. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Continuing cold Friday. Cloudy, sunny intervals. Low tonight 40; high tomorrow 5. VOL: 96 --NO. 110 10¢ Single © 85c Per Week 'Hone' Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1967 ' She Oshawa Times Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-SIX PAGES H FRPKREK KE RE cts aan De ele: . 10,000 WATCH GOLDEN CENTENNAIRES AT AIRPORT Six jets of the 'Golden Centennaires flying group pass over part of a crowd estimated at 10,000 people, on hand last night at the Oshawa Airport. Traffic was so heavy that cars were backed up Rossland watch the show from vari- ous vantage points sur- r ding the airport. Eight Road to Simcoe Street and thousands were forced to Tutor jets, one F101 Voodoo and a F104 Starfighter took part in the show. The Cen-i» tennaires who opened Expo 67 will return there in October to take part in the closing ceremonies. --Oshawa Times Photo Senator McCutcheon Enters Leader Race OTTAWA (CP) -- Senator Wallace McCutcheon today an- nounced he will seek the leader- ship of the Conservative party on a platform of the freedom of the individual and putting a stop to the "drift toward the new socialism." The wealthy Toronto finan- cier, who will be 61 May 18, discounted reports he is enter- ing the race mainly as a poten- tial "kingmaker." "T have never run for second prize yet," he told a news con- ference. SEN. WALLACE Mc- CUTCHEON (left) an- nounces he will seek the leadership of the Conserva- tive party during press con- ference at Ottawa today. He Senator McCutcheon said he hopes te win the Conservative nomination in the new Com- mons riding of York-Simcoe in mid-June. He would retain his seat in the Senate until the next federal election is called. "When I'm elected leader of the party, I will, of course, re- sign from the Senate immedi- ately." Calling himself a 'reformed llawyer and a tired business- man," he criticized the Liberal and Conservative parties for ne- said he would campaign on a platform of the freedom of the individual and put- ting a stop to the "drift to the new socialism'. At right is Sen. McCutchedins glecting the individual and fa- voring costly, compulsory wel- fare programs in recent years. "I'm frightened by the trend Girl Undergoes Cancer Treatment CALGARY (CP) -- Chelley Lynne Stanway, 13 - year - old Calgary" ant bone cancer" is undergoing treatment in New York, her father said Wednesday. suffering '"'ramp- "They started treatment to- day," Ken Stanway said in a telephone interview from New York. "Don't ask me what of our movement toward what|they're doing because' I don't I call the new socialism." CRITICIZES GOVERNMENT | He accused the federal gov- ernment of constantly interfer- |know."? © But, he said, the doctors treat- ing her 'thave done wonders" already. ing with things the individual should decide for himself. 'I'm getting very tired of the federal government constantly intrud- ing in strictly provincial fields." Woman Forger Gets Five Years COOKSVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- | Dorothy McIver, 38, of Toronto, Wednesday was sent to prison for five years after she pleaded guilty to 32 counts of forgery and uttering more than $8,000. appeared with a man who led her along Duplex Avenue early today. The parents received--a call for $10,000 ransom shortly after. The disappearance tou ched bff frenzied police activity. Chief James Mackey left an On- tario Police Commission meet- ing to take personal control of the search. At 11:30 a.m., two officers spotted a tall, fairhaired man amid some construction board- ing in front of the Hospital for Sick Children. A plainclothes detective grab. bed the crying girl while the uniformed officers grappled with the man. Expo Charges Now Altered By Wagner Wednesday alt@wred charges about organized crime at Expo. 67 in Montreal by making more "troubling revelations." Speaking in the legislature, Mr. Wagner, a former judge, identified four organizations he said do business at Expo, saying "undesirables ave succeeded in profiting from Expo facili- ties." In three cases, company names differed with charges he made Friday when he told the legislature Expo had been infil- trated by organized crime of Cosa Nostra calibre. Mr. Wagner said Wednesday "undesirables . . . have pro- voked confusion of names to throw off responsible authori- ties." He again named Joe Frankel, whom he described earlier as "a chief of the Montreal book- ies," and William Obront, de- scribed Friday as "'a notorious member of the Mafia." Mr. Wagner said Joe Frankel "created confusion to penetrate concessions at Expo" by incor- porating companies with names real' businesses. * He said Frankel incorporated Fleur de Lys Linen Supply Inc. and New System Vending Co. Ltd. and solicits the same clien- tele as New System Towel Sup- ply Co. Ltd. and Fleur de Lys Vending Services Inc. OPERATE 500 MACHINES "Frankel solicits the same cli- entele and has been able to supply several concessionnaires at Expo," Mr. Wagner said, adding that the Frankel group similar to two well-known Mont-| QUEBEC (CP)--Former jus- tice minister Claude Wagner} A construction worker helped The girl had left home at 8:15 Mary, daughter of Mr. and/Church at Duplex Avenue and , Mrs. Donald C. Farncomb, dis-|Lytton Boulevard with a man, of a little girl reported in On-|Hamilton without success, Second time today in the Sea 'KIDNAPPED GIRL. 6, RECOVERED TORONTO (CP) -- One of the most intensive kidnap hunts in| police capture the man. Toronto history ended dramat- ically in front of the Hospital forja.m. to get to school early to|was described as four feet tall,|April 27. Sick Children today when police |help a teacher on a special pro-|weighing 55 pounds, of normal! recovered six - year - old Mary | ject. A neighbor reported seeing | build and with fair short hairjand Mrs. Milton Schuett was Farncomb and arrested a man.|Mary near St. George's United|and blue eyes. of Ada MacKenzie Ltd., a wom- en's sportswear firm. The girl, a kindergarten pupil, since she was seen entering a small vehicle of foreign make on her way home from school Marianne, daughter of Mr the subject of a widespread U.S. Ship Scraped By Russ Warship 'U.S. Reports Sea Incident Second Time WASHINGTON (AP) -- The American destroyer Walker was It was the second abduction|search in the area northeast of SC'aPed by a Soviet warship a | walking south, away from the/tario in two weeks. Marianne|Chief Kenneth. Sherrett of the school area. | The girl's father is president MARY FARNCOMB, 6, abducted in the subway sta- Man, 80, Clubbed For Rent Money TORONTO (CP) -- A 19-year- old youth who clubbed an 80- year-old man with a two - foot tree branch "to get rent money" was sent to reformatory Wed- nesday for 18 months definite and 12 months indefinite. Magistrate Fred Hayes told the youth, Frank Brown of Tor- onto, that the assault on the elderly man was a_ planned) crime of violence. | Fines Total $1,500 For Two Accused TORONTO (CP) Robert James Bishop and Roman Lip- owski, 44, were fined a total of $1,500 Wednesday after plead- ing guilty to violating the On- tario Securities Act by trading in Prudential Finance shares. Bishop, an .executive vice- president of Prudential, was operation. has 500 Vending machines in/fined $1,000 or 60 days and 'given two weeks to pay. |Schuett, 10, of Kilbride, near 'Burlington, has been missing tion on her way to school, was located later in the morning by police. One re- |Burlington police said Monday 'he fears the girl is dead. of Japan, it was learned. U.S. defence department sources said the latest incident of American and Soviet confron- tation in nternational waters in- volved another Soviet destroyer. The incident was said to have occurred off the northern coast of the Japanese island of Ho- kaido, The Walker, along with two lother U.S. destroyers and the rine warfare training manoeuv- '|res in the Sea of Japan. Wednesday, another Soviet de- stroyer -- not the one involved in today's incident--made sev- | |eral close sweeps toward the American group, coming as }|near as 50 feet on two occasions and finally bumping against the ;| Walker, causing minor damage. '|FILE PROTEST The U.S. officially protested to the Soviet government over the first incident and was ex- = ipected to file another complaint port said a man had been arrested. --CP Wirephoto Ex -ICC- Member "Astonished" By Canadian Spy Allegations TORONTO (CP)--Col. Brad- ley Webb, a former member of the International Control Com- mission in Vietnam, said Wed- nesday he is astonished at charges that Canadian mem- bers spy for the United States. Commenting on a Montreal newspaper report. that Canadian members of the ICC supply in- formation to the U.S., Col. Webb other parts of North Vietnam. Canada, Poland and India make up the commission. "The North Vietnamese don't really expect Canadians to be sympathetic to the Communist cause," he said. "'But they have every reason to expect the Ca- nadian members of the ICC to be impartial." as a result of today's collision. The situation has taken on grave tones in view of the Viet- nam war. Russis is a major supplier of war materials to North Vietnam. U.S. officials said they would await details before trying to assess the significance of the - © | Wednesday collision in the Sea of Japan. A Pentagon spokesman labelled it an accident, but the state department said the fact the Soviets were repeatedly warned about coming too close to a group of American ships ;|speaks for itself. The state department pro- tested "close manoeuvring and violation of the rules of the road" by the Soviet destroyer Besslednyi, resulting in her col- liding with the U.S.S, Walker. The scraping caused minor damage to the two ships but no one was hurt, the Pentagon said. State department sources aaid the incident could indicate a further toughening of Moscow's attitude toward the United States as the Vietnam war in- tensifies. But the sources added it could just be a case of an overzealous performance by Soviet sailors, similar to the nuisance-making they said the Soviets have been carrying out against American ships for some time. said the charges could hamper Canadian attempts to settle the war. He said in an interview he could not comment on the valid- ity of the charges because he was an official of the Canadian government while a member of the ICC. Four Canadian members of the ICC are stationed in Hanoi and have limited access to HE SAYS POSSIBILITY FADES FOR AN EARLY ARMISTICE have acted as spies for the to the United States. tive Leader Diefenbaker insisted Mr. stepping a dieect answer to the question of whether Cana- dian commission members supplied copies of their reports NEWS HIGHLIGHTS PM Repeats Denials Of Spy Charges OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime. Minister Pearson repeated denials in the Commons today that any Canadian mem- bers of the international control commission in Vietnam United States. But Conserva- Pearson was side- Roving Student Bands Riot Rich- ard Thrasher, former Con- campaign manager, servative national director and MP for Essex West. --CP Wirephote OTTAWA .(CP)--An expand- ing war that "will mean the destruction of the Vietnamese people wherever they are'"'--this was part of a gloomy personal assessment of Vietnam given to the Commons Wednesday by Prime Minister Pearson. Expressing increasing anxiety about Vietnam, the 70-year-old former Nobel Peace Prize win- ner said: "My reading of the situation . .. indicates that the possibility of early negotiation has receded, that a quick military victory is not possible, nor a military solu- tion." This meant a situation that "gets more dangerous interna- tionally,' said Mr. Pearson, for- mer president of the United Na- tions General Assembly. If the fighting went on, it seemed likely that its scale would increase, with the ulti- mate result of an expanding war, oe "Mid in any event it will , make mean the destruction of the Vietnamese people wherever they are." -- Mr. Pearson also said that if his analysis is correct it would mean the indefinite involvement politically and militarily of the United States in Vietnam '"'with all that this implies." It might also mean the in- definite continuation of the cold war, since Vietnam was the only major obstacle between the U.S. and Russia. This would "nostpone indefinitely" any hope for an east-west detente. The result would be increas- ing pressure on Europe "to its own arrangements with Eastern Europe, with the damaging effect on the Atlantic coalition and the collective se- curity that this would. have." Mr. Pearson, speaking in the throne speech debate, agreed with Opposition Leader Diefen- baker that NATO and collective security "are still essential for PM Gloomy In Viet Appraisal the protection of freedom" in Europe and the Atlantic area. He rejected Mr. Diefenbaker's criticism of the government for "pusillanimous neutrality' on Vietnam. The alternative was involvement and this meant sup- porting one side or the other. It was better for Canada to continue to work in a quiet, un- spectacular way in an effort to help end the war. Canada would also work as a good friend and neighbor to the U.S. This did not prevent the country from speaking out "when there. is an obvious and inescapable duty to do so." But if Canada did otherwise, its diplomatic suggestions would not be listened to by the U.S. Mr. Pearson said his '"'read- ing" of the Vietnam situation leaves him anxious and not op- , timistic. But all Canada could do was bring its worries and anxieties to the notice of those directly in- volve@, in hope of helping out. JACKSON, Miss. (AP) ed on the crowd to revive date in South Vietnam's =v UTR Separate School Teachers Ann Londers--12 Ajax News--5, 6 City News--11 Classified--20 to 23 Comics--25 Editorial--4 Finoncial--19 ums generat .. In THE TIMES Today .. Whitby Public Schools Plan Centennial Concert--P, 5 Centennial 4,000 Rally Comes To End--P. 11 -- Roving student bands, esti- mated at 1,000, rioted today at Jackson state college, Mis- sissippi's largest all-Negro school, before police sealed off the campus and brought the disturbance under control, But student leaders manning a public address system call- their protest during the day. Ky To Be Election Candidate SAIGON (Reuters) -- Premier Nguyen Cao Ky today informed members of his cabinet that he will be a candi- presidential high governmert sources said. The sources said Ky made his announcement at a cabinet meeting. elections Sept. 3%, TO | Threaten To Resign--P. 11 Pickering News--5, 6 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--25 Theatres--24 Weather--2 Whitby News--5, & Women's--12 to 1S Ay ANC LHN AERP