Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow. - manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On tario and Durham Counties, H 10¢ Single Copy bp SOc Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 94 --NO. 275 a £ Ostaw OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1965 a imes ~~ =--Wgather Report av and Clouuy "ana - mild tedes Friday. Scattered rain both gays. tonight 22 Hick tomorrow, 42, Tae LF THIRTY-TWO PAGES | 2 Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Department * Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, natura Ht REIN I ferred to university hospitals at Iowa City, the nearest burn cen- tre. Fire Chief John Breheny and Delahoyde said the explosion was caused by gas. "'There is a gas furnace out there," the sheriff said. "The explosion blew the walls out and the top up," he said. "There was a terrific fire for a few seconds. It had to be gas." Capt. James Baugher, 34, commander of the National Guard company based at the armory, said the blast appar- ently originated in the base- ment. KEOKUK, Iowa '(AP)--A shattering explosion and fire de- stroyed a National Guard arm- ory Wednesday night, sending seven persons to a fiery death and tragically ending a U.S. Thanksgiving eve square dance. "Four or five more are not expected to live" Sheriff H. R. Delahoyde said today. Most of the other 60 to 70 per- sons in the building were burned and injured. "All our hospitals are filled,"' the sheriff said. Dr. R. E. Cooper, on duty at St. Joseph Hospital here, said eight persons were in critical condition, and three were trans- ognition. Dr. Cooper up." Searchers fra ried to this M city to help. Dr. Cooper said the dead in- cluded four women, one and two children. Some of the dead were burned beyond rec- those people can't tell us any- thing. The damn thing just blew through' the smoldering rubble for victims. Doctors and nurses from. neighboring towns in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri hur- St. Joseph Hospital said it ad- DEATH CALLS DANCE TUNE, 7 mitted 17 man ment. George of public s; "most of are had been said others. While the gaily dancing mem- bers of the Swing Ezy Club, which meets every Wednesday ntically clawed night, perf ississippi River bris that Four of the dead were burned beyond recognition. was a possibility of two or three armory, some of their children played in the basement. ~.Huge cranes dug into the de- basement as the search contin- persons for treat- Mayer, commissioner tional afety, said six deaths confirmed and there other cluding @ tank, said Col. Joseph May, gener: ormed upstairs in the collapsed into the ued today for any possible chil- dren there. : ' The armory was used by an armored company of. the Na- 100-foot building, built in 1953, contained some small arms and George Mayer,. commissioner of public safety, said: 'There was some .22-calibré ammuni- tion in the basement but I don't believe it had anything to do with the explosion. It may have exploded in the fire."" Guard. The 100-foot by military equipment, in- assistant Iowa adjutant- al. RTs CORA PU Strike Averted In B.C. Both Sides Buy Terms m nese VANCOUVER (CP) companies and the striking oil |had forwarded their acceptance|hours before the oil union had workers union agreed Wednes-jof the terms to Labor Minister|said it would extend its strike mses RTE TU -- Oljofficials and the oil companies| Settlement came less than 12 day tv accept a series of gov-|Leslie Peterson. ernment settlement terms, end-| The oil workers, many of ing the threat of a potentially| whom had been on_ strike widespread general strike injagainst the British American British Columbia. Oil Co. for the last 10 weeks, Within hours after a provin-|gave unanimous approval to the cial government settlement pro-|settlement at a meeting Wed- posal was put to them, laborinesday night. Autos At 20% Under Retail To 'Club', Allan Trial Told 7; OTTAWA (CP)--Existence ofjconstantly with the Canadian sjan automobile '"'club' within) government. the armed forces and RCMP] Later, a pamphlet put out by whose members can buy cars|the club was shown to report- at 20 per cent below normal re-jers. It said membership in the tail prices came to light here|club exceeds 10,000. #|Wednesday at the trial of Brig.) The pamphlet also said that *\John Baxter Allan. since late 1960 4,000 automobiles Defence counsel R. K. Laish-|have been delivered to '"'regu- ley disclosed existence of the lar force' personnel at savings Servicemen's Automobile Club,/to servicemen estimated at incorporated in 1960, during his) $2,000,000. cross-examination of two crown; Staff Sgt. Fletcher and WO witnesses. Corrigal said no civilians, even Army Staff Sgt. Herbert H./those employed in the defence Fletcher and Wo..D. M. Corri-\department, are eligible gal said memberships in the/club membership. club cost $4 to $6 annually and; Brig. Allan, former vice-quar- are open to all members of the|termaster - general of the Cana- navy, army, RCAF and RCMP./dian army, is on trial on a They said paid-up membersicharge of accepting an advant- are able to purchase cars di-jage or benefit in excess of rectly from Canadian manufac-|$8,000 from a Toronfo auto turers, including General Mo-' parts company between 1957 tors, Ford and Chrysler. and 1963 while the firm was do- Both witnesses agreed that alljing business with the govern- for}: unsere nmr midis lagainst BA to all oil companies jin B.C, The extension, sched- juled for midnight Wednesday, jwould have sparked a 48-hour general work stoppage called by the B.C. Federation of Labor in jsupport of oil workers. | .A spokesman for the Oil, {Chemical and Atomic Workers {Union (CLC) said today the un- jions would now sit down with Joil company officials to draw: up contracts based on the gov- ernment terms. He said it was only a matter of settling minor differences at |individual refineries before con- tracts are completed. Picket lines around BA refineries and outlets and at one Imperial Oil Co. refineny would remain until the contracts are signed. J. R. Duncan, national direc- tor of the union, said the settle- ment formula was a "'tremen- dous breakthrough" in the.area of automation, a key issue in the dispute. He said the formula would tlement of oil industry etrikes across the country. Oil company sources admitted privatély that Army R 2 For Congo After Coup KEYS IN COUP Kasayubu Given Heave-Ho Mobutu Cancels Elections LEOPOLDVILLE (CP) -- Lt.- Gen. Joseph Mobutu ousted President Joseph Kasavubu to- day and declared himself pres- ident of the Congo for the next five years. Mobutu, the army com- "couldn't be happier' with the latest turn of Congolese events. The prevailing. opinion was that Tshombe, who led the se- cession of Katanga after inde- pendence from Belgium in 1960, would be recalled to the gov- likely provide the basis for set-|/ mander-in-chief, said he ex- pected Parliamentary '"ap- proval by acclamation" of his presidency later today. He also cancelled the presidential and parliamentary elections which had been scheduled for next January and February. "Since this morning I am the president,"' he told a press con- erence. It was his second seiz- ure of power in The Congo since the former Belgian territory be- came independent in 1960. Mobutu named Col. Leonard Mulamba, a career officer, to replace Premier-designate Eva- riste Kimba and said he would form a "government of national unity from all provinces' in which he and Mulamba would be the only military figures. He said Mulamba would pre- sent his government to Parlia- ment for approval by Saturday. NAMES COMMANDER Mobutu also named Maj.-Gen. f Louis Bobozo, 34, the army's only other general, to Mobutu's place. as commander-in-chief. Bobozo has been military com- mander in nga province, ernment. Congolese politics have been in crisis since Oct. 13, when Ka- savubu, fearing Tshombe as a next year, ousted the premier and named Kimba to replace him. Tshombe and his supporters in Parliament defeated Kimba on his first vote of confidence Nov. 14, but Kasavubu asked Kimba to try to form another government. With Parliament scheduled to recess Dec. 6, political observ- ers believed Kimba planned to delay naming his cabinet until after that date. He then would not have had to face a vote in Parliament until March. The rift between Kasavubir and Mobutu probably began when the president told the Ab rican summit conference in late October that he would expel the white mercenary soldiérs whd quelled the rebellion in the north Congo. Mobutu, who va- lued the mercenaries, pressured Kimba. into issuing a that "only those mercenaries not integrated into the army rival in the presidential election . it probably 'would. The oil workers are currently jon strike against BA plants in |Saskatchewan and in Clarkson, Ont., and against a Shell Can- ada Ltd. plant in Manitoba. An oil workers strike and re- sulting general strike in British Columbia appeared immiment as late as Tuesday night when 4 rebels a year ago. + opposition was evident in Leo- while Mulamba has 'been com- mander and political director in he northeast Congo since Stan- eyville, its capital, was retaken rom the Communist-supported would be expelled." Rumors have also circulated that Kasavubu was planning to import Ghanaian , osten- sibly to replace Nigerian police who are training the local po- lice force. A coup had been rumored in the making for days. Military leaders from all over the coun- The ¢oup apparently was eaceful and bloodless, and no poldville. EFFIGY - HANGING OF COMPANY'S MAN company's storage depot overnight and the swinging bundle of rags was found in daylight hours Wednesday. (CP) Chatham. The local employ- ees of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers in Windsor hanged Wonnacotte in effigy at the main gates of the Glen the Goon reads the sign pinned to an effigy of Glen Wonnacotte, chief negotiator for strike-bound Union Gas Company Ltd. of Rhodesian Parliament Opens To An Uproar SALISBURY (CP) -- An up-lout after Palley. was led from) Palley eaid he would neither roar broke out at the start of|the chamber. They included Jo-|withdraw nor sit down. He con- the first sitting of the Rhode-jsiah Gondo, leader of the all-|tinued shouting but his words sian Parliament since Premier|Negro Opposition United Peo-jcould not be heard above the Ian Smith proclaimed independ-|ples party. idin. ence two weeks ago and the| Palley had challenged the Five Negro and Asian inde- lone white independent member|Speaker to rule that the new|pendent members remained--in the big auto firms do business 'ment. TORONTO (CP)--A coroner's jury made six blood trans- fusion recommendations Wed- nesday when it exonerated East General Hospital in the death of a patient six days after she was given the wrong blood. The jury deliberated three hours before returning its ver- dict in the death of Agnes Love, 61, who died in the hospital Oct. a1 Coroner Dr.° Douglas Mac- Ateer had told the jury there was no doubt Mrs. Love re- Hospital Cleared In Death 'Of Victim Of Wrong Blood Rh-negative, was given to an- other patient, William Wilson, who, although he died Noy. 11 of a heart attack, suffered no ill effects from the wrong blood, the jury was told, The jury found Mrs. Love's death was caused by illness as outlined in an autopsy report signed by Dr. Donald> Ryder, pathologist at Women's College Hospital, Toronto. But it added the 'incompatible trans- fusion could have been a con- tributing factor in accelerating Premier W. A. C. Bennett ar- rived in Vancouver "in case I can be of assistance." However, shortly after 1 a.m. Wednesday, Mr. Peterson in- \formed reporters that an an- nouncement would be made at a morning meeting between the premier, himself, the oil work- ers and company officials. Re- porters were invited to attend. PRESENTS PROPOSAL The premier used the meeting te present a government pro- posal for ending the dispute, He did not indicate what action the government might take if the terms were not accepted. The settlement called for: --A 35-cent-an-hour wage in- crease in a two-year agree- ment retroactive to April 16, 1965. (Oil workers had de- manded 50 cents an hour on top of their basic wage of A handful of paracommando troops were stationed at the ra- dio station, and,all transmis- sions were controlled. Street dancing in celebration was reported in the native quar- ter of Leopoldville. A report from Elisabethville, capital of Katanga and The Congo's sec-|be's arch rival. ond largest city, said Mobutu's} The army chief has long been action -was generally approved}considered the key man in the there. \turbulent nation. The general Only 12 days ago President/feeling is that he prefers being Kasavubu asked Kimba to formia stabilizing power and wants a government after Premierjto keep the army out of poli- Moise Tshombe was removeditics. But it is also understood from office following bitter con-|that he has never hesitated to ; flict with the president. put pressure on any and all A reliable source whojpoliticians when he felt it was saw Tshombe today said he'ithe national interest. try have been arriving in the capital for "'consultations." The lifting of suppression or ders against the opposition press revokes orders issued by Interior Minister Victor Nen- daka, the big. power in the Kimba government and Tshom- KASAVUBU muni mn Teneo NEWS HIGHLIGHTS who challenged the validity of|constitution introduced by Smith}the chamber. The government $2.75 an hour); --A joint union-management committee for continuing con- sideration of technological changes; --Management - government co-operation on retraining programs; --One week's severance pay for every year of service, up to a maximum of 26 weeks; --Six months' notice by the companies to the union of au- tomation changes resulting in layoffs, Labor officials were quick to voice their approval. As the day progressed, Mr. Peterson received statements of accept- ance from Imperial Oil, British American, Home Oil Co., Shell Canada Ltd., Standard Oi} Co. and others. s KIMBA On: Than Dr. Ahrn Palley was escorted| was illegal and invalid. linating voice in whatever busi-|transfusion and reacted to it.| Dr. Ryder testified Mrs. Love | ituti . itered the hospital in a dying the hospital, suffering from can- geant-at-arms. jbles, ruled that the constitution|fore the House. eS a r Palley had persistently re-jwas legal. Police were out in force|Condition and had received ex-|cer of the pancreas, liver and Speaker and several times hisifelt they were still bound byjings but there was no sign of} The blood which Mrs. Love jaundice. cries of 'Order' and "Sit/from this house immediately) Parliament was summoned to |by ot incompatible aged down." land then the proceedings mustigive formal approval to the jin this case was to ip the - wpa -igency clamped on Rhodesia by) Robarts And During' the inquest Barbara Alouette Again Postponed "::":2-v% "Sorel Wj Kove ana' Mr. Wiens od The emergency was imposed " . wii ve 2 g ; p Segall | ilson Meet: have been switched in constitution and was signed into} A 4 } LONDON (CP)--Ontario Pre-| Mr. Wilson had A type posi- : ' Smith insists Gibbs is no nesday with Prime Minister] Dr. John Crookston, head of VANDENBERG AIR BASE,jto be fired toward the Southijonger the JAgal governor but|Wilson and said afterwards Wil-|the hematology department at ada's Alouette II satellite ran} The satellites are scheduled|Government 'House des pit enext month. small proportion of mismatched Wednesday, but officials arejbits ranging in altitude from'out. leader to Toronto during a 45- hopeful if will be blasted into 270 to 1,620 miles. -- ' ____._.|minute meeting at'10 Downing : ita 4 th The launching originally was) e "It all depends on. the\ccheduled sday night, b S lf 7 h |scheduled Tuesday nig ut al 6 o Orc Ing nently. man of the Defence Research|the U.S. satellite last Friday oN Board, co-ordinator of the Ca-|forced a one-day postponement, jwon't be able to come to Tor- ion 'will have to wait until)... ; WEST CHESTER,, Pa. (AP)j|tawa, if only for a few hours," ellite used in the launching of Patricia Ann Conway, 22-year-|Robarts said in an interview. Main obstacle is a wind veloc-|;" oat tel SAIGON (AP)--U.S. infantry ity of more than 200 knots |'" September 1962, although itiinan 24 hours after she set fire|the United Nations in New York|clashed with the Viet Cong to- the jet stream about 30,000 etek ma tara by itsling on the campus of West Ches-|Johnson the next day. gon, but most American ground aN OR wie Dr euecese ot ter State College. A Wilson spokesman said de-|forces in- South Viet Nam _ ob- Besides creating technical complications, the wind pre-/been lengthened to 240 feet fromjing in elementary education,|North American trip are. still)without combat of a failure in. the Thor-Agenajemploys new parts more resist-|cree burns on the upper part|was anxious to include Canada.jone of the quietest days in two radiation damage. of her body. ; |Tentatiye plans call for his re-|weeks in the Ia Drang valley, and a United States Explorer) Like satellite inte orbit; the wesietlyjhas an expected useful life span|Jack Owens, advanced a theory|might be extended to Dec. 40.\troops last week fought their! from over the ocean to the in-lof Alouette I, Canadian officiais!on-and-off romance and her con-jsituation arising from the uni The Viet Cong kept up pres- habited California coast. expect it to. provide useful in-|cern, 'because of her deep re-jlateral declaration of indgpend-jsure, however, against South! Hight call for the launch vehiclejyears. have hurt a human being." 'minority regime in Rhodesia,'central coast, while an allied! the proceedings was ejected. {when he declared independence| party totals 64, giving it a dom-jceived an, incompatible blood)her death. out of the chamber by the ser-| The Speaker, A. R. W. Stum-|ness Smith seeks to bring be-|But he added that she had en-|was doomed when she entered fused to give way to the; He said those members whovaround the Parliament build-|cellent care. lungs, a kidney disorder and, voice could be heard abovel|British laws '"'should withdraw|trouble. ishould have received, O type] But he said "the part played Nine Negro members walked!carry on in the ordinary way."|the country-wide state of emer- scales unfavorably... . d Smith's government a week be-| Taggart, the hospital's head : junder the pre ~- independence} the laboratory." Ni ht New Dat jeffect by the governor, Sir I : |Himphrey Gybbs. mier Robarts conferred Wed-|tive blood. Calif. (CP)Launching of Can-|Pole. |Gibbs contfhues to reside at(80 probably will visit Ottawa/Toronto General Hospital said a into its second postponement to go into similar eliptical or-|Smith's orders. to him to get Robarts invited the British|transfusions result in death. orbit Saturday night. weather," said Dr. John Chap-|radio transmitter failure aboard ; ' Gi ] S b "My impression is that he nadian space team. "The decis-| Alouette II is the backup sat-| g onto but probably will go to Ot- Saturday morning." 'i sage as . Alouette I from the same base old co-ed, died Wednesday, less|Wilson is scheduled to address (about 230 miles an hour) in|"@8 been modified in the lightt, her gasoline:drenched cloth-\Dec. 16 and meet President|day in the jungles north of Sai- above the earth A The telescoping antenna has Miss Conway, a junior major-|tails of the British leader's|served U.S. Thanksgiving Day sents-a-safety. problem. In-case|150_ feet and the power supplysuffered-second-- and- third-de-|being worked out but Wilson) U.S. military sources reported B rocket carrying the Alouette|ant to ) Alouette I,-alouette Il} The dean of students, Dr.jturn to London Dec. 18 but this|where the Communists and U:S. winds. could carry the rocketjof one year, but, as in the case|that she was disturbed about an| "Wilson briefed Robarts on the biggest battle of the war. Plans for the Polar orbitaljformation for as long as threelligious feeling that.she might/ence Nov. 11 by the white-| Vietnamese troops along the} f oot |St. in which trade and the Rho- ' ue : I ] jdesian rebellion figuted promi-| US. ights itt o others on the major operation jeast of Saigon, There were no| ksgiving {force of American, Australian and South Vietnamese troops jpressed an offensive 65 miles northeast of Saigon in Binh Tuy province. Australian troops killed eight Viet Cong and possibly four with U.S. and South Vietna- mese soldiers 65 miles north- Australian casualties. The allied force has been combing a big valley for four days in an effort to prevent the Viet Cong from harvesting 3,400 tons of rice there. Britons May Have To Eat Cake LONDON (AP)--Bread lines and bread rationing in some stores hit Britain today as a bakers strike brought the threat of millions going without bread this weekend. . The full effect of the walkout called by the Bakers Union affected half of England--including London. There were esti- mates that up to 20,000,000 persons faced a "bread famine." Plot To Poison Whole City Of 3 Million JAKARTA (Reuters)--Indonesian authorities have captured. , a Communist who had orders t6 poison Jakarta's 3,000,000, | residents through their water supply a report in the official armed forces bulletin said today, The man identified as 'Mr. Jackman" was reported to have confessed he was told to . poison the purification system at the capital's only water supply plant. Moscow Ousts Reporter Over Stories MOSCOW (Reuters)--Tass news agency announced today that the Moscow correspondent of The Washington Post Stephen Rosenfeld had been told to leave Moscow. Tass said the press department of the Soviet foreign ministry told Rosenfeld his continued presence in the Soviet was "unde- -sirable" in view of the "continuing anti-Soviet campaign conducted by his newspaper over the so-called Penkovsky Papers."' Sen citn te TTT STU RUT UT ...In THE TIMES today... GM Opens New Windsor Plant---P, 15 Planners Study Gilbert St. Closing--P. 5 Generals Humiliote St. Kitts 10-2--P. 8 Ann Landers--17 Obits--30 City News--15 Sports--8, 9, 10,.11, 12, 18, Classified --26, 27, 28, 29 . Theatre--22 Comics--25 Whitby. News----5, 6 Editorial--4 Women's--16, 17 Financial--30 Weather---2 ~ REE OT so