3.99 2.49 7.99 7.99 7.99 6.99 2.97 4.99 PHONE 725.737) rware last .. . break, it for easy care, _+ @ turquoise hite. Brighten Cups, nappies, ellous idea for dor rec' room U 20 to 25%, 6.38 11.98 * 17.58 22.38 IONE 725.7373 a" Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont. ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 26--NO. 23% She Oshawa Fines -- 10¢ Single Copy S5c Per Week Home Delivered | OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1967 Authorized os Second Class Mail P it Post Office Depar' Ottawa and tor. payment of Postage in reaped Weather Report Sunny with a few clouds to- day. Mainly cloudy, continu- ing cool Sunday, Low tonight 40, High tomororw 55, TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES coe tneneneneenaanaanennnencaenssentnannscnenstensenrene i 9 ' { i i 4 ] : had just taken duting a reception for the Progres- sive Conservative leader at Annandale Golf Club Fri- day night. Mr. Robarts Ontario Premier John Robarts enjoys a joke with Jackie McEachern, 10, of 125 Northview, Oshawa, as he autographs a color pic- ture of himself which Jackie spent the afternoon and evening in Oshawa and Ajax. His stay included a visit to recently - opened Durham College,where he ONE OF LIGHTER MOMENTS IN-PREMIER. ROBARTS*-VISIT.s.20.- spent an hour*touring port- able classrooms. More than 600 attended the reception in Ajax: (Oshawa Times Photo) Biafran CANADIAN INVALIDS ON LIST Shot Down |Sick, Infirm Flock LAGOS (CP)--Anti-aircraft) fire early today shot down a plane from secessionist Biafra after it bombed a residential district of this federal capital of Nigeria. Radio Nigeria said the muti-| MANILA (AP)--A large pe ey group of ailing and infirm + age ance . occupants | Americans and Canadians had ree % OB toeagaity acai rpin eee | rendezvous with a_ Filipino found after. the plane exploded |faith healer in a well-guarded 300 feet above the Ikoyi Tesi-| today, it was reported. dential district. s | The Philippine Medical Asso- One bomb dropped in the|cjation reported the meeting as pre-dawn darkness destroyed alit watched the activities of store. at the western end of| Antonio Agpaoa, a grade-school Lagos Island. Another hit an/qropout and self-made "'doc- office building of a British com-)tor", pany, but damage there was} The 28-year-old healer was light. leonvicted of illegal medical An official spokesman pe rai bd meats ago, si one home-made bomb was| Dr. Pacifico Marcos, dropped on State House, former |p resident, said the groun-- residence of the Nigerian head|which included 108 from the of state, but it failed to explode! Detroit, epost glo and two and there was no damage. 'Canadian invalids--met Agpaoa Radio Nigeria said the man-|at a beach resort in La Univn, gled bodies wore uniform son the western coast. , bearing the Biafran emblem of "My men reported they were the setting sun. The Nigerians|driven away by burly men on the ground received minor guarding the cottages occupied |beach resort' in northern Luzo/ by Agpaoa and his patients," Marcos said, He said two of those assisting the faith-healer were identified as an American man and woman. Marcos said nothing could be \done to prevent anyone from seeking a cure from Agpaoa but that the local board of med- ical examiners could obtain a court injunction to stop him from administering treaiment because of his previous convic- tion. He said the 110 patients, who flew from Windsor, Ont., to Manila Thursday night accom- panied by six relatives and friends, were reported paying Agpaoa $500 each. "We strongly suspect that they were conned by their own countrymen," Marcos said. Calling Agpaoa "an imposter with a gimmick," the Manila Times says his "so-called scar- To Filipino 'Doctor' less operations have been exposed here and abroad as a parlor magician's trick effected with chicken entrails and expert 'palming.' " The Philippines Herald says: "If what' he is doing is some- thing punishable under our laws, something similar to the one that led to his conviction in court, then there is no reason on earth why this should not pe done fast. "Not only is it embarrassing to the government authorities involved but also to the medical profession in this country, And this is not to add the horrific, if not ridiculous, image that the Phlippines is gainng elsewhere ln the world as a land where the hocus-pocus quackeries reminiscent of the dark ages are still being performed." Names of the patients were not available. injuries. VANCOUVER (CP )--Rene Castellani told the B.C. Supreme Court jury that found him guilty of capital murder Friday that he was not respon- sible for the arsenic murder of " |his wife. Castellani, 42, a former pro- motions man for a New West- 'Ilminster radio station, told jurors: "J have been asked three or four times if I was guilty of killing my wife. I did not kill my wife." He then turned his head to look at the jury and said: "May God have mercy on your souls."' He was then sentenced to WINS AWARD Actress Sue Lyon, above, was awarded $225,000 yes- terday by a Superior Court jury in Los Angeles for in- juries she sustained in a 1965. traffic accident. Miss Lyon, 21, claimed injuries to her knee would impair her dancing ability and hang Jan. 23 by Mr. Justice Victory Dryer. It was the second time Cas- tellani had been found guilty o! the capital murder of his wife, Esther, 40, who died in hospital screen career. AP Wirephoto : of arsenic poisoning July 11, 1965. He was granted a new trial after successfully appealing the jfirst conviction. | Defence lawyer Charles {Maclean said the second con- viction will also be appealed. The jury of nine men and three women madé no recom- mendation either for or against clemency. The foreman said that "we are unanimous' in leaving the matter in the hands of the court." The jury spent more than nine hours deliberating the first verdict after. they. heard a three-hour charge Justice Dryer Thursday. The verdict was reached only 10 minutes after the jurors fin- ished re-hearing a portion of the) evidencd 'given: at the trial. 'MYSTERIOUS' ILLNESS : | Mrs, Castellani died in hospi- from Mr. | B.C. Man Sentenced To Die Asks God To Forgive Jury tal. two months after she had been admitted for tests. She had been suffering from a mys- terious illness for several months, The Vancouver coroner ordered her body exhumed on a suspicion of arsenic poisoning. Tests showed parts of her body contained up to 1,500 times the normal human toler- ance to arsenic. Castellani was arrested and charged. In his charge to the jury, Mr. Justice Dryer said that there were only two possible verdicts--guilty of capital murder or not guilty of anything. He also said that members of Mrs. Castellani's family-or her friends had an opportunity to administer - arsenic, as well as her husband. See "Any one of them might have even at her jbeen doing it, irequest,"' he said, "US. SKEPTICAL OF VIET PEACE BID WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- American officials today expressed skepticism about an Indian claim to inside informa- tion that North Vietnam would talk peace if the U.S. stopped bombing it. The claims were made by Swaran Singh in a speech to the United Nations General Assem- bly Friday. The administration is study- ing the speech, but officials are reported sceptical of Singh's categorical statement that Hanoi would respond "favora- bly" if the U.S. unconditionally Officials said they heard fre- quent similar assertions. from Indian spokesmen in the past, but knew of nothing to suggest New Delhi obtained recent information from Hanoi, MEMBER OF ICC Diplomats at the UN attached Singh's speech because India is a member of the International Control Commission in Vietnam with Canada and Poland, and because it has top-level repre- sentation in the key capitals involved, including Hanoi, W is AAA a0 Indian Defence Minister Sarsar stopped bombing the North, WEST FEARS RUSSIA PLANS KOREA PUSH | Infantry Kills 73 Of Cong SAIGON (CP)--Waterborne American infantrymen killed 73 Viet Cong guerrillas in a gruel- ling. battle through the rain- swollen streams and swamps of the Mekong Delta, a U.S. mili- tary spokesman said today, The spokesman said nine Americans were killed wounded in the 8% hour clash there in July, Meanwhile, U.S. planes pounded targets in North Viet-| .jnam's heavily-defended heart- land fot the fourth straight day. Fighting in the delta began in eatr]; oe ex chenee hine-gun fire with a Cong force of unknown size. TIMES RETURNS ON TUESDAY The staff of The Oshawa Times will observe Thanks- giving Day Monday. A news- paper will not be published. Regular publication resumes with the Tuesday edition, US. War Feared If Riots Grow NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-- The riots in Detroit, Watts and other areas of the U.S. are "a few early skirmishes" which could develop into a war, Mich- igan Governor George Romne: said Friday night. . But the governor said he saw 'on his recent. tour of the big city slums "the broad outlines of a strategy for a new Amer- ica beginning to emerge." Romney, an undeclared can- didate for the 1968 Republican presidential ination, said federal dollars alone cannot eradicate slums but he called for a "drastic revision" in President Johnson's priorities oh spending the federal budget. In a. speech at the National Conference of Editorial Writers, Romney said the ghetto leaders he walked with during his tour "are tired of broken promises" and feel they've been tricked and that "America has broken faith with them." WET WEDDING IS SCHEDULED LOS ANGELES (AP)-- What do you do about a min- ister when you're planning an underwater wedding? You teach the minister how to scuba dive. That's what skin diver Jack Tyre, 26, and stunt girl Corna Day, 29, have done for their underwater wedding today in a fish tank at Marineland of the Pacific. The bride and groom are members of the Underwater and 23) & Friday--one of the, heaviest in the densely-populated delta region since the monsoon begail considerable i One American source said it importance to was "a fascinating statement." VIRB 0 ha | Pressure Seen At UN To Pull U.S. Troops Out | UN \(AP TED NATIONS, N.Y.Jadded that "the commission I Ni )--Pressure at the United/has failed to prevent the Nations to pull U.S. troops outjestablishment of a st rong of Korea and scuttle a commis-| American military presence in sion set up to reunify the coun-| Korea." : jtry a lp ecu Western suspi-| The North Korean Communist cion the , atic eS) par 'ge , | at the diplomatic move '\party organ Minjoo Chosun was jmay be linked to mounting! reported in S Ss cor | Communist border attacks. oka to Rare cite tie Ga" The General Asse mbt! y's|with using the UN "as a tool of steering committee agreed at aggression in Korea." the outset of the session to dis-| The peace that generally pe. cuss a proposal by the Soviei)vailed after the armistice along \Union and several other Com-|the 151-mile line dividing North jmiunist nations for : the with-|and South Korea was shattered drawal of all foreign 'rovps|late last year when armed }|from South Korea. soil, bands of North Koreans began | Over-riding Western, opposi-\ambushing UN patrols. In one ition, the steering committee|ig-day period, the forays result- voted Thursday to have theled in the deaths of Ameri- 122-nation assembl debate South Koreans. a call by. Cambodia, bate cats 'apd. 2 pee ge ay men to TROOPS CLASH 'solve $ ion for e attacks were the Uni Prion ena in 1967. Last Tri fene ' Rehabilita- North Koreans and 40 troops when a com- jemployees. ' t Pei ra AT CHARITY BALL Princess Margaret and her husband Lord Snowden arrive at a charity ball in Toronto Friday night. Pro- ceeds will be used for the Princess Margaret Hospital for cancer patients. The Royal couple are to visit Expo 67 in Montreal today. (CP Wirephoto) 'Bolivia Turns Down Appeal On Competence Of Tribunal LA PAZ (Reuters)--The Bolivian supreme war counciljoil centre of Camiri, was has rejected an appeal on the|adjourned: last week after its competence of a military tribu-/second s@ssion pending the nal trying French Marxistjappeal submitted The trial, in the southeastern writer Regis Debray and six|Mendizabal, legal counsel for others on charges of guerrilla|co-defendant Ciro Roberto Bus- activity. |tos, an Argentine artist. | Mendizabal contended the s {military tribunal is not compe- Fisher Due |tent to try his client because he is a. civilian. : '. |. The 'supreme war council's ruling raised speculation that To Quit Post |the trial would resume early : |next week, OTTAWA (CP)--John Fisher| Standing trial with Debray confirmed Friday he will retire).nq Bustos are four Bolivians. as federal centennial commis-| 4 fifth Bolivian is being tried in sioner early in November, two} apcentia months before the end of the are celebration. It was believed that a further The premature departure of two accuséd Bolivian. guerrillas Mr. Fisher, 53, apparently was|Captured last week would -be hastened by the prospect of)2dded to the. number. of co-de- unemployment in 1968, now|{@ndants: when the 'rial looming over all commission|"®S¥™°s. "At my age, you can't afford| } to leave your future dnngliog| UAW-Ford Meet and I've been looking around at; said, interviewed by telephone in Vancouver. ; | The most appealing offer WAS! vito Wi made by an old friend, W. B. ainike orkers Sackville, N.B., and now owner|its second month with the two of Northwest Publishing Ltd. Mr. Fisher said he will- go to Vancouver early next month as blisher and ing direc-|"ay- ing--except to meet again Mon- Motion Picture A iati Hollywood. The minister, Rev. Mike Maxon, is associate pastor of th: First Church of Christ of San Fernando, Theminister, who has been studying: underwater diving for a month, will perform the ceremony in a wet suit with a ped bas Northwest nae | Meanwhile, Ford of -Canada which owns two daily newspa- e layoffs, \At pers--the Prince Rupert News gg BE ee eas and the Prince George Citizen --and five weeklies. hourly rated employees are f from the North over the past 12) by Maime} jobs for several weeks," he| Scheduled Monday) DETROIT (AP)--The United |= against |= Milner, like himself asnative of|Ford Motor Co, today entered) - jsides agreed on virtually noth-| - Oakville, Ont., only 250: of 3,700 |° By taknig the job in the West: Coast. firm, he missed by a few days "something" Prime Minis- ter Pearson told the Commons Friday he had in mind for Mr- continuing to, work. A total of 2,900 of Ford's 4,400 workers at Windsor, Onf., have been laid off; as have 80 of 230 men at reverse, clerical-type collar. Fisher, {Niagara Falls, Ont, tion of, Korea. ons rnagone Russian Korean item was; 'The: Northerners have already on the docket anyway. |been_ infiltrating .suby for | Australian. Amb dor Pat-|and sabot into Korea, jrick Shaw asserted that a pro-|the Seoul government claims. |posal to pull out the UN pres-| §o far this year, 14 American jence "starts to have a some-|sojdiers have been killed and 61 jwhat ominous ring about it" in|haye been wounded in incidents jview of the rash of attacks!involving North Korean troops. | months. The sharp step-up in Red | attacks is believed by Western COMMISSION 'FAILED' officials to be intended to raise The Soviet Union gave strong) public doubts in Seoul about the support to the Cambodian rro-jcommitment of 50,000 South posal charging that no progress| Korean troops to Vietnam and had,been made in the last 20|to distract U.S. attention from years in reunifying Korea. IJt|the Vietnamese war. U.S. Trucker Killed By Rock FLINT, Mich. (AP) -- A truck driver was killed today by a rock apparently thrown from an overpass on U.S. 23, six miles south of Flint. Police immediately launched an investigation into whether- the incident was part of the continuing. violence believed connected with a strike by rebellious steel haulers in eight states, | Lord Attlee's Condition Grave | | LONDON (Reuters) -- The condition of Lord Attlee, 84-year-old former Labor prime minister of Britain, was again causing concern, a bulletin from Westminster Hos- pital said today, Attlee, prime minister from 1945-1951, entered the hospital last month for treatment of what was described as a minor condition. On Sept. 20 he was said to be very ill. But for the last few days, until this morn- | ing, he was said to be making progress. | Police Seek Sniper-Killer CHICAGO (AP) -- Police today were examining a home-made gun in hopes of finding the sniper who killed a teen-ager and wounded a second youth a they headed home from high school. James 'Butler, 15, was struck in the stomach and killed Friday by what was thought to be a .22-calibre bullet. A companion, Eddie Pittman, also 15, was hit in the leg. il tei ai 1 NN ..In THE TIMES Today .. Ontorio Premier Visits--P. 1 SE TL ef Aaa PH 1 Generals Open Season--P, 8 Ann Leanders--12 Ajox News--S Churches--6, 7 City News--11 Classified --18, 19, 20 Comics--25, 26 Editorial--4 Obitudries--20 Sports--8, 9 Television--24 Theotres---24 Weather--2 Whitby News---5S Women's--12, 13 i UMA sidan A ANA anes | E : Es eit st "What age do we stop being friends 2""° stag 104 Paneer Py oe "il ~~ fter t to ble. nes sup. il, 'one The in ace ind s NG rly ith he tat ey re ay 'in ze n- wu