidence." _ From almost every angle the Conservative victory was stun- ning, They increased their majori-| ties in 26 of the 27 ridings they! of the four seats they won. The premier himself chalked) up the biggest majority--4,091) in Colchester, The 'biggest Lib-; era| majority was 311--recorded by Peter M. Nicholson in An- napolis West i The other three Liberals who gained seats did so with Jess |record. vote. of 347,660, INSIDE... Ask 8 Training Courses For Unemployed .. Page 13 1963 GM Sales~ Set Record ........ Page mong the 106 candidates. Seventeen NDP candidates) failed to poll the required 50) per cent of the winner's votes in| their ridings and thus lost their| $100 deposits. Five Liberals also lost their deposits. | The youngest and oldest can-} 13 Labor Council Asks Air Pollution Action Page Thieves Rifle for ¢ i i - Of tne Conservatives in Yas Restaurant Till .,. Page mouth, and Gerald Doucet, 26, was the man who defeated Mr.| Urquhart in Richmend Mr. Stanfield's cabinet returned to a man With 95 per cent of the. polls reported, 328,170 votes had been 4 recorded compared with 1960's) Former Top Jockey | Charged. With.Fraud Pages City Pension Plan Revised ....:, ty minutes at noon today to free the child from the wash- ing machine wringer at her Chery! Glecoff, aged two, got all caught up with moth- er's washing today. Four | members of the Oshawa Fire -home, 488 Byron court, Mrs. 4| Department.worked. for.twens Andrew -Glecoff said .! thati b 5 was Pickering Engineer's Duties Extended ... Page 3 ~ ARM CAUGHT IN WASHING WRINGER: seco Cheryl's. arm was drawn inte the machine as she tried to feed clothing into. the wring. er when 'ef. alone momens tarjly. ; # Oshawa Times PHot@ nepee sere lh rege rn te et