Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Sep 1963, p. 2

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2: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 9, 1963 These four babies were born in Jackson,- Miss., Saturday night to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P, Harkins, boosting their ~ QUADRUPLETS DOING FINE children to a total of 9, the oldest being 6-years-old. The quadruplets, weighing from 3 to 4 pounds, were "doing fine', Mother and father re- ported same. --AP Wirephoto IMF Seems To Reject Idea New Plan Needed By HAROLD MORRISON WASHINGTON (CP) -- The International Monetary. Fund says the free world now has suf- ficient credit resources and fa- cilities without having to set up mew systems. This appeared to be an out- right rejection of Britain's 1962 contention that a new form of international banking should be set up with deposits backed by gold. At the same time, U.S, Trea. sury Secretary Doughas Dillon estimated it may take more than four years to end the for- eign drain on U.S, dollars. The real problem for world liquidity and credit, he says, will come when the U.S. bal- ances its international pay- ments, "becuase the extra liq- uidity fed into the system by the U.S. deficit will cease." NOT ALARMING ... ... .... Dillon aired his view in an in- terview with The Associated Press just as the fund, in pub- lishing its annual report, took note of' the American deficit, which, it stated, should be no cause for alarm. It is inevitable, the fund main. tained, that monetary reserves would sometimes decline "even in the case of countries that build up large gold holdings." "This has happened in recent years to the U.S, and may well vided to the U.S. economy by a|uing to pursue partial measures proposed U.S. income tax cut. This, together with the indica- tion that European profit mar- gins are declining, might offset |net export of American capital. In dealing with the question of world credit, the fund noted it now has at.its disposal a total of $21,000,000,000 provided by member countries through quo- tas and other arrangements. In addition, some countries, including Canada and the U.S., have engaged in currency swap and other bilateral arrange- ments that have tended to ex- pand liquidity or credit to fi- nance world trade and other op- erations, BACKED BY GOLD Britain last year suggested a new look be given to the mon- etary system, including the pos- sibility of establishing what would be in effect another world bank where countries with mon- etary surpluses could make de- posits. All such deposits would be backed by gold. | The U.S. rejected this..on. the basis this might lead to devel- opment of a new world cur- rency forcing the American dol-| lar to take a back seat as an acceptable worjd reserve cur- rency. ' The fund said it is watching the world situation carefully and|jes, happem in Europe." if needed, would be prepared to} The fund estimated that dur- ing 1962 there were upward pressures cn wages and prices in Europe and Japan "whilé\a considerable degree of price are required,| these could be accomplished through enlargement of the fund's present facilities rather stability prevailed in the US. and Canada." The fund noted also that both the U.S. and Britain are lean.| ing toward expensionary poli- cies. This might worsen the U.S. payments deficit since U.S./ expansion could attract more} imports | REDUCE DOLLAR EXPORT .| To offset this would be the! stimulation that could be pro- than establishing new ones, it added. -Dillon, in his. interview, said countries studying the liquidity problem likely will do so more serously when the U.S.. bal. ances its international books. But on his outlook, it would seem that situation will be some years away, perhaps not until after. 1967 Meanwhile, the U.S. is contin- WEATHER FORECAST Fine Weather Will Continue Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: High pressure cur- rently over the midwest is ex-| pected to build eastward over the Great Lakes in the next 24 hours promising a continuation of fine weather today and Tues- day. Lake: St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, Windsor, London, Ham-| ilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals today and Tues. day, continuing warm, winds light. : "Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- goma, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Clear with a few cloudy periods tonight and Tuesday, winds light. Timagami, Cochrane: Varia- ble cloudiness tonight and Tues- day. Winds northwest to nort! erly 10 to 15. { 'White River: Mostly sunny and warmer with light winds to- day and Tuesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Tuesday Windoor ...0.0000. 85 75 St. Thomas....ooe. 55 75 London .... oo 52 75 Kitchener ....s00. 52 75 Mount Forest...... 50 72 3 72 | eo: nf eee ee 52 5 55 1 Killaloe ...sccsse5 50 72 | Muskoka seosecess 50 2 North Bay........ 50 70 Sudbury ... eos =6(50 70 Earlton 45 70 Sault Ste Marie... 50 70 Kapuskasing ..... 40 70 White River.. - 40 75 Moosonee ... 35 60 Timmins ......... 40 70 the dollars drain and reduce the, suggest further improvements.| | But if changes ,|United States totalled 4,179,067. to reduce the deficit, including a tax on foreign securities which caused alarm in Canada and other countries. fernment had misjudged the for- eign raction to the securities tax proposal now before the House ways and means com- mittee, Dillon said: "It probably is 'a fair state- jeuant that the reaction in Can- jada was more extreme than we jhad amticipated, though we had known there would naturally be sone reaction there because they were the big borrowrs |down here. "We had felt they (the Cana- jdians) could adjust to this tax land get along all right with it without major disruption in the Canadian economy. They felt otherwise.' The proposed tax of up to 15 per cent of the purchase price would apply until the end of 1965, New Canadian issues were excluded from the levy after the Canadian administration pro- tested and official Canadian monetary reserves started to decline, The Canadian government still hopes to get a complete ex- emption from the measure which has been under sharp at- tack from U.S. securities deal- ers and life insurance compan- jin food could cause bone can- |cer in humans who consume it: = jand 1962. Asked whether the U.S. gov-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- The milk supply of the United States during June contained a record high national daily level of 32 picocuries of radioactive stron- tlum - 90 per litre, the Public' Health Service reported Satur- day. A This was nearly double the national leve of 17 pitocuries recorded in June, 1962, the high- est for any month last year. A spokesman for the service said the figures bore out estimates 'made earlier this year by the federal radiation council, The council said jast May that the fallout levels this year would probably be substantially in- creased over these in 1962 but would '"'still be, in relative terms, far short of figures which would cause concern or justify counter - measures."' Ex- cessive amounts of strontium-90 The report said the increase would result largely from nu- clear weapons testing in 1961 A health service spokesman said the service is watching with gre at interest to see |whether there will be a nationa! |lowering of the strontium-90 }count in subsequent months, jsince June was the peak 1962 month. The Canadian health depart- ment reported in August that average levels of long - lived radioactive fallout reached rec- ord heights in Canada during June but said they were still within acceptable limits. The report also said that levels of short - lived sadioac- tive materials dropped sharply, some of them so much they jcould hardly me measured. |. The report also said that the June level of strontium-90 was well above May and would re- main high in July and perhaps August. It predicted a decline jin the fall and winter months if there were no more nuclear tests. It must have cost a fortune just to collect the 102 works-- ranging all the way from a $200,000 Picasso to the white and white and black on black types. The $30,000 in prize Soviet Presses | Propaganda On Red China MOSCOW (AP)--Pressing the propaganda war against Red China, Pravda reached to Cen- tral America Sunday for an ac- cusation that, the Communist Chinese are tfaining guns on Soviet Communists. : The Soviet Communist party newspaper reproduced a resolu- tion adopted recently by the Strontium-90 -- Level Higher | from ail parts of the worl tary bands and champagne. reception. money was probably not the biggest item on the account which included the gala dinner; with the celebrities ces in , an imposing panel of judges, mili- The day included the unveil- ing of a Lord Beaverbrook head outside the gallery, and a big Fredericton Inundated With Art By JACK BRAYLEY brook, who picked up the heavy tab, admitted with a wry smile the modern diet was as strange to her taste as it was to most of the invited guests. The Dunn International Exhi- bition at the Beaverbrook Gal- lery includes a key work by vir- tually "every living artist of fame and promise" and six of them won $5,000 prizes--five for elusive works that made many of the patrons feel like squares. But the Canadian winner--Alex Colville of Sackville, N.B,--had a Boy and Dog on the St. John River scene that was a relief for most because it was both conventional and understood. As Lady Beaverbrook said at the gala dinner, she hoped the exhibition would prove lating." She could have used "bombshell'"' with little exagger- ation, For the opening night vis- Fr itors looked alternately startled, shocked and even pleased. Douglas Cooper of Avignon,|would be in danger, if they) France, one of the three judges helped in any attempt to do proposed a toast to Lord and Lady"Beaverbrook for creating an exhibition which "could not be surpassed" in many great art centres of the world. LIKED TRADITIONAL The hostess described the late Sir James Dunn, her first hus- band, as a passionate devotee of traditional art who rejected the of some modern painters. Her second-- Lord Beaverbrook, confined to hie English home through ill health--studies the new forms of painting, she said, with atl attempt to understand them. its Fredericton ' stand the Dunn International goes to the Tate.Gallery in London Nov. crude conceptions" After = * FREDERICTON (CP) -- This usually quiet and dignified New Brunswick capital was goggle- eyed Saturday over Atlantic Canada's first sortie into the' left-field reaches of contempor- Edwin Linkomies, 68, for- mer Finnish premier who served a prison term as a war criminal, died in Helsinki Sun- day of a heart attack, He headed a conservative gov- EX-PREMIER DIES ernment in 1943-44, He was accused and convicted after World War Two of aiding the Nazis and sentenced to 5% years imprisonment, --AP Wirephoto Castro D "stimu: By DANIEL HARKER HAVANA (AP) -- Premier idel Castro said Saturday nigh? 'United States leaders" away with leaders of Cuba, Bitterly denouncing what he called recent U.S. - prompted raids on Cuban territory, Castro said: "We are prepared to fight them and answer in kind. United Sta'es leaders should think that if they are aiding terrorist plans to eliminate Cu- ban leaders, they themselves will not. be safe." Speaking with this corres- pondent at a Brazilian national day reception in the Brazilian Embassy, Castro also disclosed that; Cuba has not yet made-up its m about signing the limited. @@clear test - ban treaty drawn up last month in Mos- cow. Communist party of Costa Rica. The resolution said: "Attacks on the main bulwark of the world Soviet systeem and training guns on the vanguard of the world Soviet system and ment on any pretextcannot be regarded as other than a break- | More Tourists | Visit Ontario TORONTO (CP)--Reports to date from tourist resorts, camp grounds and border crossing points indicate Ontario attracted more holidayers -- who spent more money--this summer than ever before. Until August, the number of cars entering Canada from the Ontario's share was 3,167,321 and its increase over last year, 242,778, was greater than the na- tional increase, More than 1,000,000 campers used provincial park facilities before Aug. 25, 16-per-cent more than last year. Daily vehicle permit sales were up 13 per cent and annual permits rose six per cent, | Comparison of traffic from ithe United States to that of jother years puts estimates of |U.S: spending in the province at 'about $350,000,000 to August. The ifigure will probably exceed '$500,000,000 by the end of the year 'hour, ing up of the unity of the social- ist camp...." The reference to "training guns" underlined the deepening gravity of the Soviet-Chinese struggle since the Chinese dis- closed last week that there had been incidents on the border be- tween the Soviet Union and China, Several thousand Chinese ci- vilians have been reported build- ing frontier fortifications in the central Asian Chinese province of Sinkiang. Unconfirmed re- ports here have said the So- viet Union has beefed up its mil- itary strength on the Chinese. border. Cuba Sugar Mill Said Destroyed MIAMI, Fla, (AP)--An anti- Castro group said Sunday a twin-engine bomber destroyed a sugar mill in Camaguey prov- ince in eastern Cuba Saturday night, Dr. Orlando Bosch, head of the. Revolutionary Recovery Movement, said the plane dropped six 50-pound bombs on the mill. Bosch said the plane, flying from a concealed base in Central America, was over A stripped nude at the Edin- burgh Festival Drama Con- ference here Saturday night while audience debated "The thea- tre of the future." Kesselaar clothes during a demonstra- tion of action theatre by a United Charles Marowitz. SURPRISE STRIP BY ART MODEL EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- shapely . 19-year-old girl intellectuals and. the Art college model Anna took off all her States. director Her appearance on a high balcony in the hall followed a prearranged dispute be- tween a member of the aud- fence and Marowitz. At a sig- nal Miss Kesselaar appeared stripped, Then she launched into a routine of bumps and grinds, She was hustled off by at- tendants and left wrapped in a red raincoat. Some in the international audience sat in shocked silence, cheered and clapped. Others Afterward, Anna was re- ported to have said that the conference needed jazzing up. The 40 - year - old Earl of Harewood, cousin of the Queen and artistic director of the festival, the quick strip, said: present during "One might say the confer- ence was extremely 'undull' today, I'm sure nobody was annoyed by what happened." Cuban territory for about an "We are. taking into account the current world situation, which of course involves the Caribbean situation, which has been deteriorating in the last few days due to piratical at- tacks by the United States Raids On Cubans enounces but now this trend has with attacks" Castro then launched into a discussion of the U.S. political scene, saying he expected no! change in Washington's foreign policy even if there is a change in administration after the 1964 presidential election. "T am sure it will be a fight between (President) Kennedy and (Senator Barry) Goldwater (Rep, Ariz.), Both are cheagy and crooked politicians Switching then to U.S. racial problems, Castro said: : "They are not racial really, but economic. The day the American Negroes understand that they need the right politi- cal orientation and decide. to unite their forces. behind politi- cal conscience they will win their battle.' As for his own problems, Cas- tro admitted that Cuba's next sugar crop will be low but said this will be compensated by high world market prices. He said he is not worried by economic problems or any other problems, although "there is a certain disorganization which changed jtles in United States history. main on record, authors and journalists will continue to have official licence to promote the so-called mystery of the Califor- nian and to vilify her master for commercial reasons." Marples said. last April he will consider any "new material" in| i the case. Ceremon Nearly 150 years as one of the most peaceful co-existences in the world was marked Sunday as some 3,000 persons came to South Bass Island in Lake Erie to celebrate the sesquicentennial y Marks Lake Erie Battle pendent countries can live and work together," Macdonald. said, He said the fact there are nearly 4,000 y of the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812, | Among those on hand were the great-great-great grandson and the great-great grandne- phew of the hero of the battle, Lieut. Oliver Hazard Perry. The grandson is Daniel Wooley of Norwalk, Ohio, and the nephew is U.S. Navy Ensign Matthew C. Perry. One hundred and fifty years ago this Tuesday, Lieut. Perry and his mine little hastily-built sailing vessels defeated six Brit- ish ships about two miles north- west of here in one of the most historic and dramatic naval bat- "There's not much attention given to this battle in Canadian history books,"' Ivan V. Macdon- ald, Canadian consul in Detroit, joked during the ceremonies on the steps of the Perry Victory and Peace Monument. However, he said the unprecedented pezce which has grown btween the other nations should follow. "This relationship should be advertised . . . that free, inde- Titanic Probe Reopening Requested LONDON (AP)--Reopening of the 1912 inquiry into the sinking of the Titanic is urged by a professional association of sea- farers--to clear the name of a dead sea captain. : The Mercantile Marine Serv- ice Association has called for government action in the inter- ests of the late Captain Stanley Lord. Lord was master pf the Cali- fornian, a British steamship cruising near the/Titanic when the largest ship afloat struck an Atlantic iceberg and went down with the loss of 1,513 lives. The inquiry later that year held he could have saved many lives if he had gone to the help of the sinking ship. Lord died last year at the age of 84. "Undoubtedly Captain Lord was grievously wronged," said a statement by the association, published in the current edition of the Merchant Navy Journal. Calling on the government to reopen the inquiry, the state- U.S. and Canada is a model that) the two-na- tions should be emphasized to the new, smaller nations, Representing the U.S. govern- the Navy, Victor M. Longstreet. expect in the future is a mili- 'ary capability sufficient meet the threats we face," Longstreet asserted. Recalling the inscription on Perry's battle flag, "Don't give up the ship," and his famous message to William Hemry Har- rison, "We have met the enemy and they are ours," Longstreet called on the free world to stand for "principles of international settlement by arbitration, dis- armament end a lasting peace for all nations." 4 Aout 100 private boats dotted the bay in front of the 352-foot- high monument, built in 1913. Also on hand were three U.S, navy vessels based on the lake, the Amherst, Whitehall and Hol. jlute to Perry at 3 p.m., the hour jat which Capt. Robert Barclay, commender of the British navy on Lake Erie, surrendered to Perry Sept, 10, 1813. Also taking part in the pro- gram were the U.S. Marine Corps band, the Strategic Air ' Command drill team and veteré ans' organizations from both the U.S, and Canada. : Three Men Killed As Car Hits Tree NIAGARA FALLS, Ont, (CP) Three men were killed and an- other critically injured early Sunday when their car failed to round a curve and struck a tree just west of here on the Chip- pewa Creek road. Dead are Kenneth Hotte, 22, Guy Nolet, 21, and Jacques R. Grenier, 25, all.of Welland, Gre- nier's brother, Ronald, 18, is re- ported in critical condition in hospital. s He suffered two broken an- kles and broken ribs. Hotte was believed to have been driving the others home to Welland after spending the eve- ning here, IN SAILING COMPETITIONS OSLO (AP) -- Crown Prince Harald of Norway, 26, lefi by plane Friday for the Uniied States where he will compete in ment added: "So long as the findings of the 1912 inquiries re- Transport Minister Ernest The government, however, has we are correcting." not moved beyond that. against the Cuban people." He reported charges made earlier in the Cuban press and by the government that these incursions were "financed, sup- ported and abetted by the United States." | ATTACKS CHANGE TREND World affairs, he said, "seemed to be entering a more peaceful climate a few days ago Monks' Deaths | NOTICE TO ALL EX-SERVICE MEN WOMEN AND DEPENDENTS Said Murders ROME (Reuters) -- Buddhist monks who burned to death in South Viet Nam recently were murder cases,. not suicides according to Ronan Catholic Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc, brother of President Ngo Dinh Diem. The Rome newspaper Il Tempo says Archbishop Thuc, who arrived here friday night, told the paper in an interview an old monk who died of burn- ing in Saigon' was in fact drugged and sprinkled with gas. 'Another bonze (Buddhist priest) set fire. to the fuel," the archbishop claimed. - Another priest in Hue was |felled with a hammer before 'he "sacrifice." Wednesday, one with question on war: ment or Hospital care is t Canadian Legion, Branch All ex-service personnel and their dependents are invited to take advantage of a FREE LEGION SERVICE W. R. BUCK Assistant Secretary, Service Bureau, Toronto LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 / FROM 2:00 TO 5:00 P.M. Also from 7:00 p.m., to completion of business ,.. to give skilled advice on Veteran's Benefits. Any- Veteran's Allowance (Burnt-Out Pension) . . . Treat- "MR. A, C. BRISEBOIS, Business Manager of Royal Oshawa, who will arrange an appointment. 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