Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jun 1963, p. 2

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a Brilliant Surgeon Also MP During Wartime TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Herbert e "2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, June 24,1963 ~ «JFK Meets Adenauer wanted to make room for re-;General Hospital, he joined with BONN (Reuters) --President ennedy uer for wide-ranging talks ted to focus on European and NATO nuclear power. president was about 20 today met Chancellor Heinrich Luebke at a villa close to the Rhineside chancellery. Before leaving Gad Godes- berg, Kennedy worked on the major speech he will make Mon- day in Frankfurt. .| DENIES BACK TROUBLE Press Secretary Pierre Salin- ger denied reports that Ken. -jeondition was completely nor- Salinger said the president's mal. Kennedy's talk with the 87- year-old chancellor was prob- ably their last working meeting _ Adenauer retires in the fall, The president was expected to Alexander Bruce, the brilliant|turning veterans. Sir William Mulock and Sir Ed- surgeon who became Ontario lieutenant-governor and later an outspoken wartime opposition member of Parliament, died at his home Saturday, He was 94. Dr. Bruce had suffered a heart attack two weeks ago. Fu- neral services are scheduled for 2 p.m. Tuesday. Impatient yet dedicated, he raising eyebrows in his younger days--before he was early 1900s he foresook his bicy- cle for a horse and buggy in his medical work, onto doctor to buy an automo- bile. And he sometimes used it, when kerosene lamps failed, to But Dr, Bruce had siarted 40, In the Ww He later became the first Tor- pl mund Osler to found Wellesley Hospital. Dr. Bruce became the pivot of a national issue durng the First World War. He had served ith the Canadian Army Medi- cal Conps in thé war and in 1919 wrote a report detailing de- lorable conditions in army medical camps. He devoted several years to eader and was deep in convers- wation with American State Sec- had the knack of creating a pub- nedy's old back trouble was provide the light for his opera- make another bid for German Minister Asks Church Give ry Dean Rusk as he drove the chancellory past thous- "ands of flag-waving children band tourists, Construction workers along © president's route from the American diplomatic villa at partnership in opposition French President de Gaulle. support for a wider Atlantic to what the United States consid- ers the more limited policies of The U.S, leader was also ex- pected to take his case to the tions. Impatience overcame him in 1909 when, dissatisfied with ac- commodation at the Toronto Alberta Crops lic stir through most of his ca- reer. He rose to particular na- tional prominence when he turned to political infighting as an MP in 1940 at the age of.71. Incensed by the Liberal gov- ernment's war effort, he aston- ished the Commons when, in his the medical profession before ecepting the intment of me Minister R. B, Bennett in 1932 as Ontario's lieutenant- 'governor. He resigned this post in 1937 -- three years before plunging fully into politics at an age when most people are think- Enearby Bad Godesberg, where European public when he holds a press conference which will be maiden speech, he promptly ing of full retirement. ennedy spent the night, threw Sex Schooling own their tools to wave at the i president as he drove past. " The Adenauer-Kennedy talks were 'scheduled to last two VANCOUVER (CP)--A United States minister says that since parents don't know enough televised throughout most of the continent, PLEDGES WILL STAY called for the resignation of Saved From Dr, Bruce was born on a farm Kennedy began his 10-day Eu-| j Prime Minister Mackenzie King. As the Progressive Conserva- Long Drought in Blackstock, about 15 miles north of Oshawa, the/son of im- migrants from Northern Ire- lend, |tive minister for Toronto Park- dale, he was a relentless oppo- nent of Liberal policy on volun- tary enlistment and . conscrip- about and the schools won't teach it, sex instruction should be taken over by the church, Dr. Donald Frost of Sioux Falls, 8.D., spoke at a workshop meeting preceding the North American Baptist general con- He graduated from the Uni- versity of Toronto medical school, with gold and silver medals in 1892 and, after post- graduate work overseas, re- turned to Canada as a Fellow of the Royal College of Sur- *hours, to be followed by an ,hour-long meeting between Ken- enedy and Federal President "K Supported ropean tour Thursday 'with a/ pledge that U.S. forces would stay in Europe as long as they were needed, "So long as our presence is desired and required, our forces jand commitments will remain. LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)-- The heaviest 24-hour downpour tion be] a a a saved millions j southern rta acres from CAUSES FURORE ruin and turned the worst He caused'a greater furore|/drought since the 1930s into a HAND FROM ADENAUER President Kennedy gestures aauer applauds. U.S. Secre- right of Adenauer, The Presi- with his hand during a pause ary of State Dean Rusk stands dent arrived in Germany Sun- | ference which began Sunday. | He said the church should in- |stitute a continuing program of |sex education for parents and jchildren into their teens, "We need only remind out- For Hard Line In China Talk |For your safety is our safety, your liberty is our liberty, and jattack upon our own. . fortunes are one." in speech to crowd in City etween the two leaders and day to begin a 10-day tour of |to bribe Quebec with introduc: | |when he accused K'ng of trying/dry memory. any attack on your soil is an + our While thus renewing the MOSCOW (Reuters)--Premier Nikita Khrushchev has been given firm backing for a tough line in important ideological talks with Communist China here next month, observers here say. At the meeting of the Soviet Communist party central com- "mittee which ended Friday night a resolution passed to close the "four - day session rejected as "groundless and slanderous" 'Chinese attacks on the Russian ideological position. It authorized the Russian dele- gation at the talks--due to start -July 5--to follow '"'unswerv- selves of the examples of preg- nancy outside wediock in our own churches or of the broken young marriages to know that we have failed somewhere along the line to communicate the needed information and spirit- ae ee agi joins PeO|we seek," he said, "the war ple," Dr, Frost said. against poverty, hunger, disease He said the church should trY/and ignorance, in our own coun- to put sex education back into|tries and around the world." the home but, in the meantime, Hundreds of thousands of Ger- must take on the job itself. {mans gave Kennedy a massive ARE NOT INTERESTED | welcome as he drove in a carni- Two other Baptist ministers val ray creti from Wahn air- said their church isn't inter.|POrt 0 Cologne and then on te ested in merging with other! In thelr talks th Por s the two leaders protestant denpennanons. | were also expected to review the American pledge to the Euro- pean allies, Kennedy took care to stress also a peace theme, in line with his recent call for im- proved relations between Rus- sia and the West. "We are allies in the only war Hall Square of Bonn, Ger- many, Sunday, and West Ger- 100,000 DETROIT (CP) -- An _ esti- mated 100,000 marchers--95,000 of them Negroes -- staged a '"'walk to freedom" here Sunday believed to be the largest civil rights demonstration.in the his- tory of the United States. The parade past 30,000 spec- tators who lined Woodward Ave. Detroit's main street, ended Gerhard Schroeder, West Ger- man Chancellor Konrad Ade- man Foreign Minister, is at 'Stage March To Aid Civil Rights The marchers were festive but determined, their clothing rang- ing from Sunday suits to Ber- muda shorts. With some dressed in rags and others sporting large diamond rings and expen- |sive clothes, The seemingly-endless jof humanity surged through the Western European countries. | --(AP Wirephoto) | ¢ e The rain began Friday night tion of family allowances, Hejand snapped the back of a was the only member of the/drought which began three Commons to yote against the| years ago. By late Saturday "baby bonus' bill, claiming/when the rain stopped from one that a lack of good housing was to 344 inches had fallen in the He was the only surviving member of the first board of regents of the American College of Surgeons, founded in Wash- ington in 1913, | wave|his representative. downtown business district and|"firm religious beliefs," he a more important issue. demands for King's resignation, Dr, Bruce wrote in his memoirs Varied Operations: "Mr, Kng was very angry and, I think, never forgave me." He finally resigned from Par- liament in 1946 saying he " Between speeches, collections) jwere taken to raise $100,000. for Dr. King to take south with him. Michigan Governor George Romney, conspicuous by his ab- sence, sent State Senator Stan- ley Thayer, of Ann Arbor, as Feinberg Says" Discrimination Less In Canada \h T h a Mr. Romney said because of li i ; __ jarea. Years later, referring to his\heavier than any monthly fall since August, 1959. and said it will save spring- seeded crops and turn pasture lands green for the first time since spring. }eased the district's worst grass- opper outbreak in 20 years. throughout The 24-hour total was Most farmers greeted the million dollar rain" with glee The cool, wet weather also he cool weather inflicted eavy losses among the insects nd set back those not hatched. At various times he was pres- ident of the Ontario Medical As- sociation, a Fellow of the Amer- ican emeritus professor of surgery at the University of Toronto and an appointed member of the permanent mission on disputes between the United States and Albania. Surgical Association, an international com- He was the storm centre of many social issues, advocating such ideas as birth control edu- cation and mentally unfit. sterilization of the The amount of rain varied the district. The ghiest report came from the EYE EXAMINATIONS i . anti-Stalinist line laid} "An organization does not be- Haass P "i ingly" the st line |Berlin situation although it is) without violence as an overflow could not march in the parade, TORONTO A ome southeast comer of the PHONE 723-4191 down in 1956 with strong empha- sis on Khrushchev's version of _. 'peaceful co-existence." | And while it appeals to the| Chinese not to continue the .-open polemic" which both par- ties agreed to suspend, the reso-| 'lution itself is one of the tough-| est documents actually naming the Chinese yet published in the .Jengthy dispute. come better just because it has} more members; said Rev.| Lawrence Swanson, executive! secretary of the bible school and youth board of the Baptist General Conference, Chicago. "We believe we can achieve| more on our own," sai | Gunnar Hoglund, youth director) of the Baptist General Confer-) ence. now ccnsidered a burning issue. The president himself was due to fly to the Communist-sur- rounded and divided city Wed- nesday to deliver three speeches and make a tour. of the Com- munist border wail. RECORD 'QUAKE ESTON, Mass. (AP)--The Boston College seismographic Station recorded a strong earth- -Baffling Murder Case In London *« CHATHAM (CP)--Police were Investigating the possibility to- tday that Robert Henry Marsh- «all, 28, of London, Ont., may "have been murdered there late last week and his body taken to Rondeau Park, 25 miles east of yg where it was found Satur- ay. Cottage owner Stanley Wild and his two young sons were searching for firewood in the park when they stumbled upon 'the body of Marshall, whom po- lice believe was killed 16 to 24 hours earlier. ""It was not until Sunday night "that the body, which bore slash "Wounds and rope burns, was Adentified by next of kin. *" Police at first believed he had committed suicide because of deep slashes in his throat and Wrists, but later dropped this theory when they deter- fhined that other marks on his -roat, wrists and ankles were 'Yope burns. Police, who said the slash wounds were inflicted with a sharp instrument,-were not dis- counting the possibility of a tor- ture slaying, resulting in what they consider the most baffling case in the area in recent) years. a4 ¢ The body was found on a lit-) tle-used park road about half a mile south of the park picnic grounds and a mile south of the bustling park's main intersec- tion. Until Sunday night, the only means police had to iden- tify him was a ring with the ini- tials RM, an appendectomy scar, an upper dental plate and his height and weight. Police found a small! length of rope in the area Sunday night. quake 5,500 miles southeast of Boston Sunday night. A spokes- man said the tremor was in the vicinity of the Canary Islands off the coast of Africa. PLAY SKY TAG NEW YORK (AP) -- Two brothers from Vermont scaled a building under construction in Manhattan Sunday and played tag with police on girders al- most 300 feet above the street. The two men frolicked for more than an hour at the dizzying heights before two detectives were able to bring them down to earth. Arrested were Ronald Sherwin, 28, and his brother, Lincoln, 22. Pope Hol ds First Official Audience VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-- Pope Paul was due to hold his first official audience today for clergy and parish priests of his own Rome diocese in the Clem- entine Hall of the Vatican Pal- ace, The new Pope will also grant an audience to the diplomats ac- credited to the Holy See later in the day. His coronation will be this Sunday. | All indications so far were! that Pope Paul will be an ener- gétic and dynamic pontiff. He "WEATHER FORECAST Sunny, Warm ' Today, Tuesday Forecasts issued by the Tor-| onto weather office at 5 a.m.:) Synopsis: A massive high North Bay..segeees SOGDUIY. sivcccsee OF Ss | Earlton .... 5 was elected Friday to' succeed Pope John XXIII who died three weeks ago. Sunday, Pope Paul, formerly Giovanni Battista Cardinal Mon- tini, Archbishop of Milan, was]. cheered by 100,000 persons packing St. Peter's Square when he appeared at a window of the Vatican Palace to give his Sun- day noon blessing, The Pope broke with tradition by giving the blessing from a window on the second floor in- stead of the private apartments on the third floor. INTRODUCES TO CROWD In another unusual gesture he brought Leo Josef Cardinal Sue- nens, Archbishop of Malines and Brussels, to the window and in- troduced him to the crowd. Earlier the Pope held audi- ences with two American cardi- nals -- Francis Cardinal Spell- man of New York and Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston-- and his two brothers, Ledovico and Francesco Montini. In his energetic beginning as crowd milled quietly outside downtown Cobo Hall, where city, state and national officials spoke over a loudspeaker sys- tem about the Negroes' fight for civil rights, Participants in the Detroit Council for Human Rights-- sponsored parade were led by southern Negro integration leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Detroit Mayor Jerome P, Cavanaugh. Also leading the parade were Walter Reuther, president of the International Union of United Automobile Workers of America (AFL-CIO), Michigan AFL-CIO president Angus Scholle, and former Democratic governor of Michigan John 8B. Swainson, who walked the entire route on two artificial legs. | passed the scene of bloody mas- sacres which took place during the June, 1943, race riot in | Thayer, bringing greetings from (CP)--Rabbi the office of the governor, was raham Feinberg said Saturday racial discrimination exists in province where about one-half inch was reported. In the Medi- cine Hat area, another severe by eppointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. which 34 persons were killed|drowned out by boos, hisses, and more than 700 were injured,|and jeers, each time be men- jtioned Romney's name. ARREST WHITE MAN > a The only incident reported by 1,600 police officers assigned to} Spice Islands Get Self-Rule the parade was the arrest of a/ white man, Joseph Laliberte, 39, | of suburban Berkley, who} stepped to the head of the pa- Canada although to a lesser degree than in the southern states. , a inch rought region, more than an was reported, | 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH He spoke to about 400 persons! at the end of a march from| Queen's Park to city hall com- memorating the assassinations of Medgar Evers and William Moore, | "There are 185,000 Indians in, jrade and demanded to see Dr. King. "What has been done here to- day will serve as an inspiration for all freedom-loving people of this nation,' 34-year-old King told a packed auditorium at Cobo Hall. "I am happy .. . this is the largest demonstration for civil rights ever," he said. | Popularity Lost Over Civil Rights WASHINGTON (AP) At- torney-General Robert F. Ken- nedy says President Kennedy probably has lost some popular- ity because of his civil rights legislation but will be re-elected in 1964, "Any time you get into a con- troversy and a deep and bitter controversy such as this is, and where there is a large percent- age of people in a section... opposed to the action that is be- ing taken by the government, . . The president is going to to debate and discuss this leg- islation without this kind of pressure." Today, the assistant Senate Democratic leader, Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, plans to add to the Kennedy program a bill to establish a fair em- ployment practices division in the labor department. Southern democratic senators, meanwhile, have tentatively scheduled a meeting to marshal their forces for an expected fili- lose popularity and administra- tion will lose popularity," he said Sunday. | He added in a radio and tele- | vision interview (NBC -- Meet the Press) that while the ad- ministration has made no at- tempt to measure the political effect of its civil rights meas- ures "I have heard of other which indicate that the presi- dent has lost a good deal of his popularity because of- his ef- fort." COMMITTED TO PACKAGE Still, the attorney - general said, bis brother and others in the administration are | jday that he will make another soundings that have been taken|_-- com.-| 5 gram. A pro-civil rights republican, |Senator Kenneth B. Keating of New York, pledged on a taped radio - television program Sun- effort to modify the rule which requires a two-thirds majority of those voting to stifle senate HEADS CANCER GROUP | WINNIPEG (CP)--Dr. Renaud |Lemieux, 63, of Quebec City was elected president of the Ca- nadian Cancer Society at the or- ganization's annual meeting Sat- urday. ZANZIBAR (Reuters)--Brit- : ' this country living in almost| ain hands over internal self- indescribable squalor," he said. | buster against the Kennedy pro-| {government to the spice islands of Zanzibar and Pemba today, two weeks before elections for a government expected to lead the protectorate to full inde- |pendence. | A public holiday has been de- \clared for today but no celebra- tions are planned. Politicans from the three major parties were reported to be more in- terested in campaigning for the closely-fought election. All three parties are counting on full independence by the end of this year and membership in the proposed East African Fed- eration, which would link the is- lands with Kenya, Uganda and | Tanganyika. : | Sir George Mooring, chief British adviser to the Sultan of Zanzibar, will then swear in three new minsters to increase the cabinet to eight from five, and Sheikh Mohammed Shamte, leader of the Zanzibar-Pemba People's Party, will become prime minister instead of chief minister, The islands, with a. popula- tion of 300,000 Arabs, Asians and Negroes, have been a Brit- ish protectorate since the last "Because of our immigration| laws, Chinese are compelled to exist without a normal family] life. There is discrimination) against colored people in some of our churches." The rabbi said unless the) evils that killed Evers and) Moore were stamped out, "the/ land will be filled with the shadow of death." | Medgar Evers was field sec- retary of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of | Colored People, killed May 12 in Jackson, Miss. Moore was killed in late April on an integration march to Jackson. The rabbi, who led the march of about 200 persons, said it aimed to express "sympathy with those fighting for integra-| tion in the southern states and] to make dramatic protest about) the -hidden anti-Negro discrimi-| nation existing in Toronto. Fewer than 30 Negroes joined) the march. Negro writer Austin Clark said: "We are not trying to reach the black community alone. We are trying to reach! everybody and help them to) SPECIALS TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ONLY GOVERNMENT IN SLICED PORK LIVER RINDLESS BACON LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS LEAN MINCED BEEF BONELESS SHANK SPECTED MEAT 19 C th live together." decade of the 19th century. Zanzibar is the name used for both islands, which are 40 miles off the east African coast. The next major step towards independence comes when the islanders vote for a new govern- ment in week-long elections be- ginning July 8. @ Commercial end Industrial Sites @ Leaseback @ Development Paul Ristow REALTOR |] 187 King St. E, 728-9474 mitted to the civil rights pack-| age sent to Congress last week) "and we are going to do all that we can in the executive branch of the government to ATOX ATOX kills have it passed," TABLE DUST At the same time, the attor- VEGETA ney-general sought to discour- age a march on Washington by) pressure area covering much of|Sault Ste. Marie... the eastern half of the continent|Kapuskasing ..... 'is almost stationary, providing| White River....... - continued sunny and warm wea-|Moosonee ......... ther over most of Ontario Timmins .... Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie.) |spiritual leader of the world's {500,000,000 Roman Catholics the Pope during the weekend broad- jcast a major message to the|pro-civil rights forces while the |world, received a stream of pre- | legislation is being considered. lates in audience, and left the} Kennedy said that while he We Believe Them to Be $20-$25 Values -- Our Price Now Only! GROUND AND POLISHED TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL PRESCRIPTION Prescription sun glasses will contribute a great deal for your visual comfort and efficiency in the days ahead, Summer vacations, 55 Observed Temperatures SINGLE VISION ~ Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On-| ,tario, Haliburtm, Georgian «Bay, Algoma, southern White | River, Timagami regions, Wind. + sor, London, Hamilton, Toronto, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. ; Marie: Sunny and warm today and Tuesday. Winds light be- coming southwest 20 Tuesday afternoon. 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The Vatican radio also an- nounced the coronation would break with tradition by taking|= place in the evening at an open- jair ceremony in front of St, Pe- ter's Basilica. | The ritual usually is held in-| side the basilica except:-for the moment when the golden tiara is placed on the pontiff's head. |has "great sympathy" for pick-| jets, parades and demonstrations| jaimed at correcting grievances, | |*Congress should have the right} mss MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES | | DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 || 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. 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