-- Poe gan tin nL pore etanoel Api i H i tet a "VOL. 94 -- NO. 1504 80e Per' Weak Tome Bellvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1965 Authorized os Second Cless Ottewa ond - for payment of Pestooe. in Cash. 4 + 'Home' Newspaper 4 Weather Report Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- . A Cooler this evening. Sunny, manville, Ajax, Pickering and ' cloudy Tuesday. Low tonight, neighboring centres in On- : 60. High tomorrow, 80. tario and! Durham Counties, : THIRTY-SIX PAGES i aie The Allison brothers of Newcastle, Ont, -- Dale, 4, left, and Craig 3 -- find a way to beat the heat at» the 19th annual picnic of Liocal 222. UAW-CLC in Lakeview Park Saturday afternoon. They sample two of the 48,000 ice cream cups pro- vided for the overflow BEAT THE HEAT AT MAMMOTH LOCAL 222 PICNIC crowd. Ordered weeks ago also were 33,600 packets of potato chips, 10,000 suckers, 17,500 cones of candy floss and: 67,200 bottles of pop. (See other pictures on page 11 and stories on page 15.) Food supplies held out, but just barely. US. Drops Leaflets, 5 North Viet Cities By EDWIN Q. WHIIJE SAIGON (AP) -- U.%. Force planes dumped 2 3500,000 leaflets over five cities in} North Viet Nam today, urgin;g resi-|10 miles north of the 17th paral- dents to oppose the Comanunist|lel. government, a U.S. spol gesman reported, The cities were south - Hanoi. They are known of Roman Catholicism wil other groups potentially likely to be opposed to the Communist gov- ernment, The U.S. spokesman s:jid the drops were the beginning of a major leaflet campaign to be carried out in North Viej Nam "below a certain line" sciuth of Hanoi, 4 Four Americans were . killed Sunday night and today ijn Viet Nam, U.S. authoritins an- nounced. They brought the numtber of Air|ported raids, 12 South Vietnam- {wounded today when the Viet {| In the heaviest of the re- ese Skyraider fighter - bombers attacked a barracks compound Three U.S. airmen were Cong. fired mortar . shells into the Nha Trang a miles. northeast of Saigon, U.S. spokesman reported. U.S. planes flew through over- cast to strike 16 times against the district capital of Toumor- ong, held by the Viet Cong since Saturday. The town's 120 defending mil- itiamen were presumed either killed or captured. Government relief forces ap- parently were held back be- cause of the danger of ambush) to convoys travelling to the re-| mote region 290 miles north of| Saigon and unsuitable flying Americans killed in Viet Nam by enemy action to 429. U.S. and South Vietisamese planes also dropped bornbs on North Viet Nam today. |conditions for helicopters. |REGROUP FOR ATTACK | The Viet Cong also was be- jlieved regrouping for another 'Scots Holcl Two B.C. Men | Whale Eats In $1,250,000 Theft EDINBURGH (Reutctrs) Scottish police have :trrested two Canadians in coiimection with the theft of $1,250,001 worth of mutilated bank notes 4n Van- couver last February, it was today. The men, James Mc)Pougall,) The arrests in Britain were|McGarvey, indicated they hope 32, and Joseph Percival, 37,,made at the request of Vancou-|the hoth of Vancouver, were ex-\ver authorities. Vancou-|will arrive soon. The longer rag to appear in an Edin-|ver prosecutor Stewart McMor-|the delay, the more the whale gh court shortly and to beiran said proceedings now willleats into their profits--it is con- ordered held in custody while/be started to have the pair/suming all the salmon théy can investigations continue. William Mungie, head of Lan- | The two. Vancouver men al- ready are charged in Edmonton with possession of some of the 'cancelled money stolen from a Canadian Pacific Railway ware- house in Vancouver. They were jfree on $6,000 bail each, | brought back to Vancouver to face charges of robbery with vi- arkshire County criminiil inves-Slence and possession of stolen tigation department, said the two men were arrestec| in po- lice raids on the industvrial vil- lages of Blantyre and '(Zambus- lang, near Glasgow, duiting the weekend. McDougall was arre sted Cambuslang and Percival Blantyre. Mungie said at least 15 days had to elapse before they could be sent back to Canada, 'in case there was an-appeal of other reason for their remaining here. Percival was a former Van- couver police officer. in | goods. The money was being shipped) jback to the mint in Ottawa for} destruction. Each bill had three! 'holes punched in it. Four thieves; one of them in in the money cage of the ware- house and escaped with three 300-pound boxes of money. In April, Percival. and Mc- Dougall were arrested in Ed- monton. About $12,000 in muti- 'ated money was recovered. | The aftermath of the robbery} shook the Vancouver police de- 'partment. Rea Provincial Transport Men 'Accept Revised MONTREAL (CP) -- Striking employees of the Provincial Transport Co. voted early today to accept revised termis for a new two-year labor contract, hours after rejecting a prfevoius offer. The employees, meetinjz in a hall in east-central Moxgitreal, waited through the wee hours of the morning after the earlier rejection while Jean - Robert Contract jbuses will probably start run- ining again late today. The revised contract in its latest form offers a pay in-| § crease of 15 a week as of July 1 at which time wages for bus) & drivers will go up to $70 from) § $55 for the basic rate, The rate |will go up again on July 1, 1966 to $75. | 'The previous offer, rejected in| a show of hands several hours! Gauthier, a chief union megoti-\nefore, would lave provided $65) ator, made several telaphone calls, including at least one to Paul Desmarais, president of the PTC a week from this July 1 and $75 by July 1, 1967, Negotiators for the Confederation of National Trade Unions had urged the) A PIC spokesman saiti thejemployees to accept this offer.| west of Saigon. The Communists overran that village Saturday. But the retreating government troops counter-attacked and the Viet Cong withdrew. South Vietnamese troops with U.S, air support killed seven Viet Cong. provincial an local officials in a_helicopter- 200/ borne raid on the Mekong Delta} village of Tan Hiep 35 miles south of Saigon. U.S. informants called it the biggest single bag of Viet Cong officials in the war. / They said 24 other Viet Cong were slain and 29 were taken prisoner. South Vietnamese of- ficers estimated that the Viet Cong carried off another 50 dead. A Viet Cong hospital also was reported destroyed. The dead Viet Cong officials included the provincial chief, the. informants said. In the air war Sunday, 8 U.S. planes struck at ammunition dumps, bridges, highways and military compounds within) ; | lattack on Duc Hoa, 20 miles -- Viet Nam, a spokesman) Up Profits NAMU, B.C. (CP)--A 20-foot killer whale trapped in a gill- net pen frolicked and ate sal- mon by the score Sunday while its captors awaited a Seattle aquarium buyer said to be on his way with $8,000 in cash. The whale's captors, fisher- men Bob Lechkobit and Robert aquarium representative get. $300,000 Left BODY FOUND © The body of Hollywood ac- tor Steve Cochran was aboard a boat towed into Port Champerico, Guate- mala, today, according to a police report. Police said he had been dead about 10 days. Three women aboard the boat were held in-preven- tive detention. Police said the boat had drifted from the time of Cochran's death until picked up yesterday. (See story on Page Five.) | Dorion Report Today, Tuesday OTTAWA (CP) :'-- The report of the Dorion inquiry into al- legations of attempted bribery and coercion by federal minis- terial aides is expected to be handed to the government to-|taken place day. It may be made publie today or Tuesday. To Presbyterians OTTAWA (CP)--The Presby- terian Church of Canada has )the in@ Setaway car--held up a clerk been left $300,000 fro mthe estate Clarence M. Pitts, businessman who di onto April 10. Mr. Pitts left an estate of of $2,169,616 before taxes. He was president of the People's|real March 2, while the inquiry vows in order to i-arry a Gas Supply Company Ltd. | jion jeddling t hat " sought an Ottawa/jease on bail of accused dope|Noel Crusz, 41-year-old Roman ed at Tor- trafficker Lucien Rivard after|Catholic priest and popular Chief Justice Frederic Dor- of the Quebec Superior Court conducted a lengthy pub- lic investigation last winter into allegations of influence- the re- he was picked up for extradi- tion to the U.S, | Rivard broke jail in Mont- was going on. GEORGE BURT } Oshawa | 'Warmth Noted LONDON (CP) -- The Queen Mother, smiling and happy, ar- rived back from Canada today and told High Commissioner Lionel Chevrier she had "a won- derful trip." Chevrier said the Queen Mother looked "'absolutely won- derful and radiant, full of joy and gaiety." The Times, in a report from from Toronto, comments on the warmth of the reception the Queen Mother had from Tor- onto and Oshawa crowds, say- ing it seemed to be a reaction to the coolness of last year's royal visit to Quebec. GLASGOW (AP)--The Queen came ashore from the yacht Britannia today to fulfil a stren- uous seven - hour program de- spite a slight indisposition which kept her aboard Sunday. Her engagements included factory visits, a youth rally and the opening of a new county council headquarters for Dun- bartonshire. The Queen can- cudbright Sunday because of a slight fever. 19 Survive Rebel Captivity LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)-- Nineteen white women and' chil- dren, including a missionary nurse who twice escaped death, have arrived here in apparent good health after many months in Congolese rebel captivity. The 19 flew into Leopoldville Sunday night after being res- cued from the rebels in the northern Buta area by a gov- ernment patrol Saturday night. They included 14 Belgian nuns and one Dutch nun, a Brit- ish missionary nurse and a Bel- gian mother and her two small daughters. The nurse, Margaret Hayes, 39, was the only white person to escape last December from the town of Banalia, 60 miles north of Stanleyville, where 15 {foreigners were killed by reb- els. : Direct Talks Are Proposed WARSAW (AP) -- A_ non- partisan deputy in Poland's Communist - controlled. Parlia- ment has urged direct talks be- tween the Polish government and the Vatican, the official |Polish press agency PAP has |reported. | The deputy, Stanislaw |Stomma of Krakow, urged such ja move because, "since the {pontificate of Pope John XXIII, a certain improvement has in relations be- |tween the church and the so- cialist camp," Pap said Satur- |day night. Church Refuses Release Priest {| COLOMBO (Reuters) -- Rev. ibroadeaster in the Ceylonese jcapital, said today his request for a release from his religious jeelled a planned visit to Kirk-, ~ Queen Mother Elizabeth, on the final day of her visit to Toronto, listens with in- terest, as she talks with a member of the Toronto Scot- tish Regiment Sunday. The colonel-in- chief of the regiment, min- gled informally with the sol- diers following a march-past on the University of Toron- Queen. Mother, (See story on to campus. (CP. Wirephoto) Two), LONDON (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson flew back to Can- ada today convinced that while the Commonwealth prime min- isters' conference was a diffi- cult one, "it was very interest- ing and satisfactory." As he and his party boarded the RCAF. Yukon for the trip to Otawa, the prime minister carried a new ivory cane, a gift from Sir Albert Margai, prime minister of Sierre Leone. Pearson had hoped to get away ffom the business of the Commonwealth and relax dur- ing the weekend. Before his de- parture, he and his wife looked in at the Wimbledon lawn ten- nis 'championship matches Sa- turday. Pearson and his wife Sunday drove through the Cotswolds, a hilly, scenic rural area north- west of London. In the after- noon, the Pearsons stopped to have tea with Lord Ismay at his Worcestershire home. Lord Ismay was chief of the British Anti-Royalist Sentiments Hit TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs. Arthur Willis of Rouyn - Nor- anda, Que., brought her three children to see Queen Mother Elizabeth because she opposes anti - royalist sentiments in parts of Quebec. 'We've been living in Rouyn- Noranda in'Quebec. Seeing the hatred for the Queen, I de- cided to educate my children. I'm originally from Galway in Ireland and-I never thought I'd be doing this, But living in Que-| beauty queen has been refused. bec, I changed my mind." PM's Parley 'Satisfactory general staff during the war years. Pearson said he will report to the Commons Tuesday on the results of. the Commonwealth conference. As he boarded the plane, he told-a reporter that one point on his mind is how to get China into disarmament talks. The Commonwealth leaders had emphasized in their com- munique 'last, Friday that 'ways and means should be found for associating the People's Repub- lic of China with future discus- sions on disarmament." 12 DROWN AT DRYDEN AS HOUSEBOAT SINK Eight Children Die List But Two Survivors pontoon was ripped off and the DRYDEN, Ont. (CP) -- A weekend cruise ended in death for 12 persons, including eight children, when a violent sum- mer storm smashed and sank a houseboat on Lake Wabigoon! The dead include nine mem- bers of one family--seven chil- dren ranging in age from three to 13 and their parents, mother, her daughter and the daughter's two-year-old were the other victims. Two adults reached shore and were taken to this northwestern Ontario paper mill town's gen- eral hospital. Provincial police withheld the names and said they were hav- ing difficulty reaching next-of- kin because telephones lines were torn down by what area residents. termed one of the worst summer storms in mem- ory. A violent, shifting wind caught the boat, a large cabin craft supported by twin pon- toons, as it ran for shelter in Bonny Bay, about sevn milese east of Dryden. TRAPPED IN CABIN Witnesses said the boat was spun broadside to the waves. A > boat rolled over and sank. It appeared all but-the two who escaped were ttrappd inside the cabin...... One body had been recovered Sunday. |by late Sunday night. Other craft were on Wabi- goon,- a curving, island-dotted lake about 12 miles long, when the storm blew up but all were reported to have reached safety. ' From widespread points in the area, about miles east of Winnipeg, came reports of damaged cottages and tornado- like funnels of wind and water moving across lakes. At Eagle River, about 3 miles west of Dryden, summer resident W. E. Austen said about five cottages were dam- aged by wind-toppled trees. Mr. Austen said the storm raised six-foot waves on Eagle Lake, swamping three boats carrying fishing parties. All reached safety, At the Vermilion Bay i 25 miles west of Dryden, peeled the roof from a sheet- metal hangar and blew it 400 feet. There were no reports of aircraft damaged. Ex-Hitler THE HAGUE (Reuters) -- Queen Juliana of The Nether- lands today formally announced the engagement of Princess Beatrix to West German diplo- mat Claus von Amsberg--"the choice of her heart." The queen, in a radio and television announcement from Soestdyk Palace, was outspoken about the controversy over von Amsberg's past. as a member of the Hitler youth organization, but said the young couple had applied "reason and consci- ence" to their decision. They, "'like ourselves, were very clearly aware of the doubts and even the resistance which their engagement might arouse among many people." "Yet they finally felt the ob- jections should not be allowed to outbalance their love." Beatrix, eldest daughter of NEW CITY HALL NOT 80 HOT? TORONTO (CP) -- While Queen Mother Elizabeth was looking oper. Toronto's contro- versial new $28,000,000 city hall Sunday, one member of her party. turned thumbs down on it. "I don't like it," British publisher Lord Thomson told former mayor Nathan Phil- lips, who was the main driv- ing force behind the unortho- dox structure. "If it was a newspaper you'd buy it," Mr. Phillips told the Toronto - born peer, who owns more than 100 dail- les. "That would depend on the circulation,"' Lord Thomson replied. The Queen Mother said Mayor Philip Givens, pro- nounced it "breathtaking." But she also said there must have been ncontroversy over the building. VIET NAM "GUNBOAT POLICY" FLAYED Canadian UAW Hits At US. PORT ELGIN, Ont U.S. policies in two areas of American political con- cern--Viet Nam and the Domin- ican Republic--were criticized by delegates attending the quarterly sessions of 'the Cana- . (CR) troubled lic. The counci agreed automobiles and the U.S. for '"'gunboat diplom- to oppose Canada "free trade plan" less adequate . compensation the Canadian government was to search Europe and Asia for 1 'unanimously the U.S.- for auto parts un- is skilled tradesmen, called on federal and provincial governments: to Canadian apprenticeship programs the council © "pressure to accept and industry dian United Auto Workers Un- ion council here. The weekend meetings held on Lake Huron were attended by some 130 delegates from across Canada, representing the UAW"s' 80,000 Canadian mem- bers. Ina statement issued in Windsor Sunday-night, the coun- ci! said it had urged a nego- tiated settlement in the conflict in Viet Nam and condemned paid to workers thrown out .of work by the plan. George Burt, Canadian direc- for of the UAW, said the union *'wants at least the benefits our American brothers will get un- der the plan. Our goal is full compensation for workers laid off because of the plan and price cuts for Canadians which reflect the savings which the industry will gain." Commenting on reports that train our own Canadian youth for jobs in Canadian industry." In the annual election of offi- cers, Pat Smith, Local 439 pres- ident in Toronto, was re-elected council president; James Peters, president of Local 1285 at Brampton, vice - president; William Marshall, Local 676, St. Cathariges, secretary-treas- rer, Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard, is 27. The princess met her 38-year-old fiance in Germany last year. They are expected to wed next spring. POLICE ON GUARD Police were out in force to- Beatrix To Wed | Aid e demonstrations. Strong opposi- tion to the engagement has come from Dutch war veterans and resistance fighters. . At-a press conference before the announcement Beatrix, with von Amsberg beside. her, ap- pealed for "'time and trust" from the people. She told reporters that if the Dutch government had not ap- proved her wedding to Claus she would not have' gone through with it, The queen claimed that "Claus, as well as his family, were absolutely opposed to the Nazi regime.' 'EXCELLENT CHOICE' She said it was a great joy to make the announcement, adding that "from a human point of view, we feel it is an excellent choice." The young couple, the queen said, want "to dedicate their lives to a society which is growing more and more posi- tively toward a European and day to guard against possible a world alliance." in Malaysia's Borneo state of their demand for union reco; moves to spread the strike to rane, two each; Lindsay and NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Four Charged In Armed Robbery SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) -- Four youths were charged with armed robbery today after two policemen were held up and disarmed by a gang Sunday. issued for the arrest of another youth. Red-backed Raiders On Rampage KUCHING (AP) -- A band of raiders, believed to be Indonesian-led with local Communist outlaw support, went on a bloody terrorist rampage along a main highway deep A warrant was Sarawak Sunday night. 9,000 Cabbies Strike In N.Y. _NEW YORK (AP) -- About 5,000 taxi workers went on strike against taxi fleet owners today as the workers pushed nition. The strikers began all the 16,000 taxi drivers in Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens, 26 Forest Fires In Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- Twenty-six forest fires were reported burning in Ontario today. They were. located by district as follows: Tweed, six; Sudbury and Pembroke, four each; Swastika and North Bay, three each; Geraldton and Coch- Kemptville, one each . Comics -- 19 Editorial --~ 4 Financial -- 23 Tr ...In THE TIMES today... ©. UAW Picture Story Page 11 and 15 = City News -- Page 15. = Whistling See Wins Plate --. Page 7. = Ann Landers -- 14° Obits ---- 23 = City News -- 11, 15 Sports -- 6, 7, 8, 9 Classified --- 20, 21, 22 Theatre -- 9 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 12, 13, 14 Weather -- 2: &