E Thought For Today When a member of the clergy gets angry, it's known as clerical choler, VOL. 93 -- NO. 152 OSHAWA, ONTARiS, MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1964 spent Weather Report Sunny with a few cloudy periods, Tuesday, Rising tem- peratures. Winds light. Authorized as Second Closs 'Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. Spurs Hunt For Three PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP)| the station wagon and-two men, Authorities today investigated a|whom he described as ' of simi- lelues in the baffling disappear- report that two young white men|lar appearance' to Goodman were seen standing beside a sta-| and Schwerner, last Monday be- tion wagon similar to one driven} previously, at least six per- by three civil rights workers|sons told authorities they: had who vanished eight days ago. | passed the site around 11 a.m.| The widespread search for) last Monday: and saw nothing.| | | Choctaw Indians confessed ance of Michael Scherner, 23,| they stripped the hubeaps off and Andy Goodman, 20, both of|the burned-out vehicle about WEST CALLS FO LAOS CEASE-FI Jails Banks Canada Joins 5-Nation Plea |New York, and James Chaney,'5 p.m. last Monday. 22, a Meridian, Miss., Negro,) Some 275 more summer vol- |continued in this hill section of unteer civil rights workers | Mississippi, poured into the state during the | One hundred sailors from a) weekend. Goodman arrived the |nearby airfield rejoined police| previous weekend in the ad- and FBI officers to search west! vance guard of some 175 col- of this town of 5,000 as other|jegians from the northern and officers dragged small lakes and) western states. LONDON (AP)--Britain, Ca™)which to conduct further mill- ada, the United States, Thailand |tary operations and are in fact. land South Viet Nam _ today|continuing their offensive." |called for an immediate cease-| The five powers also claimed |fire in Laos and a withdrawal|that the North Vietnamese ont jof pro-Communist Pathet Lao|munists are using Laotian terri- forces from their recently-won tory "for the infiltration of men military positions. jand anms ino South Viet Nam" For Month - OTTAWA (CP) Hal C. |Banks, deposed president of the Seafarers' International Union jstreams in the area. | Chief Investigator Gwin Cole of the highway patrol said one |witness had reported seeing a | station wagon near a side road in the Bogue Chitto Swamp near Goodman, Schwerner and Chaney were last seen late on the night of June 21 when they posted a $20 bond after being arrested here for speeding. MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) wa of Canada, was ordered today Me ae, | |bY the Supreme Court of Can- jada to serve a 30-day jail sen- jtence for contempt of court. The court dismissed an appli- jcation by Banks seeking leave to appeal to the Supreme Court The five-power appeal. was made in Vientiane--and its de- tails released by the foreign of- fice in London--after a month of consultation among the en- voys of those pro-Western coun- tries which signed the 1962 Lao- where the United States is ac- tively backing the Saigon gov- ernments to crush the Red-or- ganized insurréction, The five powers agreed to ask the foreign secretaries of Brit- ain and Russia as co-chairmen the spot where the burned vehi- | cle used by the missing trio was! "Certainly, I'm afraid, every- | found last Tuesday. one is afraid," said Marilyn The witness, Cole said, spotted) Leonard, "but the importance of Truce Hope ».i3i"'<% Looming lagainst the contempt of court | conviction. "The application for leave to |appeal is dismissed with costs," |the court said. The court in dismissig | the Laotian peace settlement, to: 1. Appeal urgently to all pars tian peace settlement. | India, which took part in these exchanges, declined to sign for | reasons of diplomatic protocol.|ties in Laos to quit fighting im« | The five powers, after study-)mediately. s urt |ing the political and strategic) 2. Request the Pathet Lao Banks' application gave no rea-|elements of the Laotian crisis, |forces to pull back to their Feb, " ne Sis iclaimed to oars Re seme 1964, military positions. e application was heard by|what they called "indisputable; 3 \Chief Justice Robert Tasche-| evidence" of Communist North Fn ge Heth pe vn ac jreau and Justices Gerald Fau-'vitnamese involvement in the| withdraw from Laotian tersitory jteux and Ronald Martland on) pathet Lao offensive which has | Marilyn, 19, a. Negro and a Radcliffe College student from Port Huron, Mich., was one of ja fresh contingent of 275 who} |poured into Mississippi during |the weekend on the summer pro- lject to push Negro voter regis-| Two sky diving enthusiasts drop in on their wedding re- ception a mile below Sunday after being married in a small plane high above the Canton ainport. Alvin Lownsbury, the bridegroom, left, and Patricia a THE BRIDE! tration and educational projects, | One hundred and seventy-five} the civil rights wae | n J At Resort f | 0) Cristy said their vows and | then, clasping hands, jumped from the plane. They landed at the airport where the wed- dihg reception was held. --(AP Wirephoto) Crowds Hail LBJ | isk Speech b : . ; . y { ifficult; Most of the workers, like Miss War Ris peec Titve' beeaure the middle groung| Leonard, said they were appre-|last United Nations troops are|when the Congolese army took| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-|maintain f re edo | . dent Johnson says the United|them counsel and advice anditegration by Negroes and the|*hrough with the program. ; : "We expected some incidents | wedding _ of a chief of the cheers when he demanded fre- ut i i y aluba tribe. ie hes eon, meee The grenades injured nearly |munist The in Stanleyville. - wide States "must be prepared to risk waf" to keep its freedom, yet be ready to "'seek just com-| promise" to achieve peace. This was Johnson's keynote message Sunday as he ended a three - day trip into Michigan and Minnesota. He took up the matter of war and peace in his only non-political speech of the trip, at a Swedish festival in Minneapolis. Facing thousands of cheering Minnesotans' who stood under shade trees in Minnehaha Park, Johnson said: "Today, as always, if a na- tion is to keep its freedom it must be prepared to risk war. When necessary, we will take that risk. But as long as I am president, I will spare neither my office mor myself in the quest for peace." In South Viet Nam, Johnson) said, '"'we are engaged in a brutal .and bitter struggle for the frecdom of a friend" and "we will stand firm to help m and give| help as necessary." Johnson had this to say about compromising East-West differ- ences in the interest of peace:|communications between the|nard. "The news of the disap-\10 persons Saturday as "We must remember that dif-] two races for more than a week,|pearance of our fellow workers|©9Ng0 opened a country ; fereces with others do not al-! following collapse of a first ef-|depressed us all terribly, but it|teferendum on a new constitu-|2% ye only increased our dedication." tion. Agriculture Minister Con-| Bemba at The volunteers moved into the|Stantin Tshiala - Mwana was|Congo River. Informed sources knowledge. from a desire for They can come ways flow domination. The possibility of a truce in St. was Andy Goodman of Augustine's racial conflict) York, who vanished myster-| loomed today for the first time iously a week ago with two in nearly two weeks. other civil rights workers near MUONG SOUI (underlined). ear strategic Plaine Des arres, faces imminent attack |trained at Oxford, Ohio, had ar-| by 17 Communist battalions. ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP)|rived previously. One of them| Premier 8 Rea ea GRENADES EXPLODE Souvanna Phouma } says he has six battalions to |June 15. face the Reds in the battle | Banks was convicted for vio- for the town which straddles |jation of a Quebec court injunc- a vital east-west road. tion prohibiting picketing by the --(AP Wirephoto Map) |SIU. The injunction was ob- % |Shipping Company after a cam- paign of harassment directed against the compay's vessels A new effort to establish a) Philadelphia, Miss. biracial committee to seek) Goodman, Michael Schwern- peace was reported nearing suc-jer, also of New York, and, cess. .. ., James Chaney, a Negro from| But it was unknown if this) Meridian, disappeared after} proposed com mittee of {Wo driving into Neshoba County to| whites and two Negroes could) | accomplish much immediately. ome at a burned-down Negro} Community leaders predicted) has all but disappeared in the|Hensive about coming into the| furious, month-long push for in-|@atea but were determind to go/f tin equally. determined resistance by whites. There has been almost no|at Philadelphia," said Miss Leo- fort to find a settlement In the first fruitless attempt, in St. Lawrence River ports. . a | The contempt charge was laid ul Ss ongo, jafter picketing occurred at Terror Revived LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--Thejabout 200. anti-Sendwe youths| leaving The Congo with a bang,| Albertville away from the reb- from exploding grenades lobbed/els for awhile in May. the to polling stations and from honest clash of beliefs or|a St. Johns County grand jury|state by car and bus, most of }@Mong the wounded. goals. In such cases our} impose our interest. Rather, our jdesire for peace compels us to seek just compromise." | Speaking as much.about civil rights as the quest for interna-| tional peace, Johnson said: "As i) president of the United States, and as an individual citi- zen, I stand totally committed to the integrity of justice and the enforcement of the law." Johnson said the United called for a 30-day truce in pub-/them without stopping en route a biracial committee would have been established. The Ne-' gro leader, Rev. Martin Luther} King Jr., rejected this and sought immediate formation of; Cheers Faint gg tegen ugg refused inal As K Nears that ended the first effort. j The pace of demonstrations by} End Of Tour both Negroes and whites was OSLO (AP)--Soviet Premier stepped up. Fist fights and other were|Khrushchev arrived today in jm er, violence became a daily occur- rence as_ integrationists peror, \from Brussels ing 's fixed." Saturday, South Kasai's de-| offer of liberty if he would join strength does not entitle us to|lic demonstrations, after which|for fear of creating an incident, |P0Sed "mulopwe," or pentreo a "round table of reconcilia- arrive "I am still the Kalonji told report- Albert Kalonji, ulopwe,"' S. | CLAIM CHARGES FIXED Kalonji had been a fugitive|rorists were thought to have |for more than two years from} been acting on orders from the! |a 30-month sentence for tortur-|\Communist'- supported Na- es/-Officials| tional Liberation. Committee of of been | exiled extremists in neighboring g political enemi d the charges 'th a One Bal started. sc leader was killed | overthrow met on the beaches and city|Norway on the last leg of an|before the reconciliation oe ave ieciae Messages | A lO States is pledged to "abide by the law and accep\ its gettle- ments .. . to submi -ourts| streets by fist-swinging whites. 18-day Scandinavian tour. oeuvres got Trois-Rivieres, Que., in violation of the injunction. The Quebec Superior Court judgment con- victing Banks later was upheld by the Quebee Court of Appeal. When the application for leave to appeal was heard by the 'court, Banks' counsel, John G. @ Ahern of Montreal, said there is no evidénée that members of |the union who picketed at Trois- dom for Antoin Gizenga, Com-|Rivieres did so on orders of -backed separatist leader|Banks with his knowledge or consent, Gizenga has been detained for) Mr. Ahern said that Banks ars on the island of Bula-|Should not be held responsible the mouth of the for events of which he had no Tshombe was greeted by |been undr way since February. | "This (involvement) has taken jthe form of North Vietnamese | fighting cadres as well as ex- tensive logistic support," the ~|tained in 1962 by Upper Lakes/tiye.power statement said. They| jadded that the Pathet Lao and jheir allies "are in a tactically | advantageous pos ti on from Troops Seeking Gunhappy Police . ACAPULGO. Pe ican troops and federal police searched this resort area Sun- day for 30 rural police who fought a pitched gun battle Sat- urday with federal authorities, and to desist from any further use of Laotian territory for the purpose of interfering in the in- ternal affairs of the republic of | Viet Nam." 4. Call on the international commission for supervision and control in Laos (Canada, India and Poland) to submit a report on the situation without delay, VIENTIANE -- Sharpshooti Neo tribesmen have moved vend hills overlooking Muong Soui, last neutralist, stronghold in the 'Plaine des'Farres area, to coun- ter a flanking push on the town by the pro-Communist Pathet Lao, meutralist military sources here said today. : The sources said about 800 of the mountain' guerrillas led by leaving eight dead and another person wounded. The rural policemen, believed responsible for the killing of a lrancher and widespread steal- ing, were attacked by about 20 federal police on the shore of Lake Acapulco and a one-hour battle ensued. said he rejected a government} " Itio . ACT ON RED ORDERS? | Gizenga's supporters were be-| lieved responsible for the 'gren-| ade attacks Saturday, The ter-| OTTAWA (CP)--The cabinet, {met for nearly two hours todary| ldrafting a new legislative pro-| {gram for July which Prime Minister Pearson hoped would be a'greeable to opposition groups. Brazzaville. They are out to Premier Cyrille Cabinet Ponders 'Peace Program Trying to find a solution to) the Commons Friday that the government is using the prom- ise of a summer recess as a |club with which to force a quick jend to the flag debate and dis- jcussiof of granting interim Gen. Vang Pao, right-wing Meo jmilitary chief, were guarding both flanks of the town. Neutralist Premier Prince |Souvanna Phouma announced |Sunday that a Communist. at. |tack against Muong Soui wgs 'imminent. The sources said the Pathet Lao were shelling neutralist frontline positions about 10 miles east of Muong Soui but were unlikely to launch a fron- tal assault. In their flanking movements they had already run up against the Meo tribes- men in the hills. According to the neutralist sources, the Pathet Lao were finding it difficult to take their heavy artillery across the rain- swollen Ngum River about 15 miles east of the town. Monsoon rains have begun. spending authority for Juiy. Some reporters interpreted| Souvanna said the Commu- nists had 17 battalions--appar- |the tense parliamentary situa-\the prime minister's remark to-/ently about 8,000 men -- and and be satisfied by court deci- sions .. . to respect, uphold and obey the law of the land." Governor Farris Bryant) A ragged cheer went up from|from the east said North Kat- clamped on a curfew to end pub- a crowd in front of Oslo City) anga provincial president Jason lic parades at night. Hali as Khrushchev, bare-|Sendwe had been hacked to tion, Mr, Pearson called his ministers into an unusual carly Monday cabinet session, and Nehru's Heir 'MISUNDERSTOOD' announced afterwards that op- position party House leaders are being invited to meet with the government leader, Justice Min- one ~--~| headed and looking rested after|death by rebels some days ago |his two-day sail from Sweden,|when thev seized Albertville,| [stepped ashore. his provincial capital. PM's" CLAIM Ails, May Norwegian Premier Einar cut down j\day as indicating the govern-jheavy artillery massed for a ment is willing to dicker w2th|five-pronged assault on Muong opposition representatives on|Soui, 110 miles north of Vien- the possibility of postponing the|tiane and just northwest of the flag debate until after a par-/plain. The neutralists have liamentary recess. 'about 3,000 men at Muong Soui, | ister Favreau, at noon. "Until that meeting is neld I don't want to say anything about the program because this lis a program for discussion," Study Of Secession Builds New Battle © OTTAWA (CP)--Battle lines;Danforth): would the govern-; 'What I have askeq for, and have been drawn for a mew|ment consider investigatirig the|is now in the exploratory stage to FILM PAIR WED Actor Ernest Borgnine gives during the weekend. They hope to leave within a week for a honeymoon) in the Orient. Wirephoto) 2 le acd h Khnush Sendwe, 47, was t . sernardsen, who says rush- j | _ vi j | chev's five-day visit has no po- he rp rt agt vad Share Duties reeted the c i sev. eat, endian f tunat Kabangi-Numbi, end sev-).: new. Dela (AP) -- Aiting| i 4 pare eral of Sendwe's aides, Sendwe) p,j Minist Lal Bahad I am glad your visit finally Hietenbye! enemy. butiencree has been arranged," Gerhard-/W°% ~Siom': $ are enemy, Shastri was reported in gener- i™ jas revenge for the massacre of i ici | Asked whether the flag debate; viaite were called off because of Stella dl Official schedule still has ¢ high priority in the| ostile news paper comment.| : pan 7 fore a) This time the Norwegian press| Th t S h j l For the first time there was a work. to be Commnene Ere i till a3 . _ year-old prime minister. who |Said "the flag -is in our pro-|/ s : ; bode fh ' conservative mewspapers . sti «s » year-ol : | Py political fight on the issue of economic, cultural anq socialin my. office and the Privy opposed the de ie Visit In Soviet ;was reported to have suffered |8*m, but Aa sedusl, ab caipeahy Gerhardsen said Norway and a mild heart attack Friday |"scussion- Opposition Leader Diefen- Mr. Scott's Friday question tween the parts of our coun-| border "which never has| Nations Secretary - General Uj his. responsibilities, Pearson said again: "The flag baker has charged the govern-|was reworded to ask whether try... . dives a to strife. "'Thant will visit the Soviet Un-| The Times of India said no|is 10 our program for July. men' has set up a committee to the government would consider) «1 hope prove that so "I am also glad about eco-\ion next month, the Soviet news| prime minister can afford to do| Opposition MPs complained in aration of Quebec from the rest nomic, social and political ef-/terdependent -- so inextricably border, co-operation which I|said Thant would visit at the ister, as Shastri does. - of Canada, and thus has given/fects on the rest of Canada of related to each other in the ac-\hope will help create good re-\invitation of the Soviet. govern-/ A government spokesman is-| official countenance to separ- separation. He said the subject|tivities that make for a good lationships between good neigh-|ment and the dates for the visi] Sued this statement on Shastri's Prime Minister Pearson, Yes," Mr. Pearson said, "weit i an "The prime minister's tem-| © q ; , f son said, e\ity--that it would be utter dis- ; claiming remarks he made in have been considering the mat-|aster if the separation of Eng- perature is near normal now.) at mn Dac. the Commons were misunder-lter Tt js not a subject which|tish speaking and French-; LATE NEWS FI KSHES He slept well last night. merely into the economic inter- tion and dogmatic conclusions! contemplated.' Ln is cheerful." | T S t relation of various ai . eo but officials of the government Saturday slat, Mi Dieken "In a cous. of days the 0 cran on y ue alin i inves-|, : a % prime s y i 2 ada and should prove tha » are making that king of inves baker isstied his press release Se cictiolans Won't Dickes prime minister may be in a po WASHINGTON (AP) -- Am- inextricably related. 0 iti sto : i ae 3 . ' i nd! +o political leaders drew pposition Leader Diefe~-'was a watered down version 0 PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Striking electricians' here |tiyo° source flew in from Saigon today and ire ad uk payed ate baker shot to his feet to say .: the original disclosure in the gr Bow blero Shastri's son | Said the Republican party sath was surprising that the goverr- Commons, and enmesheg the tractors bring in-electricans to do their jobs. | Hafi, said his father would need Should nominate the "presiden- : . . ' ieee wy chap 3 i sive d I think Gov- Pearson's reply in the Com-|.. oration on the country ene ; : Poles Go Wild Over Bobby' there was speculation some of "0 impulsive, an th ns Friday to a question or- separation on y. Denying that the study has Ss |his aides would take the reins |eTnor Scranton is one of the feinaily pipes a month ago by; After the Commons adjourned|to do. with separation, he hopes} KRAKOW (Reuters) -- Tumultuous ciowds in Krakow | of government terhiporarily. best men." : Robert Kennedy and his family arrived at this ancient |he seemed to have been misun-|said. universty town on the second day of their private visit to of a period of temporary leader-| cannot be drafted." |e CITY EMERGENCY derstood. He still felt ashe had). "Despite the contradictory} Poland. ship. After the late prime min-| He said the whole point of his)" es 5 when Mr. Scott asked his orig-'clarifications issued by the \ ister Nehru suffered a stroke in|resigning the "very interesting"| | d PH .«t, NUMBERS Shastri.' But since Shastri)vania's Governor William W.| his bride, singer Ethel Mer- lacked Nehru's authority, the} Scranton in his drive for the Re-| man, a kiss at the reception jgovernment was beset by inde-| publican nomination at.the San) in Hollywood which followed i : | beg rovincial vice-president, For! | tical\. significance, aes Bie fa a ntly was slaughtered! ; iti sen told Khrushchey. Earlier he: apparently . . ally good condition today but ; ; . Pearson) was. friendlier, although some} | public suggestion that the 59.(summer recess, Mr. Pea Quebec secession from Confed- effects upon the rest of Can-'Council office, is a study of the! | M inter - relations be-\the Soviet Union have a com.| LONDON (Reuters) -- United] night, should delegate some of|_ Pressed on this point, Mr. study the ramifications of a sep-|a study being made of the €C0-/close together are we, §0 in- nomic co-operation across the| agency Tass said Sunday. Tass|-without a full-time foreign min-) Lodge Gives atism. needed clarification. life with security and prosper- bors." are July 28-31. condition: g stood, says the inquiry isijends jtself to easy investiga- apenking }Cheddinas Weln even general condition is good and he bee and the other provinces are tigation. now. saying Mr. Pearson's statemers sition to' attend to the business)... ador Henry Cabot Lodge| decided Sunday not to picket any city projects unless con- "xchange ress statements, 4 ' exchange of press s ment would assign federal civ'l government leader in. a con- at least a month's rest, and tal candidate who Js prudent, Reid Scott (NDP -- Toronto|for the weekend, Mr. Pearson|that it 'will show separation to| today overpowered police.cars when U.S. Attorney-General The. son's statement indicated) Speaking at plane-side upoi inal_question on May 20 at\prime minister, one fact Rubbermen Back At Work January, he turned over many | post in South Viet Nam was to| POLICE 725-1133 © 5. cision. Francisco convention, \their marriage at his home. iid be "entirefy aca- has accepted the possibility of / Monsanto Canada Limited here ended today when the work Pagel ers returned to work, They are members of Local 292 of HOSPITAL 723-22 574 » because no such separa- dividing Canada by setting up a the United Rubber Workers of America (CLC), \Mr, Pearson told reporters, eration. ada of separation by Quebec. (economic of. government," an authorita- They stemmed from Fiservant to study the effects of'tradiction issued a _press'release saying|be disaster," Mr. Diefenbaker| |India was again on the verge|his return, Lodge declared "I h time.he replied such ajemerges: That the government of the burdens of his office to|}come back and help Pennsyl- OAKVILLE (CP) -- A strike of 102 shift workers at the } DEPT. 725-65 sudo 11 ion is .going to take place." |committee to investigate -that| Mr. Pearson's release said: | possibility. é a