Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Nov 1963, p. 1

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| Community Ches If you don't want your children to hear what you're saying, pretend you're talking to them. Oshawa Time t Drive Entering Home Stretcl WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudin ess Sunday with' ) & few showers during the mor- ning and evening... VOL. 92 -- NO. 263 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1963 Authorized os Second Ottewa and for payment Closs Mall Post Office Deportmenr, ot in Cash, Postage "THEIR ETERNAL HOME" dian servicemen who have died in the defence of free- dom. A Cross of Sacrifice stands sentinel over their When Canadians -- every- 20 where pay silent homage Monday, it will be in tribute to more than 100,000 Cana- eternal homes in well-kept bloody fighting almost cemeteries around the world. Here, near the Italian town of Ortona, where many of them waged 'Broke Rest Of Life' Car Dealer Testifies vicemen rest in now peaceful surnoundings. (Nat. Defence Color Photo) |21 Killed In Plane Crash HELSINKI (AP) -- Nineteen ats and two children per- ished wher a DO-3 belonging to the Fin nieh-eline Finnaic crashed Friday night some 220 yards from the runway when it caine in for landing at Marie- their last battle in BROCKVILLE. (CP)--Stories/$228,000 during the years thatjClow in 1957. Billings said. she of strange money dealings at|she was the accouniant for Bill--had offered him the money be- Billings Motors Ltd. that never)8S: Mrs. C:ow leit the firm}cause she knew the firm needed owed "Ap 66' Be bmp' 16, 1962, and was arrested funds. hooks were recounted in court) Morty afterwards. He admitied that he hai uot Friday as the theft trial of the! Billings dered that he was in|repaid moiey to Mrs Ci0Wihostess were found alive and firm's accountant continued, |/0ve With Mrs, Clow -- "that's|"'specifical"y on that particular|prought to hospital. pst 'not true and you know it"--but note," Questioned as to why th ru nkrupt the rest of Gat y the All passenger my life--and ny children after|"©,'°% %f receiving loans from loan was not shown on the'com-|piane, on its way to Mariehamn }her when his dealership be-\pany's tuvoks, he. said Mr inki vi yf me--as a result of whai's hap-| 2 pie , S, ne - Said Mrs./from Helsinki via Turku, were pened' car dealer E. Murray came hardpressed for cash. He\Clow had asked that it not be' Finns. lands in the Baitic. years ago, 1,374 Canadian ser- | hamn, capital of the Aaland Is-| Two passengers and the air Labor Code Plan 'MacEachen Hints | OTTAWA (CP) -- Labor Min- ister MacEachen ~ hinted |strongly Friday night there will jbe government legislati |Parliament's next session to re- |vise the Unemployment Insur- lance Act and enact a national labor code setting out "an em- |ployment standard for «Can- wis ees But he told the Commons he couldn't say as much for action on overhauling the Industrial Relations and Disputes Investi- gation Act--the statute govern- ing union-employer relations. | He was replying to Stanley) |Knowles (NDP--Winnipeg North |Centre) who appealed for a pro-| |mise of government action on jall three fronts no later than) the next session, expected to! lstart early next year. : Earlier, Mr. Knowles had jurged adoption of a national la- bor code establishing minimum |wages, maximum hours of work, and paid vacations and statutory holidays. Gerald A. Regan (L--Hali- fax) also called for "a complete jreview of the labor legislation lin this country." Mr. MacEachen said he shares Mr. Knowles' enthusiasm for a national labor code, cov- jering ail or most of the items he listed. which could. be--'re- garded as a code setting an em- ployment standard for Canada. s He said that "subject to the approval of a number of other |parties'--an apparent refi to his cabinet colleague: government wo! action next session on a labor | aboard the|code and revision of the Unem-|unions under a trusteeship. The ployment Insurance Act, | But it would be "rash'"' to give the same undertaking) ht aa : g "> |said he "could noi imagine made known to the auditors Billings gin from the wit: why" his financial status often Mr, Hugnes commented "So ness stand as he was prodded! was tacking. l take-itthat till almost' to the breaking point by! ake it that you still owe her defence counse; ASKS ABOUT LOAN $3,600 and will sit down and Billings' was the' boss of 37-- Roydon Hughes of Ottawa, figure it out with interest some year-old: Dolores Clow, a b'unde|counsel for Mrs Clow, . ques- former fashion model accused |tioned the prosecution witness of milking the auto firm oflabout a $3,600 loan from Mrs. answered: She Billings counter the account. owes the company some money --| about half a million--and she'll) jget credit for what she loaned jus." He went on to say that the | "We'll n | i 1,000,000 in jewels and amount he considered Mrs. Clow| cold" Pansy cdanserte triec owed the company. was not thel|twice before to rob it. but were jamount she was charged with! cared 'off, police say, Just Peacemaker Meany Maintains gg declared: 'You sermon adh engl ug NEW YORK (CP)--President,head of the United Auto Work- ae the ie nd Pe ihat) Less than seven hours after of the AFL-C1O ; toni ey--so you will have to pay|the midtown Manhattan robbe: ig hsegd participation in al rs. ge Ps ns as back. half a million dollars and New York's biggest--the sald the Great Lakes labor dispute) os of betta ego peihimeb erecta peter tesa Shor bait foot involving the Seafarers' Inter-, ; ganiza- 4) wosT BREAKS DOWN ee Fess von It was at this point that Bill- ; natonal Union of Canada has/tions, and a member of the { : : been limited to the role of/federation's executive council. ings almost broke 'down, shout-|y J file paid Ju on aa peacemaker. Reuther. said Meany had not ing that he. would be bankrupt ; P ite He added that he had made consulted him on the policy the 'or the rest of his life. ' est pve Boge ie Masia attempts at reaching a peace- federation adopted to support) Mr. Hughes later produced a Sonne pe was accompanied ful solution of; the problem only the Canadian SIU and its presi-/receipt book showing a receipt b five. other. Dessacieert All at. the request of the Untied dent Harold C. Banks and. to for. the payment of $9,700 by sc RaReaa Or ens States government, which was attack the Canadian govern- E. M. Billings to Billings Motors) \foots said 'that two other relaying a request from the Ca- ment and the Norris commis- Ltd. on May 23, 1962. The wit: times'.in the last. five! weeks he nadiah government. sion report which condemned ness said he was:short of' cash ad seen: similarly dressed men He was asked at' a press cof- Banks' Conduct. at /the time: and that "this. was . ference! t0.comment oh state- Said Meany Friday: a loan-from'Mrs. Clow that he in 'the same' vicinity and ap- Bandits Get Gems On Third Attemp de: | NEW YORK (AP)--The ban-|men in uniform pointed a pistol|report" the decision reached \dits who. commandered a carjat him and said: "This is alpetween the NLRB and the stick-up." The car, owned |Jewelers Service, foun labandoned at the ar of a partly demolished building sev- leral blocks away from the rob- bery site on West 41st Street. Police said tire marks near it lindicated part of the loot had) been transferred to another ve- |hicle, They said some of the jewels and eight gold bars, each weigh- ing 15 pounds, were left behind, lapparently when the men were frightened off by demolition |workers nearby. Police said the six messen- gers were ordered out of the \station wagon and into a panel} truck that pulled up near them. They were handcuffed to the in- the AAA} leave' an' uhmafked, black car'side of the truck, driven to a! spot about four blocks away at} lit exempts ships of Upper Lakes about a revision of the Indus- trial Relations and Disputes In- vestigation Act. Greater study of this was needed, Mr. MacEachen said he has "under very active considera- tion" one proposal of the Gill committee on unemployment in- surance: That the national em- ployment service be divorced from operations of the unem- ployment insurance commission and made a part of the labor department, ALLAN J. MacEACHEN | CHICAGO (AP) -- Picketing, has beeri called off in the dis- pute that has made idle Cana-| Halt Picketing Of Canadian Vessels FUKUOKA, Japan (AP)--An explosion ripped through one of Japan's largest coal mines to- day and the company said at heast 171 persons were killed. Police re ported another 600 were believed trapped in gas- filid tunnels. Officials of the Mitsui Coal Mine Company who announced the death toll said 1,221 miners were at work when a terrific coal dust explosion collapsed one of the main tunnels, trap- ping men below that level. The dead and injured already apparently were hurt as the force of the explosion roared to- ward the surface from its cen- tre, some 800 yards from the entrance. The men believed trapped were below the explosion area. ping the government t rustee- |ship. "We must continue to insist Omuta officials said the mine filled with gas after the coal dian ships at four Great Lakes|that they halt all discrimina-|dust explosion. iports in a protest involving a |\Canadian government trustee- |ship order, The decision, announced Fri- day, followed conferences be- tween Jules Serot, a lawyer for jthe National \ Labor Relations |Board, and krving Friedman, \lawyer for the Great Lakes dis- ltrict of the farers' Interna- tional Union (S10) and Local 19 of the International Long- shoremen's Association, The SIU began picketing a | | | four other Canadian maritime trusteeship resulted from a dis- pute between the SIU and the Canadian Maritime Union, The leaders said the decision to stop picketing covered all vessels that have been idle ex- cept freighters of Upper Lakes Shipping Limited of Toronto. The firm's vessels have been} trying to take on a cargo of wheat in Chicago since April, Labor Minister MacEachen scribed as "an encouraging jtion."" | He said the three government trustees would again ask the In- ternational Labor Federation to use its good offices to have all picketing stopped. Serot. said the decision to cease picketing applies to ves- Ontario Company in Chicago, Milwaukee, Sheboygan and To- ledo. He said the tiz-up did not involve ships of any other Cana- erence| week ago in protest against the|dian concerns. s--the|Canadian government's action! 'The NLRB has beea investi- uld want to take|in placing the SIU andigating complaints of unfair !a- bor practices against the SIU. Al Tanner, maritime trades co . ordinator for the Great Lakes, said the picketing had achieved the objective of dem- jonstrating that "'the American labor movement is unalterably opposed to this type of union Police, firemen and miners desperately sought new ap- to the underground chamber where the 600 men are imprisoned. More than 1,000 were working Senate Blocks Tax Chop Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -- The |Senate finance committee dealt an apparent death blow Friday to all hopes for 1963 passage of a tax-cut bill, It set Dec. 13 as the windup date for hear- ings on a measure to slice $11,- 000,000,000 from the federal tax bill for 1964, The House of Rep- resentatives has passed the bill. This means only a week would remain before the Christ- mas-New Year's recess runs to Jan, 2. EIGHTEEN: PAGES Report 171 Dead In Japan Blast in' the a galleries of the huge mine the explosion happened. The blast was so tre- mendous it stripped away wood from a_ steel-supported building at the north of the main entrance tunnel, twisted steel pipes out of shape, shattered windows 1,000 feet away, auxiliary ies, many of them badly their faces blackened from the sie os ze ote Clear Rubble LENGEDE, West German: 'SOx mine of water and mud, suppression (trusteesh'p)." unions to stop the picketing. He| made the. statement in the| House of Commons. | Charles H. Millard, one of the three trustees of maritime unions in Canada, said, how- ever, the. decision to halt the picketing is not good enough if Shipping, "T can't say that half.a loaf is better than none," Millard said in Toronto, He added that continued picketing of Upper Lakes Shipping Limited ships carrying crews of the Canadian Maritime Union constitutes dis- crimination aganst Canadian crews. Mr. Milard said: 'If they're now picketing upper lakes and not the others, it means that it isn't for the reason of stop- 6-Horse Spill Causes Riot At N.Y. Raceway WESTBURY, N.Y. (AP) -- A frenzied mob of 500 harness race bettors, angered over a six- horse accident that wiped away their twin double wagers, rioted for more than an hour at multi- million-dollar Roosevelt Race- way Friday. night. Conrad Rothengast, head of the track's security police, col- lapsed and: died of a heart at- tack in the early minutes of the riot, Patrolman Frank O'Neill, one of the first of 150 officers frantically summoned to help track police, was beaten to the ground by a group of 20, Nearly a score was taken to a nearby hospital for. treatment, At least: 10 were arrested and our men arrived, the mob tried to turn over the patrol cars. They had to club them back. They couldn't be everywhere at once, When one group was con- trolled, another ran wild, There must have been eight fires going at one time in the stands." The mob, part of an official crowd of 23,127, began spilling out of the grandstand area af- ter the stewards announced the result of the sixth race as offi- cial although only two of the eight horses finished. There were few tickets in the! winner, a long-shot. Many in the crowd, as is the custom in twin doubl betting, had chosen one of the favorites to start off the wagering in which a bettor tries to couple the winners of the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth races. ments. madé -in- Washington "I'll have to talk. to -him passed om to the company. A ' |charged with assault. A finish Thursday,. by . Walter Reuther, (Reuther), about this because I, 'He said she did not want heritraffic. 'The first two times the!an hour j line judge, John Dematteo, suf- fered head cuts when someone ~ smashed the glass window of his booth. proach his cdr, slowed by heavyjand told not to seek help for! Madame Nhu don't 'know what: he's talkinginame mentioned on the receipt men returned to their car, he) The men banged on the in- Friday, however, one of the passersby 'PROVINCE HURT BY AUTONOMY CRIES' about. 'He. talked of my hand-\but that the office. staff was|said, just as a marked police|sides of the truck for half an) ling of the Canadian dispute ..'aware the money had come pattel cat appeared hour before being heard by! I haven't 'handled it.' [from her."' __261,800__ __ 250,000 _ 225,000. 200,000 __175,000 OTTAWA (CP) --! A> western|thé: essential need of bringing Social Credit MP drew Quebec! Quebec's econmoy into line with criticism Friday night by sug-|that his recent personal obser- gesting that the provine'es par-|the rest of Canada--a~ course liamentary -representatives 'pre-|that his recent personal obser- sent job-making proposals that|vations in Quebec supported the Quebec government will ac-/Solving Quebec unemployment! cept. ; would 'go far: to ease English- "Parliament has been under|French differences a steady barrage of complaints; Yet, Mr. Olson told the House) | ince of Quebec that we. should|/1abor.department's spending do something to relieve the un-|program for the fiscal year end- employment situation. there,"'|ing March 31, "'many-: of the said H. A. Olson, membér for|things that have been done over Medicine Hat ithe years have beer rejected "Il am. willing .to supprotjout of hand by the province of measures that. will do this but/Quebec on .the pretence ince of Quebec is going to ac-/tonomy." cept them."' HAD REASON | Various members from var-| Louis-Joseph Pigeon (PC lious. parties had. spoken about! Joliette--- L'Assomption--- Mont-| se calm) interrupted: Once to say he felt Quebec's Liberal govern- ment 'had: reason to refuse to enter 'the Canada Pension Plan and "'T think we from the prov- ince of Quebec have no lesson to learn 'from' the hohorable member." Mr. Olson was applauded when he retorted that "He and ment of Canada and we should always. keep that in mind." Later, Mr. Pigeon accused Mr. Olson of insulting remarks about Quebec Creflitiste 'Leader Real Caoa- with Ottawa means-a determin ation to protect Quebec. auton- omy. The -Quebec- firebrand, siding Socred Fights With Que. for once with Conservative: op- ponent Pigeon, said the federal government received .$640,000,- 000 more from Quebec in tax jrevenues than the province got from Ottawa. The exchanges were part of a crowded-Commens day Friday |--longest sittings of the week, |from 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m., with from members from the prov-|of Commons during study of the|I are members of the Parlia-|preaks for lunch and dinner. BROUGHT REPLY Mr. Olson's speech brought a |spirited reply from Quebec MPs. Mr. Pigeon said if Quebec had jthe share of tax revenues it that\ette said refusal by the prov-|should have, it could deal: with I want to know that the prov-ithey infringed on provincial au-|ince to enter joint-cost schemes| unemployment on its own. Con- federation would not have come about | pnovinces, itiviera. Denies Hiding Funds Abroad LOS ANGELE. (AP) -- Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu spoke out Fri- day for the first time on the sub- ject of her personal finances. f.e denied she has funds abroa. "They are ail liars," she told The Associated Press, "those people who say I have a villa jand money outside (South) Viet am" The former first lay of South Viet Nam, in seclusion at a pri- vate home here since the coup that overthrew the regime her brother - in - 'aw and hus- band and cost their lives as well, spoke to a reporter by tel- ephone "All that I have is in Viet }Nam--my home at Dalat that I was preparing as a nice place to retire to." A report from Washington Thursday had quoted a '"'quali- fied source close to" the Nhu family as saying she is a clever businesswoman with ample re- One person was pital, Prince Edward Is! , driver of one of the horses ved in the spill, He suffered cuts and bruises and was held for obser- vation, | Track president Alvin Weil, | |who said racing would resume as scheduled tonight, refused an , estimate of damages until in- vestigators can survey the track |and grounds. |LOSS MAY BE $130,000 Police, however, estimated the damage to the $20,000,000- structure, located about # miles from midtown Manhattan, at $100,000. The track lost an-) other $30,000 its anticipated take from the money that would have been bet on the last three races of the nine-race program. They were cancelled. "They were like animals," said Jack E, Lee of the Long Island. Press, who watched the riot from the press box. high above the stands. "There's hardly an unbroken if-Quebec had been re- sources in other countries, in- window in the place," a Nassau quired to become like the other cluding a villa on the French|County police ('The place is a mess. When sergeant said. ken to hos- Joseph McAlduff from , "RACING FAN HUSTLED-FROM 'TRACK >

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