Me - Thought For Today' i This is the time of year to start oy digging in the garden -- until ie you're found worms for fish- mg. Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, ant VOL. 93--- NO. 177 JULY 29, 1964 awa Times Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Ottawa ond for payment of » Weather Report" Clearing and less humid late today. Mostly sunny and cooler Thursday. Office Department Postage in. Cash, THIRTY-SIX PAGES re --T Aomes PC Group's Filibuster Stalls Bill OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-jhave not been discussed at mons' midsummer war ofjall so far this session. They nerves enters its third day to-|are blaming the government for day with no end in sight. holding back the main esti- A string of 12 Conservatives|mates unduly. MPs delivered lengthy speeches} Out of the 23 departments, | Tuesday, continuing their par-jonly two have pushed their es-| ty's strategy of holding up ap-|timates through the Howse in) proval of a bill to give the gov-|the first 114 days of the ses- i jernment $696,010,781 in spend-/sion -- agriculture and post of-|: ling authority for August and'fice. ' |September. J. Waldo Monteith, former) : With the exception of Justice|Conservative health minister,| ; Minister Favreau, members of|said the study of government) ithe four other parties refrained|spending is Parliament's pri- from speaking. They hope that)mary duty. \the Conservatives will. talk) Conservative speeches dwelt themselves to exhaustion in Ot-/on such topics as mental ill-| tawa's steaming heat wave. ness juvenile delinquency,| If the Conservatives manage|smoking and cancer, the nurse to keep the debate going for an-|shortage, gliding clubs, pen-| other eight or nine sittings) sions, air pollution and the fam-| days, the government will run ily. out of spending authority and) Creditiste MPs needled the/ the temptation to call a general|\ Conservatives by applauding) election will become overpower- routine statements with loud) jing. The Conservatives, many|desk banging applause, and} lof whom are itching to fight anjcontinually shouting, "carried" lelection this fall on the Confed-'or '"'dispense from reading." leration and flag issues, have| H. W. Herridge (NDP--Koot-| made it known outside the Com-/enay West) rose briefly on a mons that they intend to stretch question of privilege to plead| out the money debate for 10! with the government to let MPs' |sittings or more. secretaries, go home early to} Their announced strategy is beat the heat. | to discuss the spending esti--~~ es ol ifferent departmen * mates of a different department Nightclub Burns each day. Monday was devoted t RESCUERS TALK TO TRAPPED MEN Supplies Passed to the labor department and) l Tuesday the focus shifted to To Trapped Men [iste ons a. Near Montes' le A Conservative MP said the) woNTREAL (CP) -- The plan involves 'talking on for-| pqgewater Hotel, a well-known estry today and immigration night club in the western Mont-| hursday. ; real suburb of Pointe Claire,| The Conservatives are cuncen- was destroyed by fire early to-| trating on departments whose day. Police estimated the loss 1964.- 65 spending programs at $300,000. CHAMPAGNOLE (Reuters)--|though we are cold and wet. Nine miners trapped since Mon-| We are waiting for you to free tay 223 feet underground in a.us, but we will be patient.' limestone} mine in Eastern) Great fissures appeared in Fratice were cheerful and in/the mountainside this morning good health today, officials re-\and as large areas began to ported. It may be Thursday or subside, officials feared a ma-| Wriday before they can tbe jor landslide. The movement} brought to the surface. {left gaping holes up to six feet A cluster of firefighters us to revive a city youth wh a resuscitator in an attempt | drowned near Oshawa harbor | last evening. John Yurchi, 18, Myers street, a non-swimmer, was wading offshore with a % AL. TRAGEDY AT DUSK e companion when a_ wave swept him off his feet. A vol- o unteer group recovered his body about 30 minutes later. No lifeguard was on duty at the beach. Oshawa Times ad- vertising representative Orville Branton, an amateur photographer, took this pic- ture as fire crews sought des- perately for a flicker of life in the youth's body, (Story on | page 13) F |John M. Cabot, | Kremlin Asked To Push Peace WARSAW (AP) --- Ambassa-|by Butler, who arrived here dors of the United States and)Monday for a five-day visit, Communist China decided at a} The sources said Foreign |two-hour and 20-minute session'Minister Gromyko expressed |today to meet again in this Po-|alarm over the Laotian situation lish capital Sept. 23. in the nine-|but said Moscow had not made year-old ambassadorial talks. any final decisions on how to United States Ambassador) deal with it. following his a first meeting with the new Chi- WANTS MORE TALKS _ nese envoy to Poland, Wang! Butler told Gromyko Britain Kuo-chuan, told reporters that|/Was not against a 14-nation con- the discussion is "following mor ference on Laos but wanted or less the same old groove." edge a on -how it Hage |would be organized. the two 'sides touched on all, The, Russian-proposed confer: U.S.-Chinese friction points in|@Mce includes the United States the Far East, including Laos,/2%4 Communist China, Sources Viet Nam and Formosa, but | Said the Russians had agreed to agreeing on nothing. defer the decision on remaining Tt: eran thi? 1080d seukion® of co-chairman of the 1962 confer- the ambassadorial talks that/°"ce until all 14 powers: an- ; swered. started at Geneva in 1995, The sources said Butler felt MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Brit-|the Kremlin was tired of the ain told the Soviet Union today|Laos problem and it was be- jit will co-sponsor a 14-nation|coming a possible embarrass- conference on Laos provided|ment because of Russia's new: efforts are made to sta-|strained relations with China. bilize the situation there. | Gromyko told Butler' the 1963 Authoritative sources said a agreements had been violated British message delivered to|and the U.S. continued to inter- jthe Soviet foreign ministry on/fere in the country's affairs. jinstructions from the visiting;Gromyko also said Souvanna British foreign secretary, Rich-| was a prisoner of "reaction- ard A. Butler, listed three main/aries,"' conditions for a conference, The sources said the two min- 1, Establishment of a united|isters agreed to continue discus- |government under Prince Sou-|sions at the United Nations in Five other miners have not! wide, but rescuers were able to| CARRIES CAMERA pies Fe cag from and are anand eran aE tig i Rocket Running is True si Sank a small pipe)hole in the side of the mountain } 1 Beh hate citers | an attemptto reopen an en- Tuesday night and. exchanged trance tunnel blocked by 2 fall On Course For Moon = aay coe py nine ana a hard limestone. | ey lowered a microphone to! Rescue officials said the men : " the men by pushing through a|were 223 feet below ground, but) PASADENA, Calif. (AP)--Thejdered at 3:27 a.m. by jet pro-| larger pipe. the 35-inch drill boring down to- Camera - carrying Ranger 7ipu 1sion laboratory scientists Down went food, warm cloth- wards them could only go down space-craft probably will hit its|after hours of tracking indi- ing, hot drinks, flashlights andias far as 196 feet. Technicians ta™get area on the lighted side of|cated Ranger 7 would move Engineers said the movement be lowered to the trapped men. Dr. William H. Pickering, di- early today of a large area of Andrew Martinet, one of the Tector of the jet propulsion lab- the 806-pound spacecraft pirou-jhigh on the agenda. mountainside was not threaten-\trapped miners, gave the Oratory, which is guiding the/etted briefly for better aim, ing operations to rescue the names of the nine survivors PRINTERS AGREE ON COMPUTERS TORONTO (CP) -- Louis Fine, chief government labor conciliator, said today agreement has been reach- ed between representatives |a weekend of bloody violenc of Toxonto's three daily |moved closer to its newspapers and their print- |peace and quiet today after ers on the contentious com- puter issue. He said in a brief state- ment that talks on other as- pects of a contract are con- tinuing. A total of 680 print- ers at The Star, The Tele- gram and The Globe and Mail left their jobs July 9. The printers are members of the International Typo- graphical Union (CLC) which calls the situation a lockout. The papers say it is a strike. curfew. of city and state police A promise of swift, duced the' desired effect gun. the gallery to be sent down. target area"--a 300-mile-wide 4,000 m.p.h. speed that would Rescue officials "quoted the) Martinet said his group was Plain just above the Equator in have carried Ranger 7 some . men as saying: "Our morale is\cut off from the five missing 'he centre of the left half of the 249 miles left of the face of the Quiet Returms good. We are all in good health'men by debris. moon, moon, as viewed from earth. | ae -- . -- -- The area, called the Sea of . Clouds by ancient astronomers R h | who imagined the flat spaces on) oc ester unt teppe { Ip the moon were bodies of water,| |was chosen as a photographic} C rf C t |target because it could be a good u ew u bd landing spot for U.S. astronauts or ost er | within a few years | Pickering, obviously elated, BRANTFORD (CP)--The Na-Jone of the search planes who ini'what trace smote ea ; 5 r Ss supposed to do, tional Soaring Association cham-| reported seeing a white 'object but we must analyse tracking Pionships here were cancelled/in a marshy area near Long data for several hours before we again today as the search con-|Point, about 30 miles south Of\can determine the im P See agit pact area tinued for missing conipetitor Brantford. precisely." ae ay oe Suna A glider which landed in a Ranger 7, latest attempt of the $e eres : i field at Newark, N.J., Monday National Aeronautics and Space eran pede ranianed, . white night was at first th ",,Administration to take closeup ; ; ; 1 ' s ought to be)" " glider vanished Monday night. Ravin! i : pictures of the surface of the It was last seen heading west. '0PP's. The pilot, who did not moon, was launched from Cape Private planes in the area identify himself, told a resident Kennedy, Fla., Tuesday morn- which were being used to tow Be ee .coemeting with other ing, competing gliders aloft instead ers in Canada and planned) Major event in the 90-minute are taking part in the search. '° ae there. mid-course manoeuvre was a 67- They have joined RCAF air-. He phoned from a home near mile-an-hour kick in the pants eraft combing the area around the field and within an hour the designed to bring Ranger 7 on three southwestern Ontario pilot's wife and another person' course toward its target area. communities Ayr, Norwich arrived in a 'truck, loaded the| The kick--a 50-second burst and Long Point. glider aboard and drove off. 'by its steering rocket--was or- Ground parties also are searc aaRipeteg eer . ---- ing these areas. A fisherman who had reported HEIGHT MEANT LIFE OR DEATH seeing a white object in the f Turkey Point area of Lake Erie flew over the 'spot with search aircraft today. Nothing was sighted. Tuesday Mrs. Roy Mix of Norwich, about 18 miles south; FRANKFURT (AP)--Arrived at the camps were killed)where she was imprisoned, she,on tip toes in vain attempts west of Brantford, reported see- copa a on his tip toes, immediately by gassing, shoot-never wanteq "the joys of|show how tall they were. ing a."nfotorless aircraft," at a. rings Pitter Muscle in his ing, beating, hanging or with motherhood that every woman; When they. failed they ofte sm. ody in an attempt to/injections of carbolic acid ad-| desires." ran among their examiners--as-| low altitude at about 7.30 p:m./touch a bar hanging five feet,| ministered into. their heart py 1941--when the Nazi death|sembled SS men--flexing thei Monday. five inches above the ground. |muscles. They have testifie : eer ts vie pear aes ; oe He couldn't make it and broke/that babies born. to ei actories were running in high aig muscles and shouting they SEES WHITE PLANE into sobs* [Sooners wen a Plt gear--the SS was exterminating Yr' strong enough to perform Tuesday night. Frank Lisso of ay, _, |pisoners were Sosned alive inte pote £\any labor demanded of them. vr. 12 miles north- of Brant-, 12&t bar ,meant 'the . dif-|Ovens or on to open fires so ford, said he saw a "white ference between life and death.|as to spare the costs of morejrived. Then Heinrich Himmler invariably rejected. niane" disappear behind a Had he touched it, he would: pensive methods of murder. Nindaveted. th i isappe b have lived a little longer as a| They have described : jdiscovered that his blanket rule) é u svamp near his farm at about "°° © ; a) ey have described how the tended to slow the flow of sl only to be forced to kill thei p.m. Monday. high ade peeare? in-one of. the SS (Elite Guard) staged mock! RLS : oUF Aneel own parents in a manner The third report Tuesday a ook 250 concentration camps courts to terrify older children a 'cad piguateiat piants' signed to "amuse"' the SS--such night came from. the. pilot of is is one of the memories|before executing them, They| D} ading German firms! ,. holding the head of of tortured childhood revived in havé told of medical '"experi-|in or near the camps. He this summer's. rash of war/mgnts" performed without an-|fied his order, sparing children crimes. trials in West Germany.|esthetics on youngsters by gs/too tall to pass under thé five- Piece by piece the informa-|physicians and how some chil-|{°t-five bar. He thought chil- tion of how millions of youn-Jjren fought their tormentors|4ten that tall were strong sters died in the camps comes|with a ferocity spawned by enough to work on slave labor; 'from dozens of witnesses. Their! desperation o "\projects where adult male in- into' the 'ca ° current;Mates had an average life eX-| ovens or ak trough until he drowned, o pulling the against a mothe'rs forehead. _Children who CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS , ania various concentration campsithey failed the size test--stood| the camps. On radio signals from earth, race riots and national politics|uled to meet at the 806-pound vehicle on its 228,000-'then ignited a small rocket in tary of the National Association nine but the sinking of a 36-\through the lowered' micro- Mile: voyage, told a press con- jts base. In effect, the brief for the Advancement of Colored|dolph, chairman of the National! peace mission." inch steel shaft had not yet be-|phone. He asked for maps of ference 'I think we'll get in the burst slowed by 67 m.p.h. the/People, warned in his call for test lifting of a dusk-to-dawn Nazis Tortured Children trigger of a gun teen-agers crematorium| whites: at n-| disorder." cigarettes. Wives and daugh-|studied ways of drilling the re-|the moon, a space scientist said/past the leading edge of theiof major civil rights organiza-|"increasingly violent and futile ters spoke to their trapped maining distance to enable a today after an apparently suc-/moon and impact on the dark'tions meet in a 'summit co loved ones, bomb-shaped rescue capsule. to cessful midway manoeuvre. side. NAACP headquarters are Whitney M. Negro American Labor Coun- cil; John Lewis, chairman of dinating Committee; Congress of Racial and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In his invitation to the other leaders, Wilkins called the nom- ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- ination of Senator Barry Gold- Racially troubled Roches-|water.of Arizona as the Repub- ter, where raging mobs staged lican candidate for president a e,|factor that could "roduce the normal |sternest challenge we have yet a|seen."" King and Mayor Robert F. Wagner held a second round of FEDERAL AID URGED An aide to the mayor said there were telephone calls to the White House and federal agencies in a "joint effort by eral training and aid to youth. Negro sections here and in |were quiet, A curfew in Roches- ter was lifted. | But in Medford, Mass., several jhundred white ang Negro teen- agers battled at a dancehall after a Negro youth tried to Race Trouble Breaks Out Near Boston MEDFORD, (AP)--A 0 n} r} Mass. 4 on a white couple at a teen-age stances in which he was quoted) Sometimes they were spared,/dance turned the affair into a on statements he never made. | r/ swirling mass of battling youths de-/of both races. Police of five Greater Boston modi abound communities brought the melee and gagged father in a water|under control within an hour r)/ Tuesday night but not before 12 suffered minor in- juries. Several policemen also refused were|were hurt by flying rocks. ossed with their parents. alive Several hundred of the 1,200 the dance were in- descriptions of suffer and A' witness at the i i 798. saa ris Ree 5 4 open ,gasoline-| volved in the fracas, police said. POLICE 725-1133 omirgs often cause judges and! Auschwitz trial in Frankfurt,/pectancy of three months fed fires Seino se ashes the|No arrests. were ute . courtroom spectators to wee ' Ar ETS ASN Ringcea aun siete . ; io : es FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 These. ' sicceues neve, rilaten orl Pr . 9 Babs : se ss " tn ap as te yee d how|gas chambers' victims. This! Medford, a residential-indus- hab "haath , a = Mexico City, testified that after|sma]! childrn.-- knowing the was the same fate ordered by|{rial city of some 65,000 about » 99.9% t Nearly all small Jewish seeing the sufferings of children|gas. chambers awaited them if Himmle r I a es ' c HOSPITAL 723-2211 and Slavic children. who g y j r for all babies born in|five miles north of Boston, & substantial Negro population. | Rights Leaders Hold Conference On Riots NEW YOR K (AP)--Leaders|the meeting of the possibility | subdued icrowd within an hour. A dozen|8ive up co-chairmanship of the! ference" today, with northern! Besides Wilkins, those sched-|teen-agers suffered minor in-\Conference. Britain and Russia| juries. King, Wagner, Bayard Rus- of the march on| however, Butler won a promise the Student Non-Violent Co-or-|Washington last summer, and/to defer a final decision on the Jamesjother civil rights leaders con-| threat. # \Farmer, national director of the| ferred for four hours. No state- tin, leader Equality, ment on the talks was issued agreement by Khrushchev |immediately. cut-in on a white couple. Police), / : the window-smashing this proposal might force her to) At the invitation of the|the pia Roy Wilkins, executive secre- Young, executive director of the/mayor, King came here Mon-|Which guaranteed Laotian in- Urban League; A. Philip Ran-|day night on what he called "a dependence and neutrality. vanna Phouma, the neutralist/the fall on a new Russian plan prime minister, for a standby peace ~ byerins 2. A. cease-fire in Laos. force consisting of neutral, 3. The return of rival Laotian} Wester and Communist troops troops to positions they held in} under the control of the Secur- February. lity Council. f Sunday, the day before But-| ler arrived here, the Soviet Union called for a new 14-na- tion conference on Laos to }meet next month, Russia also said rejection of Trustee Rap Brings Slap From Union TORONTO (CP) -- William Mahoney, Canadian director of the United Steelworkers of America (CLC), Tuesday night attacked Progressive Conserva- tive and New Democratie Party members of Parliament for crit- icizing the Canadian maritime union trustees. Mr. Mahoney said in an inter- | jane standing co - chairmen of| 1962 Geneva conference} In talks with Russian Pr- jmier Khrushchey Tuesday, Informed sources said the icame after a "powerful appeal'"' Politicians Aim Barrage GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)-- A columnist, two editors and ajdon't think the press realizes tively peaceful night, hundreds vent further racial violence in|faced vigorous criticism of the|\wr Fulton said con-|New York City. ' : tinued to patrol Rochesier's Ne- gro sections. Still standing by were 1,500 national guardsmen. harsh lretaliation in event of renewed jracial rioting appareatly pro- of keeping the lid on a simmering unrest. The ban on liquor sales for Rochester and surrounding |press of Canada from tional Affairs Tuesday. | On the panel were Charles| | all participants to increase fed-|Lynch, chief of Southam News| | participation" in various Services, Norman DePoe, CBC | city programs, such as job re-/news commentator - and Chris- topher Young executive editor, Monroe County remained in ef-| Rochester, N.Y., where bloody|Of the Ottawa Citizen, Chair-) fect at least until 5 p.m. today.' rioting broke out last weekend,|man was Frank McGee of Tor-| onto, former Progressive Con- servative member of Parlia-| 3 ment and now a newspaper | ; | columnist. Mr. Lynch contended out its task well but added that there are degrees of incompe- |tence, as in all fields. | During the discussion, Davie |Fulton, former federal justice minister and now Conservative leader in British Columbia, said there is a growing feeling on the part of the puble that the} press. is not reporting what is all children under 15 who ar-/Their pleas to live were almost Negro youth's attempt to cut-in| taking place. He cited two in-| "I know there is the pressure Police Following Trail Of Smokes MONTREAL (CP) -- A thief stole a van containing $10,000 worth of. cigarettes and cigars from a transport depot in sub- urban Dorval Tuesday. Police said the man drove the vehicle, owned by Drummond Transit Limited, past the check- has) point guards-in the Kingsway) transport yard. politi- |cians and laymen attending the |Couchiching conference of the ;Canadian Institute of Interna- that generally the press is carrying, view Conservatives now criticiz- ing the trustees for their admin- istration of the Seafarers' Inter- national Union (Ind.) had failed to cope with the Great Lakes union dispute until the CIC and jits affiliates closed the St. Law- jrence Seaway in an effort to At Press jof time and deadlines, but I force government action against © the SIU He questioned the judgment of the trustees in agreeing to Although the city spent a rela-|talks Tuesday on ways to pre-|television news commentator) the power-the press possesses," turn back the SIU constitution "You have ajto its members under terms that great power ard sometimes you|would promote Leonard Me (Laughlin to the presidency. ° |don't wield it responsibly." 1 i | Se ee Soldiers of the Congolese Picture of troops servicing army use fat from their corn pee dusty firearms -- was t abi ,. made July 26. They are fight+ ee ne as grease the ac ing rebels of leftist Gaston tions of their rifles at a base goymialot in eastern Congo. near Kasenga ip.the Congo, (AP Wizephoto) ee i Dantas U.K. WOULD BACK PARLEY ON LAO