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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Sep 1967, p. 1

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Stock up LEVEL, DEPT. 228 1 9 p.m. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 26--NO. 219 Ie Single Copy B5¢ Per Week Home Delivered ¢ Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Mall P Ottawa and for payment of Weather Report Clearing this evening as tem- peratures dip. Sunny and cool Friday. Low tonight, 52; high tomorrow, 65, 'ost Office Department Postage in Cash TWENTY-SIX PAGES ONE OF THE LONGEST lines of traffic on Mont- real's Park Ave.-was the scene today as workers sought to get to work by car after Montreal's bus and subway workers went on strike suddenly early to- day. The strike for higher pay was called against the publicly - owned Montreal Transportation Commission | Transport Strike Ties Up Montreal | NOTE IN BOTTLE SEEN AUTHENTIC | VICTORIA (CP) -- 'HELP. I am stranded at 20 degrees south latitude, 30 'degrees west longitude'--an almost illegible note in a bottle found washed up on the beach near | Hospital Lets Incurables Die LONDON (CP)--Two investi-)television program, were to the suburban Saanich gations were under way and a effect that resuscitation treat People throw. thousands of new controversy over euthana- ment should not be given to bottled notes into the sea sia--mercy killing--was bub- persons over 65 with malignant; ©VeTy year. Almost all of bling today after disclosure that disease or with chronic chest or them are pranks, gags or practical . jokes, but police |a London hospital for 16 months kidney disease. had a standing order that over- 65 people with some diseases were not to be revived in the Patients in these categories event of heart stoppage. had a yellow card" marked Health Minister Kenneth Rob-,"NTBR't-(not to" be: resuscitat think there may just be some- thing to the one found washed up near Saanich Monday. Naval experts say it's theo- retically possible for a bottle shortiy after all 6,000 ° MTC LABELLED IN. YELLOW employees had been sum- moned to a general meet- ing at midnight Wednesday. Beulah Batters Texas Dies Out On Plains CORPUS CHRISTI, (AP)--Hurricane Beulah toward extinction on the flat/mile-an-hour winds and rains of Corpus Christi and Texas coastal plains today,|too heavy to measure. prche a ge vento scar of} The storm curved northward about eight mph. eath and destruction, plus|toward San Antonio. flooding that promised to! A 13-day-old storm that began| RUINED CROP . plague the state for days tojin the Atlantic, Beulah claimed! Bendy devastated: were Cl come. 30 lives--six in Texas. Eighteen rus and other crops in had a ee born ic wen Pa first time she wentiin. ctate agriculture commi patching three amphibious\inland over Haiti and the rest)... . planes from Corpus Christijdied in Mexico's southern tikes ae ae a | |coast remained isolated today. Tex.|where Beulah waded ashore/ricane but was fading today to make a survey of the/regions. damage in Beulah's main| In an unprecedented move) track. the U.S. state department ¥ A The storm's havoc continued|announced that the Untied gow Cee eon tami" to spread to the north during|States and ice ae declared| the night, mainly in a record|a disaster area along the bor- s number of tornadoes that hit as|dering Rio Grande. peng gal L gente ang now' far as 250 miles from Beulah's ay OP Sa Wednesday night. der and it is to remain open Electrical power was shut off until further notice, a spokes- to about one-fourth of the Texas|man said. land mass. The hardest hit] In the early morning hours|#,, third largest hurricane areas were near Brownsville, Goldberg Appeals To UN power for their transmitters. responsible for twisters. this sparkling coastal UNITED NATIONS (Reuters)|and collectively, to accept that FORCES CLOSURE Goldberg appealed to all mem-jence to help bring the Vietnam bers of the United Nations|conflict to an end by peaceful today to use their influence to/means," Goldberg said. help bring the Vietnam conflict) Goldberg said the U.S to an end by peaceful means. jnever had a clear message; Goldberg told delegates from|from North Vietnam that talks |S 122 nations gathered in the vast|/would definitely 'start if assembly hall that the U.S. con-|U.S. stoppe d bombing the| hours. tinues to "seek the active par-|North. | ticipation of the United Nations in the quest for peace in Viet-|retary-General U Thant's state-|? nam." ment that talks would begin if)!n Every member and every |the U.S. stopped the bombing, |Livestoc s oe organ of the UN, including the|the North Vietnamese have to run into millions of dollars. assembly, shares the charter|publicly said only that talks obligation of lending its weight) "could" start. and influence to help resolve} He said the U.S. disputes and conflicts among|to go to the nations by peaceful means, he|"at any time" p said. "glad to consider and discuss cent of its homes damaged. "Today, despite past disap-any proposal that would lead, Judging from pointments, | reiterate our| promptly to productive discus-;damage on the coast, that l She was spuniearly Wednesday with 160|\centred 55 miles west southwest MOVINE|_Five persons were killed and toward the north northwest al'19 wounded when Israeli forces | the Teported. |Lower Rio Grande 'Valley which _ The radio, quoting an Egyp- lowe! Communications were almost) § of|Shooting stopped after 40 min- s 2 The U.S. immigration service|;.ro-mation between valley|utes at the request of United Conspiracy For Profit euratic but still-active eye late|will open the international bor-ltouns, whenever they had|Nations observers, he added. Tornadoes spun off in record|the Israelis. suffered heavy cas- numbers from Beulah, herselfjualties and lost eight tanks, two 'Beulah was still rated as a hur-|..¢orded history. She was|gun and a number of machine- 30 confirmed! guns. Beulah's eye never reached/a fuel depot at the enemy's/Pany in 1961. Corpus Christi but her force at headquarters resort, | bo fishing and industrial metropo-|were seen, were also destroy- 0 e Ss n ietnam ar lis still ranked her as the third) ed," the spokesman, added. |worst for the city. ' spent iri The Nueces River was flood-|building and a police post in) -- US. chief delegate Arthur J.|obligation--to use their influ-| 7 Thee 'han di sales abith of @antara, p Pp | Corpus Christi. Salt water from) |the 7.7-foot tides forced the two} 'S. has|Water filtration stations serving} this city's 200,000 population to hut down. Officials said water the supplies on hand would last 24) Much of Beulah's track was He said that despite UN Sec-jover rangeland of the King |/Ranch and other cattle spreads ( the flat salt grass country.|na _today described € 8.1 al tock losses were expected! decision to install an anti-ballis- come held by the company. Highway patrolmen said Port ; j rth of of collaboration by the Ameri-} nee : is scthasedl Blac eaviile, vas tar cent\cans and the Soviets" against|from the revenue minister sug-|during a fire. Another 152. men cnnterence table|destroyed. Another message China. gesting he and his partners con- and women patients were evac- taking, when they were winding and would be|said Laguna Heights had 75 per the massive the mul- might bring about/ti-million dollar tourist facilities ee linson, described by a_spokes- ed) in their 'records. to make the trip from. the | « Iman as "shocked.' had one' Cardiac arrest, the moment position the note gave in the | Israelis linquiry going through a region- at which the heart stops beat-| south' Atlantic, around Cape | jal board in the government's !"8, is the point of death in the} Horn and up to Vancouver | | nationalized health service, His Medical sense. However, resus-| Island. 8 s | department stopped the prac- citation--usually electric, Second, there is a remote ] 1vé tice when it was discovered last '"'Shocks'--are sometimes given speck of land at 20 degrees, | week, to restart the heart. The nor-| 31 minutes south latitude, 29 : : ' 'actica 4 . degrees, 20 minutes west lon- AG ot s antie 4«, mal practice is for the doctor in grees, 20 ' ' her investigation was gitude -- Trinidade Island, a desea : hae ding} charge of a case to determine Wound 19 were ne.aciss sess ne aimen | Brazilian possession 70 mite | sharp disapproval Be "We are very surprised to| east of Rio de Janeiro, § § : learn of this (Neasden) rule," aj _ Detective Sergeant Robin The health department said it Ry jtish Medical Association] Stewart said police are work- jhas received assurance from spokesman said Wednesday| ing on the assumption that it the hospital--Neasden Hospital night, "and the BMA could not| Could possibly be~a legitimate in north London--that no one nossibly approve of the exist-| call for help. He said the who might have benefitted from ence of any such rule. piece of paper on which the revival treatment had failed to| "Any kind of decision on a note was scrawled was too |receive it while the directive to) patient must be taken by the weathered to be a hoax per- staff was in effect from May,| individual doctor according to| petrated by somebody locally. BEIRUT, Lebanon (Reuters) lon the east bank of the Suez |Canal shelled the Qantara area t-|this morning, Cairo radio s- lian military spokesman, said| Lack Of Transportation Restricts Expo Visitors MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont-|the way. But many people real bus and subway workers found that because of the traf- went on strike suddenly early fic jams walking was the fast- today and the tie up caused est 0 get anywhere massive traffic jams as work t herine street, 'one of sought to get to work by » downtown east-west ; taxi, motorcycle, truck or < s and a major shopping nk's mare , looked as it does at the strike for higher pay, height of the Christmas rush called while most of the city's Workers arriving at offices residents were asleep, struck a/reported it took as much as two major blow at Expo 67,/hours for a trip that ordinarily although the fair itself and takes 35 minutes. : transportation on the site were} Police indicated ¢ | § } at on-s operating normally, The prob- parking would be role bi ine was to get to and from the day in areas where parking site ited r 60 | ae F ae _ 'normally is limited to 30 or 6 | Helicopters providing traffic|minutes. However : tickets reports to Montreal radio sta-|would be issued to those who 'tions indicated that the eastern| parked in areas where no stop- jhalf of the city appeared to be|ping or no parking normally is |feeling the effects of the strike!permitted. Parking lots were |most. Major arteries in that|doing a land-office business jarea were jammed 'solid with) philippe de Gaspe Beaub jcars bumper to bumper. Work-| director of emaciated ge pan ers from the area normally Usbliad been made ta alt a ed city's 16-mile subway 8sys-|of 9 strike tat tp. ian on jtem | ¢ i : \counted on it coming so sudd The weather was overcast Nida Rae tent ae athreat of showers pont ge Aged. iggy gy Bl ho senep eat ygl soles ci | wishing to visit the fair where were in the high 60s. tryed tines ON ee CALLED TO MEETING The strike, rumored for rhe CHR ted aad te run a o,\three of the dead and seven y| wounded were servicemen. | | The spokesman accused Wednesday night on a BBClany blanket rule." 1966. the individual circumstances of| The instructions, disclosed|the case, and not according to C ci National guardsmen patrolled |Israeli forces of provoking n\Egyptian forces by opening fire C S D s on their positions. He said Egyptian forces | onn m e enies a-|silenced the Israeli artillery. shot iducer was The Egyptian spokesman said| Spe oS ; : TORONTO (CP)--Conn}distribution and appropriation,man production crew film Wednesday that he conspired to/ shareholders." cover up sharing of profits} Mr. Smythe said the sale was|after being hit with a .38-ca | "Some observation posts and in Qantara east, where several diverse fires| President of the hockey club,/ Vancouver investors. and Clarence (Hap) Day, a for-| 'There was no conspiracy." |mer Leaf coach and general) He said he complied with res- et ie i }manager, are appe aling a trictions covering the sale and | He vier We ae atiti *cutonl $430,488 reassessment of their all tax obligations. ' : nlon| 1961 income tax returns. The revenue departmen Walks of Life in the: United Notice of reassessment was claims Mr. Smythe owes $252,-/ wales ae eeaatth others filed by the federal revenue 488 for 1961, his son $123,000 7. 9 New York firm that's a department in 1965, four days and Mr. Day $55,000. tiailies in "educational Pics before the deadline for reopen-, The hearing continues. mentaries. |ing 1961 income tax returns. ose ee "| Tson owns a cluster of houses The reassessment was based . at a coal mine camp about five on payment the men received Smoke Kills | miles north of here, It was this from the sale of C. Smythe jcluster of shacks that the crew | was filming when O'Connor was |Ltd., a gravel firm, to a Van- P " atients shot to death. 'couver group for lime : The federal revenue depart-| : nt said tax should have been| LAS VEGAS, N.M. (AP)--Six|DISCLOSE TALE d on $728,000 of undisturbed) male patients at the New Mexi-| The four mem bers of co State Hospital for the men-}0'Connor's crew told this story In Exchequer Court, Mr.|tally ill died early today when to state and county authorities: referred to a letter|they were overcome by smoke} They stopped to take pictures lof some people beside the road. After 40 minutes of picture- afternoon, The 46-year-old Montrea que, Chinese Chide U.S. HONG KONG (Reuters)--Chi- the U.S.) ME tic missile system as "a vicious)!" move marking the stepping-u g pping-up smythe é sas . .1/spired 'with the Vancouver buy- uated to safety. P : A This was the first official | ors to "cloak and disguise the, The hospital director, James| UP {heir egies ogg oa Chinese be " wipe na hg ty --_____--__--_-------- |W. Wagner, said the dead were| ever seen jumped out yelling announcement Mon y by sere ry c se , {overcome by heavy smoke aS |Get off my property!" Defence Secretary McNamara} Lo B di Suey ent ie thew be th that the US. intended to build) BONE Dan it (they sient tn thelr bec' on ihe |second floor of the two-storey| appeal to all members of 'the|sion ole ag Soa a United Nations, individually'peace in the area." along Padre Island must have an ABM system to guard lbrick structure in' this north-} . lsustained a devastating blow. against nuclear attack from b B k | brick 1 i s | t The tornadoes claimed four China. 0 Ss an -- New Mexico communi ar un S lives. One man was drowned sis is at tases and Martin Backs U Thant between Victoria Tex, away in a river. Edna, x, when his car was swept Radio Peking said the propos- LONDON, 0 = te 3 | LOD N, nt. (CP) -- A al meant the U.S, intended to)igne pandit held more than. a conbinue with its policy Of | dozen persons at gunpoint for nuclear blackmail and nuclear) snout 19 minutes Tuesday . . in age from 26 to 79 and all) Hi Sl can trom the Albuquerque| ppie ayer are | LONDON (AP) -- Scotland Tet Cah ee the cal prominent Canadian film pro- ve! 46 death Marcel Pepin, Wednesday as he and a four- Smythe, founder of the Toronto| of the funds of the old company) Scenes of poverty in this moun-| s¢riljiated in/armored cars, a 106-millimetre|Maple Leafs, denied in court/to and for the benefit of its tainous eastern Kentucky area.| 4; Hugh O'Connor died s00n| worke: from the sale of a gravel com-/organized by a Toronto firm|>re slug in his chest, Hobart and that ta and his partners|son, 69, of the Jeremiah com- ly declared the strike illegal. Mr. Smythe, his son Stafford,| did not know the identity of the/ munity, was charged with mur- der. A hearing was set for this native was on leave from the Canadian National Film Board +/to produce a film called All weeks, was called against the i publicly-owned Montreal Trans- ---- Poe ae sige Bon par poriatie Commission, a few\the entrance to the ale Gabe ours oye cop ges ooealret, the suburbs had been P n hi to take a en ee at mid-\fair's pa Seite pie oe the a Inesday, entrances to the site, Additional rivers began leaving ak would be operating to routes before 11 p.m. to get to\and from the site, two islands y by|in the mi president of Gears ice" of the St. Law. \Confederation of National {Trade Unions with which ail| s Banks Stirs Legal Battle \five MTC employee unions are| Officials of Expo received] NEW YORK .(C 5 P)--An tric about 1:15 p.m. that aj/involved legal battle to oars strike appeared imminent as/the extradition of Hal C. Banks wane buses were being/to Canada' on perjury charges returned to garages. There/ was to continue today in Brook- were 50,000 people on the site at lyn federal court. the time. Through loudspeak-| © whether Canada has the legal ers, signboards and other right to extradite Banks. 7 means, the fairgoers were told/ year-old former head of the ituation ie i . |Canadian. Seafarers' Interna- lene Fogel bp amaged toon tional Union, was the crux of laway, although not all were off igo ra i pig hepa pares tie strike started. AStieso © ominigaioner 8. 'T | As t rc : he yeard pangs god piety prec The hearing went on for three wails Wied th arrenes car| Hours Wednesday before it was |pools, or to plan some means th "telp o> until 11.30 a.m. EDT getting to their offices, Some) y. Opposing counsel agreed went to bus stops and thumbed bab ais baron! briefs to the 1c Sloner--betfore ed the noisy meeting, the rs voted unanimously to Hi go on strike. The MTC prompt- 1 rides, their | : |final . arguments--indicating eee WALK ijthat there will be considerable Radio stations appealed toidelay before a decision is drivers to pick up people along reached, oto 'NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | Exhaust Controls Compulsory In 1969 | TORONTO (CP) -- All 1969-model cars sold in Ontario | will have to be equipped with exhaust control devices, Dr. i M. B. Dymond, Ontario health minister announced today. | In a statement, Dr. Dymond said sections of the Air Pollu- |. tion Control Act "would be implemented" to require the use of the devices, i] On Foreign Ministers UNITED NATIONS (CP)--!General Assembly for a few External Affairs Minister Paul|weeks only. Most of them make Martin of Canada said today he} statements in the initial debate. supports strongly the sugges- But apart from some bilateral tion of United Nations Secre-|discussions there is no discus- | | Although thousands of refu- gees streamed to safety, their numbers did not match the. eva- jcuation ahead of Hurricane /Carla in 1961, when 500,000 fled. | Beulah's inland path, how- lever, brought back the problem lof poisonous snakes being their lairs into menace" against China. before fleeing with an estimat- The radio added that the U.S.!ed $20,000 from a local branch move was designed to "offsetjof the Royal Bank of Canada. the effects of development by, Police recovered a shopping China of nuclear weapons for bag half full of currency and self-defence against the monop-|arrested three men a short oly of nuclear weapons by the|time after the alarm was United States and the Soviet/spread in the daring mid-after- Assistant Director Thomas yard combed the hippie havens! Barnett said the fire apparently|of Chelsea and Soho districts proke out in a first-floor recrea-| Wednesday for the slayer of an} tion room. He said it took about! 18-year-old French blonde beau-| Surgery Shortens Tall Girl TORONTO (CP) -- After eight months {in hospita', an r to control the blaze but|ty w batter i- : sche n hour to con' sf ty whose battered, semi-nude; poemmie Smith, of Newmarket is back at work healthy, heavy smoke apparently fil-/body was found Tuesday in a happier and three inches shorter, Miss Smith, 26, is hee tered through stairwells into'room strewn with letters and re ee SOP aa eae ay Ra BAC lieved to be the first person in North America to have sur- the second-floor unit where the! photos of her y friends, cond: photos of her boy friends gery to shorten the legs. Taunts about her height caused tary-General U _ the i r ¥ Security Council meet periodi-| continuous issues. Thant that the|sion between them as a body on/fjyshed from flooded fields and homes. \Union." 'noon robbery. cally to discuss, as Thant put} ~ it, "matters relating to interna- tional peace and security." Other members of the 15-nation council appeared to be digided on the issue of council meetings at the foreign-minis- ter level. ; The Soviet Union and France are said to be cool to the pro- posal, while Britain and the United States are guarded, but willing to go along with it. Martin said in a statement he had suggested two years ago that, with so many foreign min- isters at the UN during the first part of the General Assembly, "advantage should be taken to have them meet in order to dis- cuss the important issues that were facing all the countries at that time." WASHINGTON (AP)--A pro- test against the Vietnam war by some 600 persons, mostly middle-aged women, erupted Wednesday afternoon into a skirmish with police in front of the White House. Some 100 partisans of the Women's Strike for, Peace, angry because new regulations limit picketing in front of the White House, threw their weight Wednesday against @ de elaed: thin, blue line of U.S. park H Levene 1 has police. The secretary genera The officers were stretched urged that this be done at this General Assembly. I want strongly to support the propos- al, "Tt ld be noted that most tebdien meinisters attend the across the White House side- walk, arm linked in arm, to make sure the allowed maxi- mum of 100 pickets already on the scene would not be joined PROTEST VIETNAM WAR Irate Women Strike For Peace by their colleagues in front of the executive mansion, The women shoved and pushed, blood showed on the shirtsleeve of one police officer and feelings apparently ran high on both sides of the skirin- ish line in the 86-degree weath- er. A motorcycle sergeant, watching his colleagues try to fend off the assault of the women who want no part of the Vietnam war, rushed up to a superior and said: 'These men can't continue to take this. Let's get some gas and break 'em up." But no tear gas canisters showed at any point. But there were four arrests as the group attempted to cross Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House side. All were released on $10 collateral on disorderly conduct charges. The irate women, once thwarted by a reinforced human wall of police, sat in the middle of East Executive Ave nue, a public thoroughfare bor- dering the White House. A man who identified himself as an inspector of the park police,. which has jurisdiction over the public lands in the environs of the White House, announced over a loudspeaker that the anti-war demonstrators had violated the condition of their permit to picket peacea- bly and that the permit was PICKETING RESTRICTED | imen lay. thereby revoked. Unless they moved within two minutes they would be arrested, "Hell, no! We ain't gonna go!" the well-dressed women responded. » Neither side budged until, long after the two minutes had expired, a deputy chief of police of the District of Colum bia took over the same micro- phone and eased the terms. If the ladies, he said, would simply cross Pennsylvania Ave- nue to the side away from the White House, they would be given an. escort and, further- more, be permitted to continue their demonstration there as long as it pleased them, They did, - | Investigators said the body of Claudie Danielle Delbarre, a| free-lance bar girl and occa- sional model was found on the six feet one inch Dutch-born girl to withdraw from s0- ciety and become severely depressed, he . eos : bed in the one-room, thiré-toor| Foreign Ministers Meet Next Tuesday apartment she rented in the heart of swinging Chelsea. She} was Clad only in a pyjama top. Investigators said the girl had been dead about 24 hours} when found, A post « mortem} examination showed she died', from strangulation and a brain|= hemorrhage caused by repeated | = head blows. j la 'GAY YOUNG GIRL' Authorities said the girl had been working at a drinking club? in Soho, London's night club, - district. The club manager told = Secretary-General U Thant. Councillor In reporters: "Claudie was a gay young Ann Landers--14 girl." : hk Wi i Bill Webster, 21, barman at Leng Vigan' the club where Claudie worked, City News--13 said: Clossified--20, 21, 22 "She always wore those fan- Comics--25 tastically short skirts. She told) = Editorial---4 me she was once warned by a - policeman to wear something|= longer for her own protection,"|, Financial--24 | UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) -- The Big ministers agreed today to meet in New York discuss world problems under ..In THE TIMES Today .. Opinion Divided---P. 13 Four foreign 'Tuesday to UN the chairmanship of Race---P. § Brooklin Wins--P. 10 - Obituaries --22 Sports--10, 11, 12 = Television--2 E Theatres--18 Weather--2 Whitby News--5, 6 z Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 E

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