Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Sep 1963, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

You 1 hold sina live within your means, even if you have to borrow to do it. Sunny with cloudy intervals and--- 'warmer with increasing humi- dity Wednesday. i EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL. 92--NO. 218 1,200 Plan To March On Capital BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Negroes, incensed over the bombing deaths of four of their children, plan to march on Montgomery to lay directiy before Governor George C. Wal- lace their feeling that he is to blame for the slayings. At their first gathering since the Sunday dynamite blast, an estimated 1,200 Negroes took a unanimous standing vote Mon- day night to endorse a march on the state House of Representa- tives. The vote came after three tegration leaders called. for non- violence and accused Wallace of causing the racial tension that led to the dynamiting of the 16th Good Wishes Pour In For Royal Family LONDON (OP) -- Congratula- tions poured in from around the world today following an an- nouncement -Moday that the Queen is expecting a fourth child early next year. Some of the messages were sent directly to Scotland's Bal- moral Castle, where the Queen and her family now are vaca- tioning, and many others were received at Buckingham Pal- ace, her London residence. Crowds of people were grouped around the palace early today to watch for official visitors. The Queen was expected to interrupt her vacation Thursday to accompany her 13-year-old daughter, Princess Anne, to Benenden School, just south of London, where she will study this year. any more official enga; --)Street Baptist Church, No date for the march was set. Funeral services for 14-year- old Carol Robertson, one of the four girls killed by the blast, will be held this afternoon at St. John's African Methodist Ep- iscopal Church. OTHERS ON WEDNESDAY Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth told the rally that mass. services for the other three victims will be held Wednesday at the Sixth Avenue South Baptist Church-- where the rally was held. The iN-ithree were Denise McNair, 11, and Addie Mae Collins and Cyn- thia Wesley, both 14. Negro leaders here and across the U.S. called for use of more federal power in Birmingham, but a government source in Washington said there was no legal basis to put additional troops in the city now. There are 300 federalized troopers on alert here. Sheriff Melvin Bailey said two white teen-agers were arrested on .an open charge in the slay- ing of orfe of two Negro boys shot to death a few hours after the death - dealing dynamite blast, City police said the other youth was killed when they fired buckshot at fleeing Ne- groes after a rock-throwing in- cident. In Washington, President Ken- nedy expressed "a deep sense of outrage and grief' over the bombing and called on all Amer- feans to put aside prejudices and to unite in working for jus- tice and peace. "Words and actions" of Wal- lace and the segregation system crused the Sunday deaths, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said at the rally. He said Wallace '"'had allowed himself to defy the law of the land and to deal with Negro cit- izens in Alabama as if they ../didn't live in the state." The governor declined com- 0 march nine days and Mr. Yar- remko's yuu "already at acct He had s: d earlier|the centre of a political storm he deplored the bombing andjtouched off Friday by the res- -- perpetrators would be caug) A MALAY GESTURES as he takes part in an anti-Indo- nesian demonstration on the grounds of the Indonesian em- bassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia today. The demon- stration broke out shortly be- fore newly-born Malaysia an- tes 3 nounced the break in diplo- matic relations with its two largest neighbors, hostile Indo- nesia and the unfriendly Philippines. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The provincial secretary's de- partment was the target Mon- day for continued attack by op- position leaders as Liberal Leader John Wintermeyer charged there was a friend of gambling syndicates in the de- partment. Provincial Secretary John Yaremko denied the charges and challenged Mr. . Winter- meyer to name the person he was talking about. The new assault came with the province's general election ignation of the deputy minister, Robert J. Cudney. Big Search Organized For Maple Grove Girl MAPLE GROVE (Staff) -- Volunteers to aid in the search for a 13-year-old girl were called } today by the missing girl's mother, Mrs. J. Harvey Green. ley, of Maple Grove. The girl, Noreen Ann Green- ley, has been missing since Sat- urday night when she was seen running to catch a Maple Grove bus, in Bowmanville. Nearly 70 searchers scoured the area around the missing girl's home yesterday. Bow- manville Police Constables also searched the brush along High- way 2. BIGGER SEARCH today. "Our search will begin around © 3.30 p.m. today," said Duplate worker Steve Melnichuck, 'Anybody who would like to NOREEN help out should report to the Greenley residence on Preston street in Maple Grove. Late ar- rivals will search." PLANE USED Mrs. Greenley said this morn- ing' that a. brother-in-law, Mal Greenley, would be searching the area from his private plane. "We also may bring a spe- cially-trained dog to aid in the search," she added. A spokesman for the Bowman- ville Police said many of the missing girl's friends are being checked, as well as places where she usually "hung out". The Maple Grove Public School pupil was last seen when she left a girlfriend's place to board a bus to her home. Police believe that she never! got on the bus. The missing _ girl described as five foot, two inches im height; medium build and weighs around 100 pounds. She has short brown hair worn in bangs. When last seen she was wearing a white blouse, orange sweater, black jeans, white socks with black running shoes. She might have been wearing a was) A bigger search was planned bE | re ES ANN GREENLEY cream beige, three-quarter length imitation leather coat. Anyone knowing the where- abouts of the girl should get in touch with either the Bowman- ville Town Police station or the OPP office in Bowmanville. Quints Reported In Good Health ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP)--The| Fischer quintuplets went into their fourth day at 3 a.m. to- day, breathing easily and with reported good color on all of them. Dr. James Berbos, who brought the four girls and a boy into the world between 1 a.m. tario. Mr. Donald C. MacDonald, New Democratic Party leader, said Monday in Galt Mr. Cudney was the victim of a "war of nerves" and was condemned by mem- bers of the Conservative gov- ernment for telling the truth when he testified before the Roach royal commission on or- ganized crime last year. FULL TERM Premier John Robarts, mean- while, made a coffee-and-cakes tour of five Metropolitan Tor- onto ridings and appealed for term at the helm of the), [Ontario government. Today the premier heads to Sault Ste. Marie to begin a campaign swing in Northern On- Wintermeyer also goes north to Earlton, New Liskeard ang Cobalt, while the NDP leader will stump his own suburban Toronto riding of York South. Mr. Wintermeyer, speaking in London, said confidential files of the provincial secretary's de- partment showed that gambling syndicates had and still have a friend, inside the department. He said that an agreement be- twee Mr. Yaremko and Lib- eral counsel made at the time of the Roach commission pre- vented him from naming the man involved. SHOULD NAME HIM Mr. Yaremko, in an_ inter- view in Toronto, said the Lib- eral leader "owes it to the pub- lic not to cast innuendoes on the whole department but to name jnames."" He said rules concerning the reading of confidential files into the record of the crime com- mission were made by the com- missioner, Mr. Justice W. D. Roach. In Toronto, Premier Robarts in a statement issued by Mr. Yaremko suggested that Mr Cudney had felt the Roach com- and 3 a.m. Saturday had termed the first 72 hours crucial. mission report had reflected on)' ' program." him. Campaign Attack Hits Provincial Secretary Mr. Yaremko denied he had abused Mr. Cudney. 'I deny flatly that I have harassed him, I deny flatly that I have in- sulted him. If anything, my at- titude to him at all times has been kindly sympathetic and un- derstanding." Mr. Yaremko said there was no basis for Mr. Cudney's claims in his letter of resigna- tion that reforms' promised within the department had not been carried out. NDP Leader Le ccagerd y conference ty Cudney's resignation was "an- other example of the persistent and calculated effort on the part of the Progressive Conservative government to keep things from the public." OTTAWA (CP) -- Resignation of George Drew as Canadian high commissioner in London has been accepted, but he will remain at his post until Jan. 1. The announcement, made by Prime Minister Pearson's office today, said Mr. Drew had told the former Conservative govern- ment at the time of his appoint- ment that he wished to retire in August, 1963, when he com- pleted six years as high com- missioner, Mr. Drew is 69. The former Conservative na-' tional leader's letter of resigna- tion, addressed "my dear Mike," said he wished to resign "at the earliest date convenient to you." "May I say how greatly I have enjoyed the very cordial relations which have at all times existed between us." IT'S "MIKE' AND 'GEORGE' The letter of resignation and Prime Minister Pearson's letter of acceptance both were dated last Friday, Sept. 18. Mr. Pear- son's. letter, addressed 'dear George," said: "T have received your letter of resignation consequent on your completion of six years' service as high commissioner to Lon- don, the period during which you originally agreed to con- tinue in that post. "In accepting this resignation, I would ya to Fege you very sincerely for the distingui: devoted way a3 which you a our coun the 'United Kingdom dating these years, Our gratitrde should also go to your wife, who has been of invaluable help to you in the fine work that both have done for Canada. Foreign Aid Cuts Disastrous: JFK WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres- ident Kennedy told United States businessmen today that "disastrous" cuts by the House of Representatives in foreign aid funds would damage U.S. export trade as well as its se- | curity. In a speech before 400 execu- tives at the White House Con- ference on Export Expansion, Kennedy made a bid for indus- try support in the administra- tion's push for restoration of the aid money in the Senate. "I hope you will join me in seeking to reverse these disas- trous cuts," he said Although the two- -day export conference was called to enlist business co-operation in the gov- ernment-wide effort to eliminate the balance of payments defi- cit, Kennedy devoted a third of his address to what he called 'our much abused foreign aid be told where to >| GRAIN DEAL BENEFITS OTTAWA (CP)--Soviet Rus- sia dropped a pep pill into the @ahadian economy Monday, signing to buy nearly $500,000,- 000 worth of wheat and flour by July 31. The unprecedented order) poses a great challenge to Cana-| dian transport and handling. fa- cilities, Trade Minister Sharp said. : But the economic benefits were seen spreading out from the Prairie grain belt into auto, farm machinery and other dur- able goods industries as well as By July 31, Russia will take 198,000,000 bushels of wheat and 29,500,000 bushels of flour in wheat equivalent--about a third of this year's near-record wheat crop of an estimated 694,000,000 bushels. Canada is providing credit up to $200,000,000 and the Soviet is paying--probably in dollars--25 per cent down and the rest over 18. months. { These financial conditions are} the same as in the second long- term agreement with Red China for a maximum 186,700,000 transport and port employment payrolls. The contract, largest single one in Canadian history, was} cloaked in renewal of a three- year trade pact with the] U.S.S.R. The first was signed in| CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS | The new agreement resurrects |$657,000,000 and totalled 333,000,- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 jspent in Russia by Canada. |1956 and extended most-favored- nation tariff treatment to Rus- jSia, plus providing for some wheat deliveries there. that trade accord, ending the! jconditions of the expired--or second--pact which called on Russia to buy $2 from Canada |~ including wheat--for every $1;ments that Canada might have|be shipped from eastern portsihasten the suppl jsold more to Russia. But thelalthough every one in Canada'export terminals. |The record is " 408,000, 000 busheis bushels of wheat up to July 31, 1965. Canadian wheat and flour ex- ports are certain to hit a rec-| jord 550,000,000 bushels--worth more than $1,000,000,000 -- by inext July 31, Mr. Sharp said. in 1928-29. | Wheat and flour exports in the calendar year 1962 ran about 000 bushels for the year ended last July 31. Mr. Sharp indicated Monday at the public signing of docu- physical demands of moving wheat and other grains into po- sition--for domestic use and for regular customers abroad --limited the size of the sale. Negotiations began Sept. 3 with Canada unaware of the magnitude of the Russian order. It followed the straight cash purchase worth $22,000,000--for 11,000,000 bushels -- of Canadian wheat now being shipped. After April 17, 1965, Russia/i jwil buy another 18,700,000) bushels of wheat. S. A. Borosov, first deputy minister of foreign trade, signed jthe trade and wheat deals Mon- |day--as he had done in 1956-- and blamed the need to import wheat on adverse weather. Nor- mally, the U.S.S.R. has enough for itself plus considerable ex- ports, he said. More purchases might. be! made from time to time, sup-| plying eastern Russian areas.) But .Canada. must note that} trade is a two-way street and| that Russia has a wide var- iety of available goods More than half the wheat will he : Pep Pill For Canada will be used, Mr, Sharp said. But Vancouver--a "serious bot- tleneck'"' on which consideration was being given to expansion-- already is busy with Red Chi- ese and other Asian shipments. This: means a race to move enough wheat from the Prairies by water before the official end of seaway navigation Nov. 30. After that, rail transport is needed the whole way and this is more expensive. However, given a late fall, seaway ship- ping can continue past the Nov. 30 date. MUST STOCKPILE GRAIN, But while laying down wheat and flour for Soviet - chartered ships, the Canadian wheat board also must maintain supplies to regular customers and stockpile its usual amounts of feed grains for eastern farmers. In a strictly cash deal, Cuba is getting $33,000,000 worth of jthe wheat and flour. Unspecified other amounts can go to other ;Communist countries in Europe. Mr. Sharp said he hoped all concerned would co - operate to} ly of wheat at] Fi The White House foreign aid request was $4,500,000,000 but after successive slashes by the House foreign affairs commit- tee and the House itself, the authorization bill now calls for only $3,500,000,000. Kennedy said the U.S. will strike out for "bold but inevit- able involvement in expanding world trade." "We are challenging the other nations of the world to join in unlocking new wealth and new energies and I think we are equal to the task," Kennedy added. "We now are committed in the Trade Expansion Act to full participation in a world market of vast dimensions," he said, urging American exporters to show more daring and ingenuity in world competition--including price-cutting. "The New World was a land of competitive pricing. The old World was the home of cartels and rigid price maintenance. Now I read that the exports of other nations have oftened ex- panded more rapidly than ours because their businessmen have become better competitors--be- cause European producers, un- like American producers, re- spond to excess capacity by re- ducing prices in order to main- tain- production, rather than re- ducing production to maintain prices." DISCUSS HIGHER TARIFFS Kennedy spoke to delegates representing all branches of American industry as, in an- other quarter, a special White House group worked on a list of proposed higher tariffs on Eu- Topean goods as a counter-meas- ure against the high European Common Market tariff on Amer- ican chickens. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... 350 Rotarians At Friendship Day .... Page 9 To Unveil Rail Commuter Details . Page 9 City Honors GEORGE DREW Stormed By KUALA LUMPUR (AP) -- Newly - born Malaysia severed diplomatic relations today with its two largest neighbors, hos- tile Indonesia and the unfriendly Philippines. A screaming, rock- throwing mob stormed the In- donesian Embassy. The anti-Indonesian violence broke out shortly before Malay- sia's one-day-old government announced the break in rela- tions, : More than 1,000 Malays marched on the Indonesian Em- bassy and 200 surged into the embassy grounds. They set fire to one building, smashed win- dows and furniture, tore up a picture of Indonesian President Malays -- and denouced him as a liar. The riot was revege for @ similar mob action Monday against the Malaysian embassy oo" the Indonesian capi- Indonesia bitterly opposed the British-sponsored Federation of Malaysia--a union of Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo launched at midnight Sunday night. All are former British colonies. z No one was injured in the 33- . minute demonstration here. Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malay- eve pint ee re ina statement his governm its diplomatic action Pecanee Indonesia "has broken off Gloves C VANCOUVER (CP) -- The gloves are coming: off in the Sept. 30 British Columbia pro- vincial election campaign. The leaders are setting the tone for the province's fifth gen- eral election in 10 years, and much is being said about the province's two great power plans--the Peace and Columbia. Premier W. A. C. Bennett told a Quesnel audience Monday night his Social Credit govern- ment is the only one that will In B.C. Campaign ome Off ment-labor relations are in a state of bitterness and disor- der." Earlier in Vancouver, the Provincial Liberal leader, Ray Perreault, came out with an- other plank in his party's plat- form--an education plank under which more money would be provided for universities, and a series of vocational schools and ped colleges would be He said if elected his party ever build the $750,000,000 Peace ished) project already under way. Scofting at his artaged his government --details would be disclosed later -- and predicted all the power would be oversold by the time the first stage is com- pleted. Progressive Conserva- tive Leader E. Davie Fulton who has said he would slow the Peace and get on: with the Co- lumbia, said at Salmon Arm that B.C, needs a government that won't regard labor and all labor organizations as enemies of society. IT 'IS FOLLY' "To ignore the importance of labor in our prospects for eco- nomic and industrial deveiop- ment is folly," he told a public meeting. The leader of the Progressive Conservatives -- who haven't had a member in the legisla- ture for 10 years -- said BC. will never attract new industry nor have a climate for economic would institute a system of Racial Issues In UN Assembly UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- The United Nations General Assembly opens its 18th an- nual session today with the fo- cus mainly on racial and colon- ial issues. Already some observers are calling it the "African session." Delegates from 111 member states will hear retiring presi- dent Mohammad Zafrulla Khan of Pakistan open the session at 3 p.m. in the big blue and gold assembly chamber. Among the few national lead- ers present will be Prime Min- ister Pearson, who flew from Ottawa by department of trans- port Viscount Monday night ac- mats believe the lomatic relations with Mala without any apparent mie We have no choice but to do likewise and to recall our am- bassador and the embassy staff." He said the Philippines had asked that the Philippine Em- bassy be reduced to consulate status, Rahman called the re- ig unacceptable and seme his ambassador from Manila. In Jakarta, Indonesian goy- ernment and military leaders affirmed their full support 6f President Sukarno's so - called policy of confrontation -- Malaysia, a farses ukarmo govern which is believed to pein signs on two of the Malaysian states, Sarawak and North neo, neo, sharees thet that Tee - ttend| Asia, _ a ntence * bi ' ee hostility. is not likely to. lead to war, Indonesia has the largest armed force in Reon a much of it So- P) but a rs un- willing to risk a divect direct clash with Spritish forces. that ere pledged to defend Malaysia. The Philippines opposition te Malaysia is based on Manila's claim to part of North Borneo, Quebec Accused Of Discriminating MONTREAL (CP) -- John Boyle, Independent, and Luke G. Dougherty, running as an J dependent Liberal in the good real Notre Dame de Grace vincial byelection Sept. 25, a day night accused the Quebec government of expansion so long as "'govern- companied by External Affairs Martin. against English-speaking prod dians. PORT ARTHUR, Tex. (AP)-- Hurricane Cindy slammed over- land with her full force at 8 a.m. today after hurling high winds and tides at the Texas and Loui- siana roasts all night. The hurricane's 80 - mile - an- hour punch moved in between Galveston and Port Arthur. About 12,000 persons fled ahead of the winds and abnor- mal tides, most of them leav- ing Louisiana's Cameron Parish (county) where more than '500 died in hurricane Audrey in Texas coastal residents gen- power of a hurricane until late afternoon. During the night Cindy turned slightly to the west after first aiming at Sabine Pass which separates Louisiana and Texas. The town of Cameron, La., was sealed off as rising. tides covered the only highways lead- ing inland, The 10,000 residents of the parish moved inland, most to Lake Charles and Sulphur. At, least three persons were missing on boats off the parish. Twenty-six. men, trapped by the sudden forming of the erally remained calm, Only those living on low ground fied their homes. Tides at Port Arthur were ex- pected to go no higher than five feet above normal after ear- lier forecasts of eight feet. Even at five feet, some ground is sub- ject to flooding in this low area. Galveston's tides reached five to eight feet above normal. But the major portion of the flodd- ing came from. heavy rain ra ther than tides The Red Cross counted 1,078 persons it had placed in 13 shelters in Galveston County, many of them from Bolivar Pe- ninsula and the unprotected west end of. Galveston Island. rains -as great as 10 inches Victoria Shamrocks Page 9 Ward Sysiem Petition Expected Soon - Page 9 Pickering Firm Signs Union Contract .. would fall. storm, rode out the winds and battering waves on two offshore Weathermen predicted that) Strong winds spread' out 100 7 miles from the eye. The storm sprang up sud- idenly in the Gulf of Mexico . Page 3 |Monday and did not reach the WHERE CIND Thousands Flee Coast Ahead Of Hurricane oil well -- rigs. am gue on one reported - peavey Myler winds. Lake Charles Mayor Alfred E. Roberts declared his city in a state of emergency and said it was prepared to feed up to 10,- 000 refugees. Port Arthur's 70,000 popula- tion boarded up, taped windows and sandbagged to reduce dam- age. Mrs: Walter Sumner, a. civil ep worker, said there Shelters in nearby Y IS HEADED indy AE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy