Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Nov 1963, p. 1

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

; Community Chest Drive Entering Home Stretch She Oshawa Gimes £, 50,000 or oie Pass°'seience: commentator be ues THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'Cement is the stuff that won't harden until a small boy has run through it. ' ? WEATHER REPORT © Sunny Sunday and.a little mild- er. Clear, cold tonight " ~ i Pee 29 he 7 VOL. 92 -- NO. 257 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1963 Officials -- Pour SIU Data MONTREAL (CP) -- Primed by a series of RCMP. raids against the Seafarers' Interna- tional Union (Ind.), the federal wrnment is studying a quan- ity of seized documents to de- termine whether there are grounds for criminal proceed- ings. dean Martineau, a Montreal lawyer appointed special prose- cutor by the federal govern- ment, said the documents seized Friday would have to be pro- cessed "before we know all the steps that have to be taken next", The raids were conducted at Space Vessel Could Launch Moon Shot MOSCOW (AP)--A Sovif' sci- entist said today "that the new space ship Polyot-1 is the fore- runner of vehicles which may be used for building a moonshot launching platform in space. Tass news agency quoted Pro- fessor Viadimir Dobronravov, a mechanical engineer, as saying that with the perfection of the! Polyot space ships "'it will' be possible to create such space- ships which will solve the task/ of cosmonauts meeting in outer) space." | "Such meetings will be neces-| sary in the future, for building) big orbital space stations and) for manned flights to the moon and other planets," he added. The new Soviet spacecraft was launched Friday. It is un- manned. ~~ an assault against Capt. Frank) Over SIU headquarters here, the homes of SIU President Hal |Banks and. two union members and union halls in Ontario, | | Warrants empowered the! IRCMP to search for documents co. : ] Seven Perish In bearing on a 1957 assault against a rival union organizer and on the recent SIU work stoppage| that tied up most Great Lakes | shipping. | In the main raid, some 20 |Mounties under Inspector Alex- ander Cart spent most of the % : } jday at SIU headquarters. They) r | took out several cardboard} ™ boxes' and envelopes and placed ' | them in their cars. | | HE WON'T SAY | Inspector Cart declined to say| what was in them. | "We have search warrants!- "re »= 5 Freed Negroes Plan Next Move Four female stenographers AMERICUS, Ga. (CP-AP) --:down an injunction' prohip! NGUYEN NGOC THO HEADS GOVERNMENT from RCMP headquarters ac- companied the search party. Meanwhile other RCMP squads searched the homes of |Mr. Banks, union members \Jack Richardson and Paul; |Karsh and union halls in Tor- onto and Thorold, Ont. ! pani eet kong whether Mr fait 'when a federal court ruled|tion charges, |time. He was reported to have} that Georgia's insurrection JAW MUST PREPARE jbeen in New York Thursday. |i8 Uaconstitutional, plan to con-, Offici he stat t Meanwhile, Justice Minister |*™Ue warwing fer piv nant. aaa warner ae |\Lionel Chevrier reiterated in Montreal that a charge of con- Spiring to commit criminal as- Sault had been laid against Mr. Banks. H id c ' . so. Four of them § been lod agsiotio tiers chargea with violating the State Te changes were made in a whom he did not identify, lInsurrection Law. of 1871--which/ suit filed by a New York law learried the death penalty--andjfirm representing one of the FOLLOWS ASSAULT -- an unlawful assembly -statute|Jailed integration leaders. oer ge ean san during civil rights demonstra-| If upheld by higher courts, thet the charse et eg @Y 'tions 'here, ithe ruling would set a prece- | Tom| 'under iGeordint law; 'n6* bOAd for civil rights demonstra Walsh while Mr. Walsh was an if Permitted for a persom'tors to go directly to federa} jail in this south Georgia farm- next January by the court to jing centre Friday under a total/prepare their defence against lof more than $11,000 bond. They,Charges that they had engaged! had -been civil rights -movement here. beits at var- fous distances from the earth Council May Issue Stand | Against Reds | VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The! Vatican ecumenical council ap-! peared Friday to be under in creasing pressure to take a stand against totalitarianism, and by implication, Commu.| nism. The world-wide assembly of Roman Catholic patriarchs, car- dinals, archbishops and bishops is not expected to come up with a decree denouncing Commu- nism by name. But there are} signs it will denounce. persecu-) tion some Roman Catholics; must endure and the excesses; of totalitarianism in the modern world. | As the council discussed) Thursday the call to holiness! within the church, Bishop An-| drea Sapelak, a Ukrainian-rite Catholic, said: "The council must deciare, that those being persecuted and oppressed for their faith pre- cee others on the road to hol- iness,"" He said it required a special holiness to be able "to knee and prav for one's persecutors." Bishop Sapelak was seeking mention of persecution in the theological schema dealing with the nature of the structure of the ehurch. HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 250,000 225,000 | 200,000 175,000 150,000 125,000 100,000 i 75,000 25 | Start @ tganizer for the Canadian|chatged with a capital offence. (court with complaints of exces-| erchant Service Guild in 1957.) The three - member federal] aie aii ie | Mr. Martineau commentedjcourt ruled Friday two to one) Many civil rights workers ar- later that no charge had been |that both the insurrection law/Tested under Georgia's archaic laid because "the case is not and the unlawful assembly sta-/80-Called peace warrants were| yet complete." tute were unconstitutional, held in jail for months under Informed of Mr. Chevrier's| The court also directed auth.|bond so excessive that they ob- statement Friday, Mr. Martin-jorities to set reasonable bond,Viously could not obtain their eau said: on additional state and city|release. "If the minister said a charge charges against the four inte- has been laid it must be cor-\gtationists and two . other per- rect." jsons. All six were freed im- But "so far all we have done|mediately when bond_ was| in Monteal is take out search posted. warrants." : In its ruling, the court handed Leave Faces | | Snow Could Help Murder Count Parched Farmland driault, 21, of Massey, on leav By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ten-year-old Barbara Staten|daughter of the elder Mrs. But- was injured critically and John|ler by a previous marriage, also Staten, 15, the coyple's eldest}was injurd critically. child, was injured. and three of them were killed.|mother and daughter, |They were Mrs, Margaret Wor-|and a niece, land, 79, and her grand-daugh-! couples. ters, Ann . Margaret Worland, | 15, and Susan Worland, 14. Two/¢alled for an investi other grandchildren and thejthe Marion Count children's mother, Mrs. Irene/to determine whether the tra- Worland, were injured. jsedy was caused by "crimes of Motors Corporation plant physi-| FAMILY KILLED jeommission or omission." cian in Indianapolis; his wife,| A triple funeral will be held) Fire Chief Arnold Phillips} Mary, 45, a church organist,|/in Indianapolis Monday for Jo-\said he was 'almost certain"' | |from his Canadian army unit! stock and household water sup- lowing the street-fight death of Relief for Ontario's parched ® the urovince with a'dreaded éry at least another two inches of|Sudbury, 40 miles northeast of} snowflurry activity for today wl casita amei day night. the province .and 20 innorth-|health officer of health, Dr.) re third of an inch--far from ade-| "There is a danger that a) Mrs. Tommy Crabbs said she) since 1901, farmers now are con-jafter it carried water for ani-|boy fall backwards", she said.| ings, the freeze could solidify;mmended for wells being re-|Picked him up and dropped him Grand Jury To Probe to the Holiday on Ice revue at one member in the explosion an aunt} family died and a fifth was in i in Germany, was charged with plies. a youth. . farmland will probably come in A Sd Bruce Robinson, 18, of Salter the form of snow today but cool NEED MORE WATER freeze-up. rain was needed before any realjhere, of head injuries a few| The® weather office ' Friday relief could be reigstered. They|hours after a brawl outside an ne on cold winds that may| Another problem has cropped) 7 andriauit was remanded for bok the mercury to as low asjup in southwestern bebeb pled week: in magistrate's. court. ern areas, D, P. Harris, said public health|attempting to break up | Rain'al Thursday night and|problems are involved in the wa-jruckus, in which a crippled boy quate. jtruck may be called upon to de-/heard noise and shouting across) Although it was at least ajliver water for human consump-|the street. b fronted with a_ possible aid = ae eer sia elt aga "He is a tall boy and landed) reeze-up, nes . iflat on his back. His friends surface water before it soaks|plenished by tank trucks- or/again and he landed on_ his into the earth, cutting off live-'other water hauling facilities head." INDIANAPOLIS (AP)--Many the Indiana State Fairgrounds coliseum Thursday night and at that killed 64 persons and in- jured 385. critical condition in Marion County "7 Hospital. non-capital murder Friday fol- arctic air threatens to cover| Agriculture o'ficials had ei ee et ee. OF night predicted considerable could not predict the outcome | Fspanola bowling alley Thurs-| 32 degrees in southern parts of|where Elgin County's medical) Tt is bebeved asdsleclt was early Friday amounted to one-|ter shortage. ee involved, break in Ontario's worst drought|tion. without adequate cleansing! 'Suddenly I saw the Robinson| Long anticipated with misgiv-- Household chlorine was reco-| persons went in family groups least 18 families lor' more than Four members. of the Staten Killed the blast were Dr. estigation by) y grand: jury| Jesse E. Staten, 50, a General ten, 72, Greencastle, Ind. The|79, and his son, James J. But-| couple's son, David, 14 died/ler, 53. ° Friday night. James Butler's wile, Larene, for cooking in the concessions under the stands caused the ex- plosion, ~|children, Dougias, The fivé were released from/and city level were given until| said they were not mistreated.|in a conspiracy to suppress so | and 11 married'sjon Prosecutor Noble P. Pearcyjing 62 persons and inj REPORT 400 IN SAIGON RE Seven persons, six of them members of one family, died today in an early morning fire. Dead are Mrs. Mary Gilles- pie, 40, a widow, and her five 21, . Nancy, 15, Patricia, 12, Frances, 9, and Kathleen, 6, and Donna Gavin, 15, who was visiting the Gilles- pie family. William Walton of Perry) Point, N.B., also a visitor in the home, escaped by jumping from the third floor. All the dead ting were trapped on the third floor, | Five integration leaders, freedjthe prosecution of the four civil) Inspector John Ross of the|opened the window and. threw]! NB. House Fire ' | SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) --!the rear of a vacant condemned building. River, N.B.,.was on his way to work in the Provincial Hospital here when he saw smoke bil- lowing from the home at 3 a.m. ROUSES FAMILY He aroused the' family on the lower floor, Mr. and Mrs. James Theriault, their married daughter and five other younger children. All escaped uninjured. Walton told police he woke up of flames and smoke." He after nearly three months in rights workers on the insurrec-jsaint John City Police said the|himself out, landed on a roof! ifire appeared to have started at/below and toppled to safety. Dock Workers Walk Off Unloading Job CHICAGO (AP) -- Longshore- Const. Allen Black, who came on the scene shortly after, said |he attempted to get upstairs, jand could hear screams coming |from the third floor. But he was driven back by a wall of flame. | Fire Chief S. H. Knight said jthe dead apparently. suffocated |because their bodies were not |thought to be badly burned, It was the most lives claimed men unloading newsprint from}in a single fire in the city for the Momdoec, a Canadian freighter, walked off the job Fri- three pickets from. the ; In' pl -- én a bridge nearby. he 45 unjoaders are mem- bers of Local 19 of the Inter- national Longshormen's Asso- ciation (AFL CIO). The freighter was tied up in the Chi- cago River beside the Sun- Times and Daily News Building. The SIU pickets were protest- at least 25 years. U-2 Plane Down TAIPEH, Formosa (Reuters) --The Chinese Nationalist Air Force today confirmed the loss of a "high altitude reconnais- Sance aircraft" in Communist ing the trusteeship imposed by|close details. ions, The with the protest. A spokesman for the' newspa-} pers said the freighter carried| 2,500 tons of newsprint. He said/ the walkout would not affect publication. : Lloyds registry of ships lists the Momdoc as being owned by| | N. M. Paterson and Sons Lim- ited of Fort William, Ont. Soft Drinks Cost Hiked TORONTO (CP) -- The price of soft drinks has been in- creased by two major bottling companies here because of re- cent. increases in sugar prices and other ingredients, it was announced Friday. Pepsi-Cola Canada Limited, raised its suggested retail price of a six 644-ounce bottle carton to 46 cents from 41 and.a car- ton of six 10-ounce bottles to 51 cents from 46 cents, said D. J. Cruickshank, sales manager of the Toronto division. A spokesman for Seven Up Ontario Limited said the com- pany boosted the price of its cartons by the same amount. A third company, Royal Crown Cola Limited, will in- crease the price of a carton of six 10-ounce botties to 51 cents from 46 next .week, the com- pany's sales manager for -Tor- onto, B. G. N. de Souza, said. Mr. Cruickshank said the wholesale price increase will probably result in increased cooler prices of one cent a bot- tle in retail stores. No Canadians Hurt In Blast INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, (CP- AP)--None of the eight Cana- Others who were killed in-|dian performers in the, Holiday- AMamily of eight came from)clude a grandmother and grand-|on-Ice skating troupe was in- Kokomo to see the ice. show,'daughter, a father and son, aljured Thursday night in liquefied petreleum gas explo- state fairgrounds Coliseum kill- ring 385, One of the skaters Was Joan Berggren, 21, of Imperial, Sask. A spokesman for the skating troupe identified the other seven Canadians as Ted Deeley, Van- couver; Claudette Kenalty, Sherbrooke, Que.; Carol Burns, jand his mother, Mrs, Lena Sta-|seph H. Butler, 76, his wife, Iva,\that leaking propane gas used|Regina; Monique Loisel, Mont- real; Isabel Hourston, St. Cath- amines, Ont.; Norman Roy, and Bill Cordier of St, Johns, Que. ----|the Canadian government last jmonths over five maritime un-| American - Peking announced that an made U-2 belonging longshoremen said/to the Nationalists was shown s | Soldier On |they left their jobs'in sympathy|py the Chinese Communist Air|d Force during a spying mission. William Hickey of Hammond| China Friday but refused to dis-| | | eee | and found the place "a mass} VU VAN MAU | SIU Members Stop Work After Threat HAMILTON (CP) Two anonymous phdiie calls Friday night resulted in evacuation of the ore freighter Leadale by its Seafarers' _ International (Ind.) "\ n e first call said there was laden motorboat was headed to- ward Strathearne Street docks where the ship was loading crushed formite destined for Georgia. About 20 policemen searched |the freighter for an hour while the police launch, aided by a spotlight, checked the exterior. The Leadale is owned by Lea- ale. Shipping Limited, of Mont- real. | Ben Bella-Hassan Continue ALGIERS (AP)--A heavy Al- gerian artillery barrage erupted along the tense Algerian- Mor- occan border at dawn today, several hours after a midnight cease-fire. Mortar and cannon shells landed near palms in the Fi- guig Oasis on the Moroccan side of the border, and heavy ma- chine - gun fire shattered the early morning quiet. A Moroccan officer in the be- seiged oasis said he ordered his men to fire back. '"My men ob- served the cease-fire until at- tacked," said Col. Mohammed Hadda. He said his men evicted the Algerians from the oasis Friday, The Algerian-Moroccan cease- fire, negotiated at a four-coun- try conference in Bamako, Mali, earlier this week, went into ef- CMU President Lauds Soviet Wheat Deal dent of the Canadian Manufac- turers' Association, H. Roy Crabtree, said today Canada's sale of wheat and flour to Rus- sia holds out hope of "'a genuine new rapport in trade." At the same time, he cau- tioned against endangering Can- ada's manufacturing industries the| ny that rocked the Indianalejectrical manu by pushing for free trade. Speaking to a business semi- ar at McMaster University, the president of John Inglis facturers said the entry of Russia and, China into large-scale trade with the West through their Canadian grain purchases is "one of the most significant developments of the last 10 years." Russia signed in September to buy $500,000,000 worth of Cana- dian wheat and flour in the; coming 10° months, shortly after China had agreed to a $360,000,- 000 purchase over the next HAMILTON (CP)--The presi-|: Fight fect officially at midnight Fri- day. Both King Hassan. II of Mor- occo and President Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria promised to ob- serve the truce and allow commission set up at the Ba- mako conference to supervise their Sahara border dispute. Moroccan and Algerian troops remained dispersed along a 50- mile belt of the di d area "jdeath toll from the fighting a bomb planted on the Leadale| and the second said a dynamite- TWENTY PAGES ~.. : ML 5 Diem, Brother Claimed SAIGON, South Viet Nam (Reuters)--President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, were reported to/E have died today. in the wake of a successful coup d'etet by Vietnamese military leaders, Official sources said Diem and Nhu committed suicide but other versions contradicted this. As jubilant crowds milled about the streets of this city shouting 'their support for the revolution, military sources said the bodies of the two former leaders would not be shown publicly for psychological rea- sons, Authonitative sources said the might be as high as 400. A military revolutionary com- mittee formally announced the dissolution of the Roman Catho- lic + led government and as- sumed executive power after an eight-year rule by Diem. The présidential palace, where Diem and his brother were holed up, fell during: the night after a bitter battle. Sources said the death toll in- side the palace grounds might be as high as 100; They I from the presidential gu But the bloodshed appeared to have little effect on Saigon's population as thousands flocked to the ruined palace in a fes- tive atmosphere. They swarmed over tanks re of the building to rubble. } A stormed the streets in a burn- {a nd armored cars which had |battered the palace defenders jinto submission and reduced The fate of ministers in the Diem. government was obscure but the houses of several min- isters and National Assembly- men were burned. United States Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge was re- ported reviewing travel ar- rangements to return to Wash- ington for consultations, Reports indicated the number of civilian casualties from the night4ong bitter street fighting was surprisingly low in view of the large amount of ammuni- tion expended, Crowds of angry youths ing and looting spree, seeking targets associated with the Ngo t. and Diem families, They included students freed hy military leaders after being held 24% months in prison in connecti with the Buddhist from Tindoug, an ore-rich town in the southwest, to Figuig, 215 miles south of the Mediterra- nean, dispute. The editorial offices of the Viet Nam news agency were crowds to F i intervention. tacked for the third time ing few hours, ; A-bonfire blazed outside the Times of Viet Nam, which had supported the Diem regime, é Reliable sources said the news papers American part- owner Mrs, Ann Gregory, had sought protection in the U.S, embassy, Her 'Gene Gregory, was reported to be overseas, It was authoritatively stated Nhu's three youngest children were in Dalat, 150 miles north- east of Saigon, when the coup was launched. They were un- harmed. Mme. Nhu and her. eldest Thuy, daughter, Nho Dinh le ei the U.S. ; ghout today, thousands of Buddhists swarmed into Sal- gon's main pagodas for tearful reunions with monks who were freed Friday night by rebels. .. Members of the former inter: of Buddblem-the ieadaship. ot of of the buddhist anti ay ri Diem cam- paign -- held informal discus. sions at the main Xa Loi pa- wy. the scenes of fighting. U.S. Stabbed Us In Back' Mme Nhu Says locked hotel door today without comment on the reported death ts jc"ned etaph of her husband, South Viet Nam's strong man, and Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem after their overthrow in a military coup. Official sources in South Viet Nam connected with the new military government said the two Viet Nam leaders had com- mitted suicide but other ver- sions contradicted this, One. re- port said they had been shot. Mme. Nhu prepared a state- ment on the reported ths he held I riday night, but s! Earlier, she snapped *'never!"* to a reporter's question as to whether she would seek "ot caine wae county bel s' a whose ment stabbed in the back," she said. asylum ~ = She blamed the coup on U.§. = gutted by fire after being at- MINE ORDEAL IS Fritz Lader, 36, one of three miners rescued yesterday after being trapped for eight three years. days 259 feet down.in a flood- ed iron mine at Brois- tadt, Germany, is visited by his wife in Peine hospital, The three miners were reported in good condition, Forty . oth- ers have been given up' for dead 'while 86 escaped soon after the mine- was flooded. (AP Wirephoto by cable from London) ry awe wr res eae e325 Berens

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy