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Local Highlight BOATING ACCIDENT causes critical injuries to Mrs. Marg- aret Wild. See Page 9 ®Qjjbtu$\mta Weaker Forecast 'ii'Jienilh fair acrf emiler to niitlit. TH.-V(I:(>. CIKII and breezy. Cliuncc ol showers. High, K5 iu 75. VOL. 26, NO. 2369 OGDENSBURG, N. Y„ MONDAY, JULY 3, 1967 Dally Entered As Second Class ..tter Posi Office Ogdensburg NX SINGLE COPY 10c Egyptian-Israeli Fighting Continues At Suez Expo Visit Today For Elizabeth Montreal — Queen Elizabeth 11 arrived in Montreal this morning to help put ihe icing on the Expo cake. With the Queen came massive security and crowds of Canadians hop- ing to catch a glimpse of the monarch as she makes her day- long tour around the Expo site. > The Queen and Prince Philip 'were scheduled to arrive on board the royal yacht Britan- nia at 8:30 a.m. following an overnight trip down the St. Law- rence Seaway from Cornwall, Ont. At 9:20 a.m. Quebec Lieuten- ant-Governor Hughes Lapointe was to go aboard the yacht to greet the Queen and her party. When she stepped off the yacht at 9:30, she was greeted by Prime Minister and Mrs. Pear- son. Following a royal salute, the Queen inspected an honor guard from the Royal 22nd Regiment, dressed in the new green uni- forms which were worn for the first time during Canada Day ceremonies at Expo Saturday. The Queen was to tour the pavilions of Britain, Canada's Western Province, Quebec, Ontario, the Indians of Can- ada and the Atlantic Prov- inces, before attending an of- ficial dinner at the Canadian Pavilion at 1:15 p.m. Following the luncheon, she will address the nation before returning to the Britannia at 4 p.m. 1 She will hp h-.siess of a din- j net- tonight on the yacht as it sails west on the Seaway. | Greeting the Queen when j she arrives at the Quebec Pa- j vilion will be Premier Daniel j Johnson. Mr. Johnson also planned to attend the dinners at the Canad- ian pavilion and on board the royal yacht. He will travel to Ot'iawa Wednesday to be sworn in as a Privy Councillor. Expo officials have called for the tightest possible secur- ity for the visit. He Notre Dame was to be closed to the public ,until 10 a.m. The portion east .of the Expo Express was to re- open at 10. The area west of the Expo Express was to be opened in stages as the Queen passed through the various pa- vilions. The Canadian Pavilion will be closed to the public un- til 3.45 p.m. In Ontario yesterday 70 miles of highway between Ot- tawa and Cornwall were closed to the public by police as Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip were driven from the capital to the royal yacht Britannia. .' Ontario Provincial Police be- gan closing off the 45 miles of Highway 31 between Ottawa and Morrisburg before the roy- al procession left Government House at 3 p.m. The 24-mile Morrisburg-Corn- wall stretch of Highway 401 also was closed. The routes were kept totally closed until about 4:15 p.m. because police said they didn't want anyone overtaking the procession from behind or blocking it from ahead. of the people, by the people, for the people; whose Just powers are derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a repubtic, a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States; a perfect Union one and inseparable; established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice and humanity for which American patriots sacrificed their fives and fortunes. I therefore believe it is my duty to my country to love it, to support its Constitution, to obey its laws, to respect its flag, and to defend it against ail enemies. THE AMERICANS CREED William Tyler Page 6 Guy Named Joe' Battles For Fewer Hazards On The Highway John Martin, 18, Hurt In Accident ThisAJL .Early John Martin, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Mar- tin of 904 Patterson St., was injured in a car accident near Heuvelton, early this morn- ing. Hepburn Hospital authori- ties said that his condition is considered \satisfactory.\ He suffered multiple lacera- tions to the forehead. X-rays were taken at the hospital to- day. Martin graduated from Og- ,densburg Free Academy in June. Bv ESTHER VAN WAGONER TUFTY Washington Correspondent Washington — He's just an ordinary guy called \Joe\. But this TV repairman from the Bronx, Joseph Linko, \cared\ and so fewer motor- ists will die on American highways. Joe is quick to admit he's no engineer but some of the needless hazards on the high- ways \didn't make sense\ to him. So he started a one-man campaign by photographing every danger spot he saw. To date, he has taken 3000 color slides, spoken to scores of engineers and written letters desperately to gel someone to listen and act on his sugges- tions. finally he was heard on Capitol Hill. This working man was a new kind of con- gressional witness in Ms ev- eryday clothes with shirt open at the neck. He was also convincing as he startled the members - of the Special House subcommittee on the Federal Highway Program with his \homble\ examples. His practical suggestions will correct many engineering de- signs that are jeopardizing safety. Subcommittee Chairman John Blatnik (D-Minn.) had this to say after Linko's testi- mony: \We have seen and heard today what an alert in- telligent layman was able to support large overhead direc- observe by way of unneces' sary design deficiencies . . . and the hazards exist from coast to coast.\ Congressman Robert Mc- Ewen (R-Ogdensburg), a member of the subcommit- tee, praised Joe as \a fine American citizen\. He called the testimony \aston- ishing\ and say now when he drives along the high- way he, like Joe, looks for those death traps described by the TV repairman from the Bronx. tional signs, thus presenting a hazard. Less than 20 feet away, an overpass could have supported the signs. Joe Linko isn't a public- ity seeker. He just winces at the accidents on the high- ways and wants \to see these highways cleaned up\ and the end of unnecessary deaths. [Marines Blocked UN To Vote Red Advance At 0n Ca,ls ht ICosi Of 51 Dead Troo P Pulbut iBy £ clashed HE ASSOCIATED PRESS ypt'.an and Israeli troops refugees Saigon -- i.AP> - U.S. Ma-1Con Th.en. .dashed at ihe Suez Canal for nnes halted an mtiltrating toree 2. South Vietnamese head- the third day today as 'he Unit- of .some 3.000 North Vietnamese quarters said that about noon ed .Nations prepared to vote on regulars Sunday in a savage today a Communist force jump- demands for ihe withdrawal of battle that cos! 255 American ed a 100-truck supply convoy Israeli troop- and Israel said casualties — 5J dead, 34 miss-;moving from Da Nang to Phu;thousands of Arab ing 170 wounded. jBai with an escort of armored j could return home. The Marines said they count-j vehicles and two companies of; The Israeli army said Egyp- ed 65 Communist bodies and j troops. ] tian troops on the' canal's west that planes, artillery and naval[ 3. The vital Marine airfield at j bank fired for 20 minutes at Is- guns probably killed many,Dong Ha was put out of use fonraeli soldiers on the east bank more. | five hours by Communist gun-j nea r El Qantaxa, about 25 miles The battle took place in the j fire, and considerable damage ! fro m tll e canal's northern en- long - threatened 1st Corps area < was done to the Air Force radar j trance, just below the demilitarized .installations there which keep zone. The Communists kept up!watch over the demilitarized heavy pressure today with thun-! zone just to the north. At least derous, big gun barrages and an ,'four Air Force men were wound- ambush that raked a 100-truck j ed. The Red gunners fired 120 South Vietnamese convoy. ; rounds at the installation. The war mounted in intensity; 4. The Air Force said three; __ on the ground and in the air! U.S. jets were lost in raids over j all of Egypt \east of The\ ca'naT above North Vietnam with these [ North Vietnam Sunday. One I the June 5-10 war, reported major developments: [pilot of a Navy Skyhawk jet j three such machine gun and 1. The Marines stopped thei was listed as missing in action, I mortar attacks Sundav on its elite North Vietnamese 90th;The pilots of two Air Force;positions near El Qantara. The Regiment moving south for amThunderchief jets were picked'Israelis said they silenced the attack on the Marine outpost at [up in daring helicopter rescues, i Egyptian gunners'each time. __ _ , p iac j: 0 Q, d \r,j sa pj Egyptian forces in position on the eastern . bank turned back an Israeli at- tack and destroyed six tanks jand nine armored cars in two I days of fighting. The two sides clashed Satur- I day night on the east bank. ho I Egypt claimed its men had been there all along. Israel said The Israelis said the Egyp- tians fired across the canal a second time two hours later, but the Israeli troops returned the fire and the Egyptians quit shooting. Israel, which captured nearly Drier Weather May Prevent Dam Break Lawrenceburg, Tenn. — lAP) — The weatherman today aid- ed engineers seeking to ease the pressure on a rain-soaked, earthen dam which has been threatening to flood three mid- dle Tennessee communities. Most of the 200 families live in three communities down- stream from the dam moved livestock from riverside pas- ture areas to higher ground over the weekend. Residents stayed put — relying on a mo- Britannia Will Pass U.S. Loeks The royal yacht, the Britan- nia, carrying Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, is schedul- ed to arrive at Eisenhower lock at 6, Tuesday morning, July 4 about 100 Egyptians had crossed the canal and penetrated about nine miles info the Sinai Penin- sula before being driven back across the waterway. The forecast called for sunnvlbile radio network hastiiv set. upl„ Each sid f prote-rted to UN . and dry weather, for the first ibv the commissi 1 n to warp.,'•ecretary—General U Thant time in a week, as an air mass I them if the Flood thro/.: worsens. i tha t th e otlle r har i broken the which has kept thunderstorms' rn , , ' June i0 cease-fire, hounding the state, moved out 1 rhirty-twn game and fish. At the time of the cease-fire, toward the ea< workers. several National; Egypt nac. a force in Port Fuad. Laurel Hill Dam an earth Guardsmen, and state troopers j on the east bank across from structure made mushv by sev-' wer e stationed a t strategic!Port Said at the canal's north- eral sraignt days of rain, be- f s P ot s downsitream fi-orn the dam I ern entrance. Radio Cairo gan seeping dangerously last i n cor] ^ , . gineers watching contact it. said evacuation could within a few minutes. come Wednesday. By Friday, engin eers for the State Game and Fish Commission assessed the situation as critical. The dam,! Engineers, meantime, were however, continued to hold hack spilling water from the S.ti- lls two-mile fishing lake. million gallon lake at the rate \But one good rain could ! of 8 inches a day in an effort change the picture drastically.\ to relieve the pressure. It is said Bob Galloway, lake mana-;down two feet from full pool ger for the state. \We're not!now. Officials plan to lower it over the hump by a long shot.\! 16 feet more. with en-! claimed the Israeli were trving Officials ; to move on Port Fuad. Congo Government Asks Algerians For Tshombe Israeli military men inter- preted the new outbreak as an attempt by Egyptian President Carnal Abdel Nasser to rally his shattered army against ' the threat of an Israeli invasion. The Israeli newspaper Maariv quoted political informants in Jerusalem as saying the Egyp- tians might be trying to \in- fluence the U.N. General As- sembly to vote for the with- drawal of Israeli forces from lands they captured in Egypt, Syria and Jordan. Two rival resolutions are be- fore, the assembly, neither as- sured of gaining the two-thirds voir needed tor adoption. Both Unless plans are changed be- cause of wither conditions orj^f ^^ i n whic h he was . . . ; other reasons, the vessel bear- i travelklg K fr0 m Palma de Mai- », P ,°/THi fif ,° ¥ |Jng he T 1 r f Pl e ,- Wl11 • be lorca to the nearbv Mediterra- the Ralph Nader of the high-Roving upbound for Kingston,! ^ d o f jft j n u ways, but he s not looking for I Ont., where the vessel is sch- KINSIIASA. the Congo •: AP i coup. Tshombe's political j— The Congolese government;has been banned in the Congo, j t\ 31 ' f °r Israeli withdraws I today asked Algeria to extradite ! his property confiscated and his [former Premier Mnishe Tshom- supporters thrown oir of their jbe to Kinshasa so it can execute .positions. him on charges of treason and! „ . . . , Iplottin,^ o erthrow President|^^bs^arrclgo! ;Joseph Mobutu. les e nli]itar y trWna] ^ Since most African nationalist i March after it found him guilty leaders consider Tshombe a! of treason and subversion .Most puppet of the colonialists, it was!of the charges grew out of the assumed that Algeria's anti-'secession of his copper-rich Ka- Westem regime would turn him'tanga Province from the rest of iCrowds over to the Coneo government. ! the Congo in 1960. In 1963 a U.N. \ „_ : .„._, force put down the secession, driving Tshombe info exile. Mansfield Rites Brief And Private Pen over to the Congo government Tshombe is being held in Al- giers after the apparent hijack- ing Saturday of the British A Cooler Period For AH Upstate ! glory — or controversy. Here a few of Joe's \horri- ble examples\: Five Trapped In - A concrete bridge abut pj ane Wreckage guard rail guided their cars straight into the abutment eduled to dock at the afternoon. 5 o'clock in citizens were on the plane with Tshombe. along with three Brit- ish subjecls, the pilot, copilot Queen Elizabeth left Corn- wall, Ont., Sunday evening for Expo 67 at Montreal The ship ment presented a hazard toj* *\* ,, J \ • '•^\\^v, was t o ^ at anchor in the vic- oncoraing traffic, so highway f)ff Mjjinp ShofP !init y of th e Beaunarnois locks,'from Algien engineers installed a guard' vy \ ! „ , 4™ |J us t eas t o f Valleyfield during! arrival was a surprise to the rail. But four persons were! ^ oearsport, Maine — (At) .j^g n jg nt Monday, Expected [government of President Houari killed at the spot because the! Tne bodies of flv e P ersons jtime ol arrival there was at Boumedienne. Algerian officials • - - - - 'trapped inside a small aniphi-l 10:30 Monday hight. !denied arranging the landing at bious plane which crashed Thi s wouW \ i eav e th e Britan-'Boufari'k military air field west some 500 feet offshore were expected to be removed to- — An EXIT sign bedded in concrete is a hazard. Sign could be mounted on flexible material, which would bend wnen hit. — Guard rails do not pro- tect motorists if they end in a concrete block. day by scuba divers from the Brunswick Naval Air Station. The plane crashed into Penobscot Bay Sunday after- noon. State police said the plane carried two men, a woman and two boys bound „ , ,.,. , for a fishing expedition in — Trees and utili y poles Norlh Maine, should not be placed too near a highway. ' The plane was registered to — A huge steel bridge was'William D. Mahoney of Cro- built over a superhighway to!ton-on-Hudson, N.Y, Argyl, Pa. — (AP) — of curiosity seekers are arriving in this small, quiet hamlet to see the burial site of actress Jayne Mansfield. But the family of the 34-year- old Miss Mansfield, who became a famous Hollywood sex sym- bol, reiterated its itention to keep the final rites today simple and private. And there has been little for the curious to see: a tarpaulin over a newly opened grave near Temperatures are expected to! the entrance to Fairview Ceme- and hostess. Reports to Paris average well below normal, jtei'y, a neat white house where said Tshombe's ! Daytime highs will rangp most-!Miss Mansfield lived as a child. ly in the 70s. ; The actress was killed Thurs- A few widely scattered show-!day along with her attorney and ers Tuesday, More general! chauffeur in a car-truck crash showers likely in western areas)in Louisiana. Thursday and in all sections 1 Meeting Sunday night at the JSpanish Balearics. , Algerian officials said several;, ^] n ?:„: *' , n ' a V ~ ( ,,!!' through Saturday: nia about two hours from Snell!of Algiers, [Friday. lock. The ship is scheduled to' Algeria and the Congo broke! ^~\7; ~\— Continue its upbound trip at diplomatic relations in 1964 tin- SOVIET PRESIDENT daybreak. ] dter Tshombe's regime and have FLIES TO BAGHDAD Back on Apr. 27, 1959, the not formally resumed them. But! Damascus, Syria — (AP)-• ship was detained in the St.!a Congolese Embassy spokes-;Soviet President Nikolai V Lawrence River by one of thei man in Paris said his govern- JPodgorny flew to Baghdad worst fogs in history. Instead ment has assigned represent a- [Monday for a two-day visit 1o home of Miss Mansfield's aunt, Mrs Bert Milheim, relatives, and Hungarian-born strongman, Mickey Hargilay, Ihe actress' second husband, made final plans for services. of arriving at 8 a. m., for ceremonies, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip arrived after 2 o'clock in the afternoon when fog lifled and permitted the vessel to move as far as Snell!recently in Madrid, since Mobu- lock. 'tu took power 'n a bloodless lives to open extradition talks'Iraq after two days of talks with Algeria. The 49-year-old Congolese leader has been in European exile for 19 months, living mosl with Syrian government lead- ers on the Middle East situa- tion. The three Syrian-Soviet sessions — one unscheduled — lasted a total of 12 hours. GIVE BLOOD BLOIX+OBILE BE A DONOR BLOODMOBILE Gala Parade To Highlight Morristown's July 4 Celebration