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Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jun 1962, p. 1

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OH jad f hildren -- Page 9 | WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy intervals to- day and Wednesday. Not much change in temperature. Refrigerator Bylaw To Protect C === he Oshawa Times Definition of a recession: When Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa you can't afford a new car to tow your wvvat. Department, ond for payment of Postage in Cash, EIGHTEEN PAGES Price Not Over 10 'Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 143 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1962 STARR WINS: TORIES SEAT 117 Easy Starr Victory | But Majority Lower By JACK GEARIN ;servative Dr. R. Perey Vivian| Allan ee eer ee ic] | by 231 votes to win Durham Rid-|tired railroader rom Uxbridge ae aan' Pied Meaning The riding has been held by| who carried the Social Credit election in a_ political career|Dr. Vivian since 1957. Total| colors. that dates back to 1952, ran true|results were as follows, Honey,| While other big Tory names to form Monday : |7786; Vivian, 7555; Coutts|were suffering some stunning EMBRACED BY WIFE --Times Phote by Joe Serge LOSER CAFIK CONGRATULATES MIKE STARR WINNER STARR Times Photo by Bruce Jones TORONTO (CP)--The Liber- Toronto and York seats where als recaptured Ontario in Mon-|the Conservatives scored a day's federal election, mowing|clean sweep four years ago but down huge Progressive Conser-|emerged with only three wins vative majorities of 1958 and|Monday. Huge Conservative smashing their way into the|majorities were overturned by Toronto heartland of this tra-|12 Liberal and three NDP vic- ditionally Conservative prov-'tors. ince. Liberals defeated Works Min-| Before the voting, Conserva-jister Walker in Toronto Rose- tives held 63 of the 84 seats at}dale, Commons Speaker Roland stake Monday, the Liberals 17)Michener in Toronto St. Paul's, and the New Democratic Party|Toronto Telegram publisher four. The Liberals .emerged|John Bassett in Toronto Spa- with 42 against 36 for the Con-|dnia, and R. H. McGregor, 78- a in Following a Federal cabinet post, took an| vance poll), incomplete returns|able majority throughout the tions). {Norman Cafik, the runner-up,/|eral candidate, Mr. Starr's mar- the 1958 landslide when he fin- | Elect Minorit Ontario riding's election ma- Monday when Harry W. Jer- Canada has a minority Pro-|of 133 seats, recalled that in| to be heard from. five years. jseats in the then 235-member| prompt filing of election returns surprising third-place finisher|Conservatives 50, Mr. King got Democratic Party vote in the|Albert, Sask., said any '"'defin- of 300 polls -- compiled at 1962 1958 1957 |armed forces' vote. SC 30 0 19 |9n basis of the civilian vote] ™an Cafik was second with NDP (CCF) Alton Alexander Alton was ri Liberal candidate. os éilsaler waited less: than eight seats than the Conservatives,|Oshawa and The Oshawa Times ,---- by the biggest landslide in Ca-|i" Ottawa it was clear the Con-| CLOSE DURHAM RACE SC-NDP HOLD BALANCE |with the largest majority eral Russell C. Honey edging} the Conservatives was the loss NDP to decide whether to sus-| 1958. the former Member of Parlia- polls closed here he watched since 1900. A Liberal wrested it\parties hold the balance of|Provinces gave Mr. Diefen-| lection. head a_ minority si gy el ere for Mr, Diefenbaker in a| Finally, at 10:44 p.m., he and | Honey, 7786; Vivian, : saign jori i -lriding 5 i tive party whip. Red Deer, Alta., that his party REASON 35 POLL cous tn ivian, 7555; massive: majority, Mr. Diefen-|riding he has represented since Applause and cheers greeted 158 1957 when Mr, Diefenbaker|until a budget is presented and mons members, but not oa by telephone. Then, when|The results were scrawled in jcame in for the first 50 polls -- planation for not having which shoved the Liberals to turns . . . we are still the gov- ported. His nearest rival, Roger servatives and six for the NDP| year-old dean of the Commons, That was at 8.45 p.m, "The Deputy Returning He cited two previous minor- In the 25 general elections S N B rlin Bay ge d WINS LARGEST MAJORITY seat--was deferred to July 16jonly one seat, | } race .in the early stages. : ' ees 0 e call. Five phones were in- | situation. h The most devastating Lib-|first NDP MP. casions--five of them when Lib- past , UXBRIDGE (Staff) The|# national leader. jIt_ was 1672 over Aileen Hall, the DRO's called commit- minority government. A year jtheir all-time low in the prov-|Soviet Premier Khrushchev told Mrs. Celia 'Granny' Baker of j 110 polls in, 80 of which were "d each and every one of you for from all but three polls é Beles x Mr. Diefenbuker was to fly Finance Minister Fleming was|give any deadline" on settling Mrs, Baker, in failing health! s Mr, Alton. Thus he had a com- 0 ue ec O © the five telephone numbers Sharp, a former deputy minis-|but I "on't see any reason to} Born 14 years before Confed- One of the early voters today| obvious who had won the It was fashioned by the So-jin areas populated by modest|/-- they pushed the button it would neighboring farm hauling servative-Liberal split for the is: ripe we will solve the prob-| KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) -- A; As a little girl, she read re- over the old party ette, 44, the party's deputy na-| tory in Villeneuve, the northern ae Commons 'seats. deposits. } . 3.C |reverses and Party fortunes -year-old former Osh-|(NDP), 2183; Toms (S.C.), 158,| reverses an ima ten Canadian of| With three Ontario riding polls| generally were on the decline, Ukrainian descent to ever hold | still missing (including one ad-|Mr. Starr maintained a comfort- »arly lead and was never head-|at 11.15 a.m. today gave Mr. evening, so that his election was od Z Ontario riding (where he|Starr a total of 22,878 votes as)conceded at approximately 10 has now won five Federal elec-|compared with 15,771 for Liberal! p.m. by Norman Cafik, the Lib. f Port Hope Liberal Russell C.|and 14,250 for Miss Aileen Hall,| gin of victory will not likely be Honey edged Progressive Con-|the NDP candidate, and 468 for as great, however, as it was in | lished with 26,768 votes as com- | pared with 10,602 for the Lib- erals and 5,430 for the CCF. chinery operated effectively up PC : é iovernment until approximately 11.30 p.m. |myn, the returning officer, de- By DAVE McINTOSH fell more than a dozen seats) cided to close shop for the night Canadian Press Staff Writer |short of an over-all majority|with more than 43 polls still gressive Conservative govern-|1921 Liberal Prime Minister} This was the poorest record ment for the second time in}Mackenzie King had only 117/in modern times at least for How long John Diefenbaker's|Commons and stayed in office|in the riding -- by 10.30 a.m. administration can hold powerjfor four years. The Progres-|today Mr. Jermyn's was still depends on how Social Credit,|sives then held 64 seats and the| without returns from 30 polls, behind the Liberals in Monday's|/by with Progressive support. general election, and the New| The prime minister, at Prince Aor of page Sat abamacaaaat? aA Complete election returns 2th Parliament, likely to bejite and final state eee fa: for Ontario riding -- 300 out convened this fall. mation of the government will The standings jawait results Saturday of the 1 pm. today showed ' ; Michael Starr, PC, the win- ' 9 Recounts are almost certain ak 3 Bhs re a | is in a number of close contests, er With 23,002. Liberal Nor- » Ps 15,923; Aileen Hall, NDP. alone. Voting in Stormont, in Ly bs * : Doutta * : * Ontario, was deferred to July} WS third with 14,965/ and 16 because of the death of the se . : 8 : cath of the! fourth with 474 votes. rig 265 265 265 However, it was obvious the In 1957, Prime Minister Dief-|/4berals, with some 20 fewer|although PC headquarters in L t be call | were both far ahead of that fig- months to call a new election, oo a potted renyy upon 'to ha at fig ee t . G i ib l seizing on ee af ngen were Liberal Leader Pearson said PM [ k n Tl eS ] Tr tide in his favor, He won in . " | '@ | eS W | In n ; ; jservatives had suffered a de-|, A Close race in Durham Rid- : ; 3 , nadian history feat after four years in office|i8 resulted in Port Hope Lib-| ' . in! @ e ; Mout the Progressive Conserva-| T ' F | When 'the Liberals present|history. sere chy Sager a oronto ori1es ade |their first non-confidence mo-| A record vote was indicated, | an naaate will cp dab lt in the Commons, it will|Probably 250,000 more than the ; me cagthg Social Credit and the|Previous record of 7,287,297 in|. Mr. Honey, a lawyer, defeated PRINCE ALBERT, Sask.ja department of transport Vis- : : y Nova Scotia. Prince Ed- t, by 231 votes. A solid/(c@py -- pri inister Diefen-|c ircraft the battle of the ballot it Sing thle Tor , h vernment. Together! Only Nova Scotia, Prince Ed-|™men (CP) -- Prime Minister Diefen-|count aircraft. a ballots as of Feel, just west of Poronte aun aap Se Het ter\ward Island and the Prairie|¥®ban vote gave Mr. Honey the| baker has indicated he plans to} Election night began and/developed on television. which had been in their column|or separately, the two splinter) : € ; i : pire is . A' total of 81 per cent of the|Cons ti t forjrailway car on a siding a block|his wi i from J Dalle arliament.|power in that situation. baker the support he got from Drie ; Bs , onservative governmen y ding his wife, Olive, were driven a ay sett' Pee eet Robert Thompson national| 'em in 1958 chgibie wh cast their ballots.|the second time in five ae from downtown igre Albert,|block to the DAF, DOU} hee ter Diefenbaker and Conserva-|Social Credit leader, said at The results were as follows:| Returned personally with ala city of 25,000 in the federal rooms. : D), 2183; Toms (SC inds hims ading 53. i shoal pr | The Liberal surge was iniwill use its power to provide ; f 'a ae a ~piy irs ~ti him. He looked an ya 'a but still sharp contrast to the result in'a reasonable stable government FIGURES LATE Mr. Starr took his traditional Best § | He received first election re-|smiled and waved his hand, early lead when the returns i - "TOS: fashioned his national upset/another election called. Sik da' MA Mawatha urns/enough for a clear working ma chalk across a wall-length poll é : a oe Here is Mr, Jermyn's ex- jority in the 265-seat House. | we chiefly on the strength of 61 On-| Mr. Diefenbaker, whose party lhe had § @he an = A witht fs aa i count--Diefenbaker, 17,618 votes tario seats,and the 1958 sweep/-- . A TN red alls compares We On the basis of national re- Oldest Woman after 202 of 204 polls had re- nis orld phage P available this morning the |2;407 for Miss Hall, 2390 for Mr. : figures for 35 polls in the |Cafik and 61 for Mr. Alton.lernment of Canada," he told i 0 the brink litie blivion. . My Fades | , ' Carter of the New Democratic --all its gains at the govern-junbeaten. since 1925, in York|"© Drink of political oblivion Soviet Premier riding: 7 ; , |Party supporters Monday night. Party, polled 4,015 votes. ment's expense. | East. JUMP FROM LOW : : The Liberal and NDP candi- } anada Voting in Stormont--the 85th} The Conservatives gained Officers were given a spe- (dates were in a nip-and-tucklity governments in 1921 an I : Peterborough) since Confederation, Ontario cific telephone number to J } 1926 and said they were '"'inter- . It was the biggest majority because of the death of a Lib-|where Walter Pitman won ajnow has gone Conservative 18 Mr. Starr's lead at 9.10 p.m.,lesting analogies" to the present 1es t of his career--his seventh. per- eral candidate 1960 byelection to become the|times and Liberal on seven oc- I Deadline Stalled here to take the (however, was not as formidable | sonal triumph and his third as calls, as in past years at this stage.) When the prime minister first) eral onslaught came in the 18 One of the biggest shocks to erals won national power. Prior ssue "It is obvious that 35 of trae rig | i cane took office in 1957 he carried a oldest resident in Ontario Coun-| "My friends, I want to : " |to Monday the Liberals were at) BUCHAREST, Romania (AP)| tes ems bok s eo I . s _ A pied r, Ca es a oe ee ty and possibly Canada tell you how. déeply grateful to 6 «© ms ; sh- r. Starr at 9.20 p.m. wi S partly s \ ince. Romanian workers today that} awa Times had the results try. | Uxbrid : ; : ) | ge 'Township died Mon- New Dimension The 36 Conservative survivors|Russia sees no reason to go to| in the City, had 9,321 as com-|RETURNS TG OTTAWA |day three months before her|*% Wonderful support you gave included six cabinet members, war over Berlin and "we do not a on, eo pared with 6,170 for Miss Hall, 109th birthday. oan caged of Prince nthe instruction (6001 for Mr, Cafik and 178 for|/back to Ottawa today aboard |Albert," he said. re-elected in Toronto Eglinton) the Berlin issue. | sheets issued to the DRO's \ : ie BR alt ----------|for some time, died at the after a cliff - hanging counting) "The United States threat-| ahha manding lead with the returns . Stouffville Hospital. battle against Liberal Mitchelliened us with war over Berlin, be ee eee in for little more than one-third Three Mo ties y ov fast night we (of the polls. un shape : QUEBEC (CP) --Quebec pol-;mainly in marginal agricultural ter of trade. Trade Minister.go to war," he said. were 35 polls short. It was ence haar Wok maar' ck rd ites gained a third dimension|areas in the eastern and north-|Hees had a squeaker in Tor-| 'Those who talk about war 6 n° jin Oshawa city was Mrs. Rachel] D d P age of 10. She worked at a M ay's general election. (ern parts of the province and onto Broadview. had better remember that if} eiection so I went home. | CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 ea : osse ° cial Credit party which rode a|wage-earners. Many were by boomerang against them. ---~ -- oe oe Kill F iti Phun arise gay age -- strong wave of protest votes|wide margins. Breakdown In "We do not give any dead-| | 1 S ugl 1ve fest eh ih le S pal that upset the traditional Con- «1 was a victory of the peo- line, but as soon as the matter! 25 MONTREAL ARRESTS } |P . sinees : ple ma- . sj: " sai rag |ports of the American Civil province's support. jlem," he said. ragged an of 32 shot and/p ' paw ean by the spell-/ chines," said Mr. Caouette, who Ontario Riding Khrushchev spoke to a crowd killed three RCMP officers|War in the papers. Although binding oratory of Real Caou-|won a landslide personal vic- tional leader, Social Credit! Quebec mining constitue scored a breakthrough that car-| ried 26 of the province's 75 The Liberal party won the, Until now, Quebec has always largest nuumber of Quebec|Shied from so-called third par-| seats, 35, or 10 more than it|ties. Independents and national- |HaH and Starr. Advance poll; 2, had in the last house. The Pro-|ists have had isolated successes} Whitby town; 47, 1577, gressive Conservative party|in federal elections, but only|2,305. dropped three cabinet. minis-)once has Social Credit ever! Ajax: 21, 873, 837, ters as its strength was cut to|been 14 from 50 members now. ; The New Democratic Party, Mr. Couette won a_byelec- Pickering Twp.; entered 40 candidates. All of(|tion in Pontiac-Temiscamingue| 1779 3054. them lost their. $200 deposits. |in 1946 but was defeated in the! Social Credit gains 'were 1949 general federal election. Social Credit now enters Can-| Whitby jada's 25th Parliament with 30/1196 {seats--including two each in Al-| Reach Twp.; 13, 435 berta and British Columbia--| Scugog Twp.; 4, 79, and conceivably holds the bal-| Port Perry; 7, 38 ance of power since. the Pro- Uxbridge Town; 23, gressive Conservative govern-| 592 jment has returned with a mi-| Uxbridge Twp.: nority. Mr. Caouette rejected) 572. the idea of a coalition govern-| Scott Twp.; }ment that would inelude 'social \Crediters. 1,008 87, Twp.; 38, 797, CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 36, 95. 363, 18 1 373 14, 355, 48, 410. a, 23,002. the breakdow: by municipalities of the votes ! NCY-/cast in Ontario Riding in Mon- His three opponents lost their day's federal election. The total are in this order, Alton, Cafik, 159, 46, 243 Oshawa; 185, 7559, 8495, 11,458 1288 elected in Quebec until) Pickering Village; 0, 289, 109 2318 East Whitby Twp.; 15, 357, 236, 94. 752, 278 643 a, S| week's visit jof railway workers in rolling- ock repair yards on the out- skirts of Bucharest. He arrived lin Romania Monday for a Khrushchev told the workers: "I am convinced that tomor- .|row the Red flag will fly over 'Ilthe United. States. But we will not fly the flag. It will be the American people themselves." ' Laotian Coalition Talks Breakdown | VIENTIANE (Reuters)-- Talks between Laotian leaders on the wording of a royal pro- clamation announcing the estab- "lishment. of a provisional coali-| tion government broke down 184, 617./here. today 130, The breakdown came _ after Prince Souvanna Phouma, the} neutralist premier - designate,| rejected a right-wing proposal which he said would have made Grand total; 474, 15,923, 14,- the government one in name lonly. K Thefts Symbol MONTREAL (CP)--It was a quiet election by Montreal standards but the symbols of wilder days -- armed gangs and stolen ballot boxes--were still in evidence Twenty-five persons were arrested for various irregular- ities Monday but 18 were re- leased from custody during the day The most serious incident occurred when about 50 men attempted to invade the home of Progressive Conservative candidate Alphonse Therrien in Montreal Papineau riding but were repulsed by two con- stables and the candidate's supporters RCMP © officials' reported three ballot boxes stolen but, by 10 p.m., two had been re- | covered. Of Wilder Days Early today, police were still seeking six men reported to have stolen 100 ballots at one poli and. attempted to place them in ballot boxes later in the evening. Police said the men also. threatened a returning officer but es- caped before police could ar- rive. The first arrests came about 50 minutes after the polls closed when three sus- pects were picked up outside a Liberal candidate's office. Several baseball. bats were confiscated One man was arrested for impersonating a voter and an- other was charged with at- tempted impersonation. Insp. Maurice Nadeau of the RCMP said it had been a "quiet" election. she did not vote, she followed sive counter-attack with a bul-jelections closely during her let in his brain. younger days. The three ambushed officers} Mrs, Baker has lived in Ux- were constables Elwood Joseph|bridge Township for about 15 Keck, 25, from Gravelbourg,|years. Before that she lived on Sask.; Donald George Weisger-jthe 6th line in Whitchurch berg, 23, Fife Lake, Sask., and} Township. Gordon Eric Pedersen, 23, Milk} She never wore glasses and River, Alta. _. {still had her. own teeth, Her Killed after the multiple|recipe for old age, she said on shooting was George Booth of! previous birthdays, was to nearby Knutsford. |work hard and smile. She stat- jed that she couldn't remember Monday, then died in a mas- Veteran officers said the in- jcident was probably the worst being sick a day in her life. of its kind in RCMP history. {She broke a leg once back The episode started at a gov-|when she was in her 90's but ernment building here whenjdid not remember much about Booth left the welfare office} jt. and was stopped by game war-| Mrs. Baker is survived by a den George Ferguson, whojdaughter, Mrs. Thomas Phil- asked the man about the rifle|lips of Uxbridge. Township; a he carried. |sister, Mrs. Sarah Forsythe of "Get the hell out of here or/Toronto; four grandchildren; hie kill you,"' Booth said, push-| seven great-grandchildren and ing the .303-calibre weapon into!one great-great-grandchild. Ps The body is at the Uxbridge Ferguson called police and|Funeral Home for service on |the three officers 'went after/Thursday, June 21 at 2 p.m. & : |Booth, who fled up a nearby|Interment will be at the Heise ™ crtek. {Hill Cemetery ned Gormley. | Ferguson's stomach.

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