PROVINCIAL police on the run to where the action is. The action was a riot of hundreds of teen-agers and adults in this ' resort community Saturday night sticks and tear gas. (CP Wirephoto) lasting over an hour and » combatted by a 38-man pol- ice force with helmets, TRAFFIC HEAVY, PARADES HELD By THE CANADIAN PRESS Violence and death marred Blin. taae ¥ otas Tye ; the 1 Scr Der weekend in|... | ie amy Canada with teen-age riots in Grand Bend, Ont., and more than 100 deaths in accidents across the country. Traffic fa- talities slone far exceeded the Canadian Highway Safety Coun- cil's prediction of 77. Violence flared Saturday night in Grand Bend, 30 miles northwest of London, as police fired tear gas into a chanting crowd of teen-agers who hurled bottles and rocks up and down the town's main street for nearly an hour. Scattered outbreaks of van- dalism broke out again Sunday night and police arrested 4 persons during the two days of rioting. One policeman was in- jured during a fight in front of a detachment office. In the Maritimes, record crowds attended a sportsmen's 23 Face On Mob GRAND BEND, Ont. (CP)-- It's judgment day today for 23 persons arrested during two successive nights of mob vio- lence in this resort community on Lake Huron, about 30 miles northwest of London. All are to appear in magis- trate's court this morning facing charges varying from creating a disturbance to car- rying concealed weapons. All but five are charged, with liquor) offenses. 'An enlarged force of helmeted police with riot sticks used tear gas guns both Saturday and Sunday nights to quell the dis- turbances, which resulted in a dozen arrests the first night and 11 the following. . There were 34 police officers in the village when hundreds of persons, mostly teen - agers, surged up Main Street Saturday night and massed in front of the police detachment building to demand the release of 4 youth arrested for drinking un- der age. Whn police tried to clear the street their action was the sig- nal for bottle and rock throwing Charges Violence injured, one requiring treat- ment for a cut ankle, Th melee between police and mob lasted for more than an hour with the law striking the finishing blow with tear . gas shells fired from paddy wagons. Another 40 officers from pro- vincial police forces as far away as Toronto were on hand Sun- day to control the crowd, esti- mated to be about 15,000. Sunday night chanting youths |began to collect in the main street. Police quickly cleared the street and the action shifted to the side streets, Again tear gas guns were brought to bear on milling gangs and stones were hurled at police and their vehicles. Five of those arrested face Criminal Code charges. Two youths are charged with carry- ing concealed weapons--a knife and a rock, Another is charged with creating a disturbance, an- other for mischief and the fifth for common assault. During the Labor Day exodus for homes and the beginning of a new school - year, someone scribbled beneath a "'Welcome to Grand Bend" sign the single in which two policemen were word: "RIOT." Confederation Credited For Boom By Smallwood By DAL WARRINGTON 8T. JOHN'S, Nfid. (CP)--"I have been. fighting a war against poverty in Newfound- land and Labrador from the moment I started the campaign for Confederation and from the moment I became premier," Joseph Smallwood tells New- foundlanders as he appeals for a sixth vote of confidence in Thursday's provincial election. The 65 - year - old Liberal leader, Newfoundland's "father of Confederation," attributes his province's booming develop- ment to that event in 1949 and to his own untiring efforts to raise its standard of living to- ward that of wealthier prov- inces. He quotes Dominion Bureau of Statistics figures that show personal income in Newfound- land rose 194 per cent from 1950 to 1964 compared with 161 per cent in Canada as a whole. | He says new capital investment | increased 266 per cent, more | than double the Canadian aver- age of 130 per cent. Painting Witn a difrerent brush is the. Progressive Con- servative leader, Dr. Noel Mur- phy, 51. He says progress has been made, but at too great a cost. In his view, Premier Small-| wood has become a dictator) who threatens the basic free-| doms of the peopie. CHARGES PATRONAGE | He charges the Liberals with) widespread patronage and cor- ruption -- especially in the awarding of liquor-sale licences and construction contracts -- with promoting industries for Farmers Refuse To Collect Taxes BRANTFORD (CP) -- Dis- trict farmers Saturday said they are not prepared to col- lect income tax from tobacco field workers as they have been ordered to do by the district taxation office in Hamilton. | br aps = and ay of the few,|few days on reviewing their ith meddling internal uni-|flight plan and tisi versity affairs and with brow- ~ SS ae cadice eid beating civil servants. He admits he's fighting an uphill battle. After 17 years, during which, the Smallwood forces have won every election with smashing majorities, the PCs have a formidible task But gains in 1962, when ti. / elected their first members out- side the St. John's area, give them hope the tide may be turning their way. That time they won a record seven seats in the 42-seat house, Liberals took all the others except for a lone independent who has cast his lot with the Conservatives in the current campaign. "Blue Angels' Back In U.S. TORONTO (CP) Police Monday tried unsuccessfully to serve a summons on the leader of a team of American airmen investigating the crash Friday of a United States Navy stunt plane. The summons. was issued by Dr. Morton Shulman, Toronto's chief coroner, requiring Cmdr. Harry Walker of Grosse Ile, Mich. to appear at an inquest into the death of Lt.-Cmdr. Richard Oliver, 31. Lt.-Cmdr. Oliver, a member of the USN's Blue Angels flying team, was killed Friday when his F-11A Tiger fighter disinte- grated after striking Lake On- tario during an air show at the Canadian National Exhibition. Dr. Shulman ordered the Americans away from the plane Sunday when they re- fused to give him one of two reports they had prepared. The USN officers checked out of a hotel Monday after they were ordered by Washington to return to the U.S. because they Farmers are required to col- lect taxes from all workers em-| ployed 25 days or more, or who couldn't complete the investiga- tion. Police arrived at the hotel YOUNG PHANTOM OF SEWER FINDS FRIENDS IN BOYS TOWN MEMPHIS, Tenn, (AP) -- The unwanted boy, who won the name Phantom of the Sewers, found Sunday he is wanted and may soon have a home. Boys Town, the haven for homeless boys. at Omaha, Neb., notified juvenile court authorities that it is inter- ested in the youngster, who gained attention for his habit of hiding out in the city's storm sewers. "The prospects are bright for him,"' said probation of- ficer Frank McCroskey. 'I think he can make it. "At first he may have trouble adjusting, though, be- cause this area is all that he knows." The 14-year-old lad now is undergoing psychiatric exam- ination, but McCroskey had . expressed concern for his fu- ture since there is no facility Four Major Feats Slated For Next-To-Last Gemini By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) The Gemini 11 astronauts today prererstions for here for continued care of such children. The unidentified youngster lives with an aged grand- mother who struggles to sup- port her family, but he has lived mostly by his own de- vices while roaming the sew- ers for the last two years. McCroskey said the boy lived from' the proceeds of petty thefts pulled in the neighborhood of his sewer hideaway, where police were unable to track him. Last week two private citi- zens nabbed the youngster on one of his forays, and Mc- Croskey persuaded him to stay at his grandmother's home until a hospital bed could be found. Boys Town officials said that before any decision is made the home would want to have a history on the boy from a social service agency. lay of two seconds in the count- down would force a two-day postponement of the Titan II liftoff. Gemini 9 holds the rendez- vous record, catching its Agena in four hours, during the third orbit. Gemini 11 plans to overtake the Agena after 80 minutes, 185 miles above Hawaii, and dock with it 10 minutes later. The quick manoeuvre would simu- late an emergency takeoff from the moon by two Apollo astro- nauts. Sunday, the astronauts are to fire the Agena's powerful engine to drive them to the 863-mile altitude, where they'll photo- graph weather and terrain feat- three - day space flight. Cmdr. Charles Conrad Jr. and Lt.Cmdr. Richard F. Gordon Jr. will concentrate in the next hh of the ding mis- sion in a spacecraft simulator. The next-to-the-last Gemini shot will attempt four major new feats: A record first - orbit rendezvous and linkup with an} Agena satellite; a dash to a rec-| ord altitude of 863 miles; flying formation while, tied to the Agena by a 100-foot cord, and meet at Beaver Dam in Nova Scotia, an exhibition at Pictou, N.S., and the Maritime go-kart |championships at Greenwood, |P.E.I, | It rained in Halifax and Truro, ruining sports events and making the heavily-trav- elled roads treacherous, Har- ness racing cards were staged Monday afternoon in many Maritime centres. TRAFFIC WAS HEAVY Provincial police leaves were cancelled in Quebec as heavy traffic was reported Monday on LBJ Urges Restraint - For Labor DETROIT (AP) -- President Johnson told organized labor Monday on its own holiday and in one of its citadels, that it can't make all the gains it wants--all at once. Johnson, starting his first po- litical trip of the November election campaign, coupled a call for labor union restraint in wage demands with these prom- ises: --He pledged he would not forget the goal of a guaran- teed annual wage. --He promised to fight in 1967 for repeal of section 14B of the 'Taft-Hartiey Aci, which authorizes states to outlaw the union shop contracts that require all eligible employees to join the union. In a Labor Day address pre- pared for a union - sponsored memorial service at Cobo Hall for Senator Patrick McNamara, Johnson said he did not want to varnish rough facts about infla- tion--"a pickpocket." "Labor wants--and labor de- |serves--a growth of real wages, not just money wages. It wantf wage gains that will offset some jof the recent rise in the cost of Teen Riots, 100 Deaths Mar Long Weekend all main roads, More than 800 men using a helicopter, patrol cars and motorcycles patrolled aan aoLp ihe province ia aa effort to down the death toll. A traditional Labor Day pa- rade was held in Quebec City. In Ottawa, Parliament Hill echoed for the last time this summer to the trumpets and barked orders of the changing of the guard, a daily ceremony that has drawn a record attend- ance of 380,000, Toronto's traditional Labor Day parade to the Canadian National Exhibition was trans- formed Monday into a massive protest against the use of in- junctions in Yabor-management disputes. A forest of placards calling for the abolition of injunctions marked the course of 8,000 marchers who tramped a three- mile route to the CNE, which closed Monday night, Elsewhere in Ontario, a rec- ord crowd watched Hamilton Tiger-Cats defeat Ottawa Rough Riders 16-12 in an Eastern Foot- ball Conference game at Ham- ilton. Cloudy, cool weather pre- vailed over Manitoba. most of the weekend. In the Gimli area, 50 miles north of Winnipeg, strong northwest winds caused Lake Winnipeg to rise two feet Sunday night, flooding large tracts of land. RIDERS BOMB ALOUETTES In Regina, Saskatchewan Rough Riders bombed Mont- real Alouettes 44-0 in a Cana- dian Football League interlock- ing game and Calgary Stam- peders nipped Toronto Argo- nauts 13-8 in Calgary. On the West Coast, the Pa- cific National Exhibition closed Monday in Vancouver. Else- where in British Columbia, rail workers in the southern part of the province remained the only major holdouts Monday night towards settlement of the na- tional rail strike. Meanwhile, clergymen said in Labor Day messages that Can- ada's poor have not shared in shen mass Yan jthe-country's -s Maurice Cardinal Roy, arch- bishop of Quebec and primate of the Roman Catholic Church in Canada, said in Quebec City that 23 per cent of Canadian families have a revenue of less than $3,000 a year. He said the initiative being taken on the war on poverty is timid with more than 1,000,000 persons under-educated and 1,- 300,000 suffering from some permanent physical disability. In Toronto, Lord Soper, a Methodist minister and the only non-Anglican clergyman to sit in the House of Lords, told an audience of labor leaders and ches, wealth has gone to the rich and few and not to the poor and many. Labor- Minister Nicholson, in his Labor Day standards, warned that gains in wages and working conditions must be matched by gains in productiv- ity if Canadian workers are to enjoy a continued increase in living standards. EXHIBITION Sept. 19 " Oct. 3 The outstanding petitions on exhibit will be from oi of the 15th-: Rembrent, ry. Van Dyke, Aenoir ere some of esters repre- m ted. You will be given @ cross-section of humanity shown in the face of mon as shown In these paint- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 6, 1966 3 Gerda Reveals |itmiss:'iicin rd n'tn Mrs. Munsinger once as Wedding Plans MUNICH, West Germany|socia (AP) --Gerda Munsinger, the central figure in "s sex: and - security allegations last spring, announced ce = plans to marry a wi year-old Munich businessman, The S8-yoar-cld blends said is an interview that she originally had planned to marry her com- panion, Ernst Wagner, next Thursday, but now she wants to wait until after a Canadian inquiry issues its report on the allegations. The scandal erupted in March ings. 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Gordon plans two space ex- cursions during the journey--a 107 - minute space walk Satur- day and a 140-minute "space stand" Sunday in which he'll poke the upper part of his body through a match to photograph) the stars. | The walk includes work with a space power tool, a step for-| ward developing devices for fu-| ture astronauts to repair satel-| lites and assemble space sta-| tions, He'll use a nitrogen-pow-| ered hand gun for manoeuvring | on a 30-foot lifeline. | sian sities | STARTS EARLY The doubleheader launching is to start at 8:48 a.m. EDT Fri-| day when an Atlas rocket is to) drill the Agena into orbit. A Ti-| tan II is to start Gemini 11 in| pursuit at 10:25 a.m. Because of the precision tim-| ing required for the chase, a de-- ifish and shellfish of Mobile pee |living. But it can't make all the 4 |gains it wants--all at once--no Later that day, they are to|matter how big wage increases disconnect from the agena and|hecome. 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