ae Am a cule see a ta em a ei Dh iD al tk RENE REN +e et ANOTHER HAZARD FOR FIREMEN go's south side Friday. Ele- vated fire tower, known lo- cally as a snorkel, has plat- form basket lowered to above firemen. It is used to put firemen into high posi- In sub-zero weather Chi- cago firemen turn to chop- ping fire hose out of ice formed during a battle to control fire in empty grain storage elevator on Chica- tions to direct fire hose noz- ales, or. rescuing people from tall buildings. Part of fire truck pumper is at right. --AP Wirephoto Trouble Ahead For LBJ Over Aid, House Majority By ARCH MacKENZIE is fresh evidence of "neo-isola- Canadian Press Staff Writer |tionism." Two storm warnings have} It exists. to a limited degree been hoisted by the United/at the highest levels, as when States Congress for. Presidentja senior government figure says Johnson. |the U.S. in 1965 intends to be One underlines disenchant-|more sensitive to hostile acts ment about shoveling foreignifrom recipients of American aid to countries that respond|aid. with riots. | Egypt, whose President Nas- The other re-emphasizes the|ser invited the U.S. recently to political maxim that a largejdrink seawater, a prime target. majority is by no means aj/Indonesia is another and so is docile one. Algeria, which continues, with The president's first realjothers, to feed arms to The brush with th Democrat-domi-|Congo rebels. nated Congress came this week} Feeling runs much deeper when the House of Representa-|and stronger at lower levels | As chairman of the powerful] [foreign relations committee, he| has declined to pilot the foreign- aid bill this time. His objections are basic, although perhaps not widely supported. Fulbright opposes the present system of extending aid by agreements with each country. He wants aid channelled through the United Nations or other international agencies. He also wants the package' split cleanly into military, economic and financial sections but Pres- ident Johnson has reacted un- favorably to this proposal. tives blocked an additional $37,-\and in Congress, fed. by statis- 000,000 in farm-surplus items|tics such as those showing U.S, tor Egypt. jlibraries abroad have been at-| The move, backed by somejtacked 40 times in 11 years. | key moderates, drew applause} from others in the Senate. The|GOVT. DISMAYED government was badly caught] But, while the government off guard. jwas preparing to review the \next batch of food aid for Egypt FATE IS UNCERTAIN jas a token of its displeasure, it More important, the move|was dismayed at the chopping- created uncertainty about the| off of the last food supply under fate of the whole $3,400,000,000/an expiring three-year agree- foreign-aid bill that the presi-| ment. dent wants approved for 1965-66.; What it can do about it re- This is smaller than the billjmains to be seen usually. presented to Congress} A real blow has been the ac- but it had been trimmed this|tion of Senator J. W. Fulbright, time in hopes it would meet|Arkansas Democrat, who is one less opposition. jof the most enlightened mem- Concern by government lead-|bers of the Senate on interna- ers may be premature. Thereltional affairs. RCMP Personnel | "Winnie" Helped Me, Says Windsor NEW YORK (AP)--The Duke of Windsor said Friday the late Sir Winston Churchill had a hand in writing the abdication speech in which the duke--then King Edward VIII -- gave up his throne for an American divorcee. "I've always been grateful to im for the support he gave }me at the time of my abdica- tion," the duke said. He abdicated Dec. 11, 1936, so he could marry Wallis War- field Simpson. The duke and duchess sailed le Havre, France, en. route to Paris. The duke said only the ord- ers of his doctors, following serious surgery, prevents. him from attending Churchill's fu- Get Pay Boost | OTTAWA (CP) -- Pay raises|and second year $6,235 instead of eight to nine per cent were|of $5,715 announced Friday for non-' Sergeants will receive $6,645) commissioned officers and con-|instead of $6,065 the first year. | stables in the RCMP. In the second year they will) The new range is from $4,180|get $7,015, increased from| annually for a htird-class con-|$6.435 stable to $8,045 for corps ser-, Staff sergeants, first year,| geant - major. The former|Will receive $7,270 and in the; range was $3,760 to $7,365. jsccond year $7,570. They re-| The general increase is retro-|ccived $6,690 in both years un-| active to April 1, 1964, and|@z the i ey gn aa} t 95 sent of tlie) oo Soteee 2 . -- Pog My eat Bad of |eceive $7,860 instead of $7,220. neral Saturday. _ The duke underwent surgery in Houston, Tex., last month. CRASHING SPREE BRISTOL, England (CP) --| John Robinson, 26, was fined| £40 and disqualified from driv- ing for one year for waging a car "duel" with a business partner, The two men_ raced side by side for nearly an hour through this city's streets in the early hours of the moming. The cars collided and rammed each other several times. as By ARCH MacKENZIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- Some stiff congressional _ priorities face Unitea States legislation to implement the free-trade auto pact with Canada. U.S. administration spokes- men, while conceding there will be "flak'" along the legislative route, seem confident however that passage can be achieved this year. Otherwise, the process must be started anew in 1966. Canada has given the only ap- proval needed, a cabinet order- in-council This is the timetable here for the agreement signed Jan, 16 by Prime Minister Pearson. and President Johnson and remov- ing North American tariffs for manufacturers -- not the car buyers--on autos and original parts: --The .U.S. government hopes to have the draft legislation ready and introduced in Con- 0 Tg hy ttt nl agp ARATE ei PON CLEP Ee i EP er re PPO Auto Pact Opposed But Will Be OKd gress within two weeks or so. --It wil! start out in the 435- member House of Representa- tives, which constitutionally begins work on money bills. --The auto pact will be stud- ied in detail in the house ways and means committee which has a crowded schedule. --Later, the Senate will get the measure. Either body can make alterations. First priority by presidential order goes to the so-called U.S. medicare bill providing some benefits for persons 65 or more. Work on that measure has be- gun, but it still may be mid- March at the earliest before the auto bill can be started, WANT BLOCK DEAL Some independent American parts makers want to block the deai4with Canada, Congressmen from auto-making areas will at least want to have a good look at the whole plan. ma LL LLL OPE EEE PO EE PEt There is a strong possibility that another matter--President Johnson's proposed excise tax cut of $1,750,000,000--may be squeezed in first. Committee of- ficials say protests are already being received that buyers, an- ticipating tax cuts on a wide range of items--are holding up purchases of luxury items. That many prove to be a powerful stimulus for early action on the tax-cut measure. Generally, house approval tends to take longer than Senate action, chiefly because the Sen- LOLOL LLL EDP TENE 4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Jonuary, 30,1965 J Two Men "Sink" Beer All Day COPENHAGEN (AP) -- Two men have been put to work full time -- pouring 1,000,000 bottles of beer into the sink. They are completing the closing-down of the Stjernen Brewery, launched in the 1920s as_a co-operative en- terprise by the Danish Workers Movement. After an initial success, its beer gradually lost popularity. Efforts to sell the beer on favorable terms have failed and the idea of giving the beer away was blocked by customs authorities, who tax any bottle of beer leav- ing a brewery, whether it's for sale or not. ate has only 100-members. The Senate finance committee will do the detailed study after house approval has been ob- tained. The finished product--if it survives as now conceived-- would be made retroactive through administrative action. Hopefully, it would be extended back as near as possible to Jan. 17. PORT ELGIN, Ont. (CP) -- Council is considering reinstat- ing Const. Charles Riley to his former rank of chief constable in this Lake Huron resort town 25 miles west of Owen Sound. Mayor W. A. Davey said a special meeting to discuss the matter was held Friday at the conclusion of an eight-day po- lice commission hearing, but no decision was reached. Mayor Davey said council will discuss the proposal again during a closed meeting Mon- day night. Members also are ex- Fired Constable May Be Rehired As Chief pected to consider reinstating| Counsel for each of the par-loffer outlined by Chrysler former constable George . Ar-| mour Taggart, who also was! dismissed last fall. The police commission hear-- ing was precipitated mainly by council's firing of Const. Riley when he was chief constable. Riley refused to resign, but later was reduced to constable at the same salary--$4,200--plus \$12 in daily overtime. | More than 45 witnesses were called to testify at the hearings which opened in December and resumed Monday. ties told the three-man commis- sion they would present written submissions, Robin Scott, com- mission counsel, said findings are expected to be announced in about a month. Chrysler UAW Digs In Heels WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- An official of ' Local 444,: United Auto Workers (CLC) said Fri- day the union is preparing for "a strike of some duration" with Chrysler Canada Limited and is setting up registration offices for strike pay. The announcement came in the second day of a strike of some 7,000 hourly - rated em- ployees of three Chrysler plants here and Walker Metals Limited. a Chrysler subsidiary. Charles Brooks, president of Local 444, said terms of an Thursday are generally favor- able, but that they don't 'go the Chrysler offer does not completely meet the pattern offered by the same company in the United States, |however, TORONTO (CP) -- Members of the CBC newsroom | staff walked off their jobs Friday in a dispute with the CBC's public affairs department. m The 20 employees, membe: of Local 213 of the Canadian Wire Service Guild (CLC), re- turned after a two-hour meet- ing and an agreement with the CBC for a meeting with senior officials of the television news and public affairs departments. A statement issued by the union did not give a reason for the walkout. Members said, it involved use of news film for public affairs programs such as This Hour has Seven Days, Observer, and Toronto File. The union said its position is that the news department programs That Two Hours Over Seven Days should have sole over news and that the use of news film for public affairs gra damages the rela- tions of its members with their 5s3 the news department at meeting of the Metropolitan Toronto council, The statement issued by union said an agreement har been reached to negotia' dispute with management. went on to say the news ope: ation would continue without interruption and the stoppage a had no effect on oper- ations. TERE SAIGON (AP)--Exuding con- fidence after playing a major role in the downfall of three governments, South Viet Nam's militant Buddhists appeared to- day to be riding on a new crest of power. Reliable sources said that the Buddhists have made it clear they want the United States to Arsenic Theory Buddhists Lay Down Political Warning refrain from interfering in their political affairs. The warning was reported to have come from Thich Tri Quang, a popular - 42-year-old monk from central Viet Nam who met Friday with strong- man Lt.-Gen. Nguyen Khanh. Tri Quang led the eight - day Buddhist hunger strike in Sai- gon that helped force out Pre- mier Tran Van Huong in a bloodless military coup. The Buddhists had charged Mayor Davey said immediate/nor does it grant some of the steps will be taken to bring the|concessions in Ford and Gen- town police force up to its pre-jeral Motors contracts in Can- Huong with oppressive meas- ures. They levelled the same accusation against Khanh last vious three-man strength. third member of the force, for- mer Constable Karl. W. Mac- Naughton of London, resigned last fall. TORONTO (CP)--Donald C. MacDonald, Ontario New Dem- ocratic Party leader assailed the Progressive Conservative government for failing to lead and the Liberal opposition for failing to oppose. He told the legislature both the speech from the throne and the Liberal reply consisted of little but platitudes. Mr. MacDonald moved a 12- art sub - amendment to the non - confidence motion sub- mitted Thursday by Liberal Leader Andrew Thompson, but added that he had no choice but to support "what little protest there was in the Liberal mo- tion. The legislature also heard a bitter attack by Stephen Lewis (NDP--Scarborough West) on conditions at the Ontario Hos- pital for Retarded Children at Smiths Falls, near Ottawa. Mr. Lewis said he visited the hospital last year and "if every imember of the legislature jtoured that incredibly depress- ing institution, Smiths Falls would be altered within a month." Health Minister Dymond said plans for improvements in the hospital will be announced in the legislature later in the ses- sion. WARDS CROWDED Mr. Lewis said the hospital's staff is inadequate and "can barely cope with physical needs let alone give a modicum of af- fection--sométhing every child needs merely to exist." Wards were so crowded that deformed and retarded children some- times hurt each other because there was no room for them to move. Mr. MacDonald's non -. confi- dence motion called for com- pulsory, government - operated Say Malaysian KUALA LUMPUR (AP)--De- }struction of an Indonesian-in- ispired plot to promote armed lrevolution in Malaysia was an- jnounced by federal police Fri- jon the liner United States for| day. | Three Malaysian political leaders, who oppose Prime Min- ister Tunku Abdul Rahman's policies were charged with con- spiring to slip into Indonesia and set up a rebel government- in-exile as part of President Sukarno's campaign to crush the British-backed anti-Com- munist federation of Malaysia. All three.were arrested late Thursday, completing a round- up launched with four arrests Tuesday. The Internal Security Act permits indefinite deten- tion without trial. Police identified the accused politicians as Dr. Burhanuddin Al-Hemi, president 'of the Pan Malaysian Islamic Party; Ab- dul Aziz Bin Ishak, president of the National Convention the force. Not affected are about commissioned officers, special | 170) constables and civilian employ- ees. The new pay scale for corps sergeant - major, the - highest) from $7,365 ranking non-commissioned offi-| s cer, is $8,045 a year, increased | ae { A sergeant-major will receive | $7,270 in the first year instead of $6,690. Pay in ,the second year has been raided to $7,570 from $6,990 from $3,760 Second-class stables wil: receive $4,380, stead of $3,960. New rates for constables, with | old rates in. brackets, are: | First year $4,580 ($4,160), sec-| ond year $4,780 ($4,360), third year $5,000 ($4,560), fourth year} $5,240 ($4,760), fifth year $5,540) ($5,060) Discretionary constables will | receive $5,660 instead of $5,180. First year conporals will re- | ceive $5,050 instead of $5,530, | in-| ted fitte Need Mortgage Money? a Real Estate McGILL ":..: Day or Night - 728-4285 TRUSSES and ELASTIC STOCKINGS "Ladies or Gentlemen fit- by competent qualified rs' . . . in our private PHONE 723-2245 health support room or in your own home. .°. | JURY & LOVELL LTD. 8 KING ST. EAST OSHAWA Armed Revolution Smashed Federal Police Party, and Ishak Bin Haji Mo- hammed, former chairman of the Socialist Front. Both the Socialist Front and the Islamic Party, a fanatic Moslem _ organization, are known to have pro-Indonesian leanings. The prime minister once described them as '"'the disloyal opposition." The con- vention party is aligned with the Socialist Front. Indonesia is known to have organized what it calls a volun- teer Malaysian National Army to help in its fight against Mal- aysian and British armed forces guarding the federation. In announcing the first four arrests Tuesday, police charged that the four "recruited and sent a number of Malaysians to Indonesia for guerrilla and NDP-ers Slam Grits, Tories; | 'Say Both Are "Platitudinous' Rape Trial medical care and automobile accident insurance. : Mr. MacDojald asked for enormous expansion of educa- tional facilities, reform of mu- nicipal government. and contin- uous study of the impact of rapid technological change on the economic and social struc- ture of the province. Dow Still Held Liable WINNIPE G (CP)--Manitoba Court of Appeal Friday upheld a lower court ruling that Dow Chemical of Canada Limited was liable for damages in a case involving faulty material provided for construction of a Portage la Prairie cold storage plant. But the appeal court reduced the amount of damages awarded to $109,078 from $125,- 7 Western Processing and Cold Storage Limited sued Hamilton Construction Company of Por- tage la Prairie after insulating plant in 1959 buckled and warped. Last March Mr. Justice F. M. Bastin. of Court of Queen's Bench awarded Western $109,- 078 to cover the supply and in- sthllation of the material and $16,000 for the nuisance of mov- ing stock while repairs were be- ing made. The damages were charged against Dow Chemical through Hamilton Construction, which had since gone out of business. The appeal court, in a deci- sion written by Mr. Justice A. M. Monnin, said Western could | Alada. Non - economic - issues, he said, are highly important to the workers and involve mainly working conditions and griev- ance procedures the union seeks to change. Blacks Out OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Justice A. H. Leiff Friday ordered a complete press blackout of the current phase of the trial of Victor (Pretty Boy) Levesque on charges of rape and armed robbery. Mr. Justice Lieff said he issued the order "most reluct- antly" at the request of Crown Attorney John Cassells and De- fence Counsel Thomas Swabey. He said he did not want to hamper news media on the course of a criminal trial, but had decided that publication of testimony in the current phase of the trial "'might well inter- fere with the course of justice." Levesque is being tried on charges of armed robbery and rape in the Nov. 16, 1963, rob- bery at the Ottawa home of Dr. Edward Shapiro. Four masked men took part in the robbery which netted only $2. "Canada On LBJ's List" LONDON (CP)--Prime -Min- ister Pearson says he hopes President Johnson can_ visit |material used in a new western|Canada this year. He told re- porters Friday that Johnson's schedule for foreign visits has not been completed 'but Can- ada is on his list." Many Canadian regions and Officials are vying for the chance to receive Johnson, among them the sponsors of the Calgary Stampede. "They could put him on a horse--he rides, not like me," Pearson added with a smile. Pearson said he urged John- son to make a trip to Canada when the two leaders conferred at Johnson's Texas ranch last month. At Inquest TORONTO (CP)--An inquest into the death of Mrs. Maria Dolores Callus, 42-year - old mother of three, was adjourned for a week Friday to allow ex- amination of her internal or- gans, following a suggestion arsenic poisoning might have caused cher death. Dr. Ralph E. Will, a special- ist in internal medicine, told the inquest he could not follow de- velopment of the disease which was said to have killed her. "As a doctor I am not satis- fied," he said, Dr. Hans Sepp, a pathologist, told the inquest Thursday that Mrs. Callus died in St, Joseph's Hospital here Dec. 6 of acute general peritonitis in the vital organs, aggravated by acute pneumonia. Dr. Will said Mrs. Callus be- came ill after eating--with se- vere irritation of the intestinal tracts. He said the pathologist's report didn't explain the kidney malfunction found at the hos- pital or the high level of urea found in Mrs. Callus's blood. Arsenic could cause such symp- September and against the late Ngo Dinh Diem in November, "yg before their governments fell. U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor talked with Khanh for more than an hour Friday in their first meeting since Khanh regained power last Wednes- day and made Nguyen Xuan Oanh acting premier. A U.S. mission spokesman said rela- tions between Taylor and Khanh, who have been openly at odds in recent weeks, were normal. Khanh's restoration of mill- tary rule put U.S. authorities on the spot. Washington had hoped that at least a facade of civilian rule could be main- tained. Khanh insisted the mili- tary seizure was necessary to end the Buddhists' anti-govern- ment disorders. toms, he said. CONT Due To Popular Demand Sale Continues Through Week of February 1st Buy One Pair of Shoes and Get Another Pair of Equal Value FOR ONLY 1.00 INUES BIKE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE have avoided moving stock by making adjustments in the plant operation when the trouble first sabotage training." became evident in 1960. Whether to LAUGH or CRY ON YOUR INCOME TAX If your income tax has got COMPLETE you down, it's eqsy to puta peTypNS smile on your face again. Just see the BLOCK office in your neighborhood for. fast, accurate service. You'll smile at the low cost, too. GUARANTEE '0. We g e prep we moke eny errors that cost we will the penol of every tox return. If you @ny penalty or interest, or interest. "EOCKG North America's Largest Tax Service 135 SIMCOE STREET NORTH OSHAWA Phone 725-6322 OSHAWA & DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD * x O08 * REAL ESTATE OFFICE OF THE YEAR 1964 WALTER FRANK REAL ESTATE LTD. BOWMANVILLE (Mr. Walter Frank, President) OSHAWA & DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD---------- GULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OF T.J Paul REAL ESTATE SALESMAN THE YEAR 1964 . "TOM" HUZAR Ristow Realtor OSHAWA » al arts, Se Si po pep