Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Dec 1963, p. 2

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ad: Eighty persons were report- ed injured, 11. seriously, id CRASH NEAR TEL Thursday in this train collision near Tel Yoshuah railway sta- RED CHINA PREMIER CLAIMS Political Climate Ripe For Revolutionary War ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Com-;cal difficulties between the twojundeclared war in the Hima Premier. Chot reporter munist Chinese En-lai told Algerian Thursday he has achieved some, thinking of a section of people/ments to aims in his visits to Egypt and Algeria, and is : visits will help China's relations with the two North African countries. Answering questions at a press conference, he said that if China spends another 14 years. without membership in the United Nations, it will not prevent her from gaining strength He said the last 14 years of non-membership have not hind- ered her development. In a speech Wednesday night published for the first time Thursday, Chou said the pres- ent international situation was excellent for the pursuit of rev- olutionary struggle. He urged Afro-Asians and La- tin-Americans to rely on their own strength in the fight against imperialism. Observere here said the @peech appeared designed as a feply to Russian Premier Khrushchev, whose views on the world situation and the peace- ful co-existence were publish here on the eve of Chou's ar rival for his week's visit to Al- geria. TOKYO (AP) -- One of Red China's top theoreticians has criticized Soviet leaders as "anti - Mar - Leninist" and @aid they are "all political wor- shippers' of the United States Chou Yang, vice - director of the propaganda department of the central committee of -- the Chinese Communist: party made the charges at a philo- sophy and social science con- ference last October. The text was broadcast by the New China News Agency Thurs day and monitored here The statement was: released on the heels of Soviet Prem Nikita Khrushchev's messag Wednesday to Chairman Mao Tze-tung of China in. which Khrushchev id any ideo!logi- WEATHER FORECAST r feel Red powers would be overcome Chou. said "the revisionist is in Soviet academic circles convinced the growing steadily along with the|ing development of the revisionist political line of the leadership of the Communist party of Soviet a Union. "Supporting the 'combat against the personality 'cult,' they have repudiated all Sta- lin's theoretical writings under slogan of 'eliminating the -onsequences of the personality eult.? To repudiate Stalin com- plet is fact to. negate Marxism-Leninism, which Sta- lin. defended and developed.' "While wantonly adultering Marxism-Leninism," Chou con tinued, "they. demand that other Communist. parties should fol low their every step and parrot their every word as if their adulteration were an 'imperial! edict': "The present struggle be- tween revolutionary Marxism- Leninism and modern revision- ism is the prelude to new and still greater revolutionary bat- tles by the world proletariat," Chou declared. the 1 In NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- The Chinese Communists have withdrawn thousands of troops from Tibet and switched them to an area near the Russian border, reports to the Indian government said Thursday One. unconfirmed report said the Chinese had moved aq divi- sion from the western end of the disputed borderline with In- dia to China's Sinkiang Prov Ince; which borders on the So- viet Union This report was viewed at the policy-making levels of the In- dian government as of doubt- ful significance for India or Russia. Foreign reports here de- policy-makers reaching the nce ministry. do not iny important lessening of the Chinese threat to India. The two countries fought a one-month Sunny S aturday, Continuing Cold Official forecasts by the Toronto weathe flice at 4:30 a.m: Synopsis: Cold weather is ex pected to persist tod Saturday. Mainly cloudy and some periods of li or snowflurrie southern Onta Lake St. ( Lake Huron, k tario, Windsor, London, Hamil- ton, Toronto: Mostly cloudy with occasional snowflurries or periods of light snow today Saturday sunny with cloudy riods. Continuing cold. W northeast 15 becoming light thi afternoon, northwest 10 to 20 Saturday Haliburton, Georgian Bay: Cléar with cloudy periods and continuing cold today and Sat- urday. A few snowflurries to night. Winds light Algoma, White River, Timag- ami, Cochrane, western James Bay, North Bay, Sudbury: Va fable high cloudiness today an Saturday. Continuing' cold Winds light today, northwesterly 10 to 20 Saturday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday Windsor 12 St. Thomas. a London Kitchener ; Mount Forest Wingham Hami!tori St. Catharine TOTONLO .ssscevees Peterbo; ough .... Sault Ste. Marie... >, Moosonee .. ; Regina .... Trenton Killaloe ... Muskoka North: Bay. Sudbury . Earlton .. NADON Kapuskasing White River. tien fa ce Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday Dawson 4 Victoria ... Edmonton . cs Winnipeg .. Lakehead ... White River....... Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... Earlton North Bay Sudbury Muskoka Windsor London Toronto .. Ottawa . Montreal- . Quebec .. Halifax : co ae : NWP DwWnwa-~I ~~ we enwnwu St. John's FOR PREFERRED ATTENTION PAUL ISTOW 728-9474 EALTOR indicate tak work returned with a flourish for Parliament in the last ses- sion, Nine permanent committees and three special ones were at work after the comparative lull of two general elections in less of two generale lections in less than a year. The special committee on de- fence journied to Europe and briefly to Washington. Mines, forests and waters summoned witnesses from as |far away as the Arctic to tes- \tify about futuré government in jthat huge area. : | The special committee on food nd drugs probed the pesticides miissue, although Unitei States lauthor Rachel Carson -- who \wrote The Silent Spring assail- ling the growth of chemical poci- |sons--declined an invitation to |appear. RANGE WIDE There was also study of re- machinery, the impact of railway t2chnical © shifts on workers, the TCA and M@\CNR, external affairs and cer- tain aspects of veterans. affairs. The Senate has its own set of : !study groups -- although some- work horses which stand Teady ; ith MPs in linked|to handle specific legislation or 'vamped_ electoral tion, north of Tel Aviv. (AP Wirephoto | via cable from London) | this | comparatively jsion and coincided at activity Itore Christmas, The result itheir committee staff, on |Hansard. reporters, jing space. | There were times when as in one day although this was not the rule. Some met morn ing, noon and night and most had authority to sit while the Commons itself was sitting layas last year The reported Chinese move- ard Sinkiang are pos- sibly related to reports reach- diplomats in London, which moved troops COUNTER CRITICS toward the Sink Border as) Hence the MP complaint that esult of the Communist ideo-when scanty attendance in the cal conflict between Peking'Commons was criticized, no ref- nd Moscow erence was made to the heavy This war of words - shifted/committee program into bitter nationalistic terms}! Some MPs 'taking an active last summer, China has at times|interest in'a committee or more put forward the same sort ofi'than one committee said they territo claims on parts of)spent as much as eight hours Russia 'adjoining Sinkiang. as'daily on that alone were made beforé her 1962 at-| Sometimes they had to choose ack on India between two committees. sitting said Russia has Wheat For Reds Given U.S. Okay € WASHINGTON ( AP) ---- The|Soviet purchases which, : to- United States authorized its first» gether with purchases by other gagged in sales of surplus wheat to the So-\Communist nations, could add viet Union Thursday, " \|up to an estimated $250,000,000 Perhaps signalling a break injin surplus grain transactions a seven-week impasse, the .com-| That is the value. placed on }merce- department approved ex-/the 2,500,000 tons of wheat the port licenses for two cash sales|Soviet Union is reported seek-} to the Russians worth $20,320,-/ing, plus the 1,500,000 tons So- 000 each--a total of $40,640,000.| viet satellites want, to offsét Virtually no other information! crop losses inflicted by a severe was disclosed. drought in Eastern Europe this "There are a number of con-| year ditions which must be met be-| This 4,000,000 tons would come fore the sale is consum a" ito about 130,000,000 bushels a commerce department source) The U.S. and the Communist said. "That's about all we ean nations negotiated and an agree- say about it." ment announced Nov. 8 on han- Other officials said later how- dling the sales. But the' pur- ever that two U.S. firms ob-,Chases. became snagged ater tained the export authorizations OV¢r U.S. requirements that up and described. them as "hunt-|'? 50 per cent of the grain be ing licences" Soin eee carried in U.S. flagships. The ng to sell grain to the Russians | Soviet Union objected because q cautioned that no firml°f higher U.S. transportation charges deal had yet been worked out 3 SA ene acai thee be Whether this dispute had been ieved follow-up negotiations to worked out, or at, least ease try to nail down the s would. ¥a8 not known, but available in- 5 ein Mosh formation indicated, the export Hs branes licences. would not be issued un- til the conditions specified were met, Underwriting of credit for ate es said ansactions could be the forerunner of more came| the Commons late in the ses- 1 its peak|the committee reports depends |with efforts to polish off thejon the government itself. \House of Commons agenda be- was _considerable| Illegal Trial | pressure on MPs themselves, on) the on transla-| jtors and even on available meet-| many as seven committees met} By French ~ lexplained Committee Work | OTTAWA (CP) -- Committee|coincidentally. Quorums_ be- came more difficult to convene. All this is likely to mean pres-| sure from the MP rank and file) of all parties for an earlier start| in the session .on committee] work, taking advantage of a) more leisurely pace to handle} that chore and deal with "om-| mons and office work at the| same time. i At least some of the commit-| tees have asked leave to resume) their non-complete work ° early in the new session resuming in the second week of February. This includes defence and jmines, External affairs also) probably will get its teeth into the long - awaited Columbia) River treaty if and when the fi-| nal ends are tied up shortly among Canada, British Colum- bia and the United States. The special food and drug committee has more work to do and so does the special com- jmittee detailed annually to ap- |praise the operations of the {CNR and TCA. | Veterans affairs, agriculture, banking, privileges and elec- tions, railways, canals and tele- igraph lines and labor are other ispecial subjects as assigned by Just what action results from 'Plea Ignored | | PARIS (AP) -- The French State Security Court Thursday brushed aside arguments that ex-colone] Antoine Argoud was kidnapped in Germany and il- legally transferred to France. The five-man court ordered his trial on treason charges to proceed. Argoud, nervous and_ silent refused to say a word. When the court president said'at the opening of hte trial "the defend- ant should stand" the former secret army. leader remained seated and studiously looked in the opposite direction | Lawyer Bernard le Coroller that the' defendant was only physically present jand that legally he was in Mun- jich, Germany. Le Coroller ibranded the whole trial illegal | Argoud was arrested last Feb 125 at his Munich hotel and bund led into a car by a group of imen, He was next seen the fol- lowing day in Paris, where po- lice, foun him bound and small delivery van parked near central police head- quarters POLICE HAD TIP Police announced at the time that they had been given a tele- phone tip on where to find Ar- hgoud by some of his enemies in lthe secret army. But. Argoud's| lawyers alleged that he was kid- |napped in Munich by French se- feret police agents and smuggled lacross the border Lé Coroller termed the proce dure "worthy of a totalitarian state." eS He said that to continue with jthe trial would 'encourage acts lof international piracy." | The lawyer argued that. Ar- goud should be freed immediat lely and sent back to the Ger- |man border. Then, if the French government wanted to go ahead jwith the case, it could ask Ger many for his arrest and legal extradition Argoud already has been sen- tenced to death for taking part lin the generals' revolt of April 1961. This sentence was set aside when he was arrested, He | i\ | Stricken Boy Triggers Riot |Communist nations was the cen-|!8 also accused of ordering the ltre of a stormy dispute in Con-|machine-gunning of eight Mos igress. A restriction denying|[¢m cafes in Paris and a bank Isuch credit to Communist na./holdup while he was nominal |tions was approved twice by the head of the .secret army in House In the latest-flareup the credit Chien (Routers) a was removed only Jast ZOE CE veuters)-- Tuesday by the House from a Leaders of more than 3,000 de- ttack ; j tT ce en rider attached to the i ;monstrators grappled: with po- pil] oe ee A e lice here 1 rsday night during i. a march protesting inst the The bill, without the rider, is failure of any Fr 1 doctor so far to authorize "last hope' MONGEY: treatment for a four - year - old English boy suffe om leu- kemia eA 8 Edward Burke. arrived here W7eat and flour from Canada z The purchase involved 5,600,000 Dec, 22 with his mother e r e She" Gm ae <= Bo ; hope a local healer, Gaston tons of wheat and 575,000 tons of flour. Maessens, could try a special) __ serum to save his 'life | Maessens is an_ independent} biologist without a doctor's de- gree and needs the authorization of a French doctor to carry out the treatment, | The people of Bastia started| a demonstration of sympathy! for the stricken bov, carrying} slogans with the words:} "Quickly, lIeukemia~ does not) wait" and "We must save Ed-! idie."' | The boy may have fo 'return to England if a French doctor cannot be found to approve the treatment In Corsica BASTIA Rarler- this year, Russia bought $500.000.000 worth of HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS. awaiting Senate action next!-- ANcus-GRAYDON CARPET COMPANY 282 King W., Oshawa ®@ Tel, 728-9581 Oshawa's Rug and Carpet Centre Broadloom-Tile-Linoleum professional Rug Cleaning France. : Although technically Argoud was subject to a death penalty for his role in the Putsch, it seemed unlikely that his life was in danger. None of the Putsch generals or secret army leaders has ever been executed NEED AN OIL FURNACE .. cau PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 GLECOF FS 174 RITSON ROAD SOUTH OPEN DAILY TILLIOPM OSHAWA; OLDEST AND FINEST SUPERMARKET Specials for Friday, Saturday, Monday and Tuesday Dec. 30th and 31st, Jan.2nd and 3rd AMERICAN DRY--LARGE 28-0Z. BOTTLES GINGER ALE <7", 39¢ 2 BOTTLES DEMPSTERS APPLE PIES sien 496 (WITH MEAT PURCHASE) is' 5c BUTTER 1ST GRADE HOLIDAY COLOURED 5 css. 1.00 MARGARINE Large Stock BOXED CHOCOLATES, CANDIES, CRACKERS, etc. SILVERWOODS SPECIAL PRICE EGGNOG ICE CREAM LEAN COTTAGE ROLLS LARGE STOCKS OF SMOKED HAMS ALL VARIETIES, PINEAPPLE HAMS, ETC. FRESH MINCED BEEF HAMBURG ee TLV. Dinners Frozen Peas CHOICE Blade Roasts Beef Chuck Roasts Beef VARIETY OF CHILDREN'S & LADIES' VY -GAL. 89c » 49c 2% LBS. 1.00 Ring the beffs! Blow thé horns! Glécoff's is whooping it up for '64 with Greétings and SALE-utations fo start you off on a Happy Néw Year of BIG SAVINGS! And SAVE YOU WILL when you shop here for everything you need for the holiday festivi- ties -- for wonderful party treats... for delicious foods | for gala dinners . . . for every day favorites for mar- velous meals the whole week long, We've storewide LOW PRICES and SUPER BUYS in all aisles to bring you the best at less cost. Specials that "Ring the Bells" HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL -- FREE CITY WIDE DELIVERY SERVICE CHOICE WEINERS 3 iss 1.00 LEAN BUTT ROASTS PORK ,, 49¢ LEAN SHOULDER OF PORK ,, 43c Large Stock of Poultry... Turkeys, Geese, Chickens, Capons & Ducks uw 49e Dis. mes. 47 | GLOVES AND MITTS Reg. $1.00 for 69 18.1. any POWeE Reg 75¢ ee 6 "Ls set fashioned adi q L Large Stock of Gift Items Gift Sets, Ladies' Lingerie etc, LARGE WHITE GRAPEFRUIT su 5 vs 38¢ CELERY six 2 ron 39C CELLO TOMATOES ice. nc. 25¢ SUCCULENT WASHED CARROTS5 *:.; 29¢ FRUIT BASKETS MADE. TO ORDER 3.00 AND UP 96 SIZE Terry Cloth Apron and Towel Sets. Reg. 1.98 .... for 1.19 White Sugar Bleached Bags seas 8 f0R Te Bromo Seltzer Reg. 69c . for 55¢ see e cere ee woe 174 RITSON ROAD SOUT OPEN DAILY TILLIOPM OSHAWA; OLDEST AND FINEST SUPERMARKET OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 10 P.M. 3

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