Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 May 1964, p. 1

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Thought F Sometimes it pays to handle children with they're easily suede. VOL. 93 -- NO.118 or Today kid gloves -- Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1964 -- Ohe Oshawa Cime Authorized os Second Ottawa ond for Cless Mall poyment ee eens ree re Weather Report Clearing by evening. Risk of frost overnight. Sunny with cloudy periods Thursday, Winds light. Office Department Post f Postage in Cash, ° THIRTY PAGES * No Ending | | To Terror: Creditiste OTTAWA (CP) -- Creditiste;ure in committee of the whole, House Leader Gilles Gregoire|commented that to give the told the Commons Tuesday that! provinces sole power over direct) separatist terrorism and demon-|taxes would weaken the federal | strations will continue in Que-| government to the point where bec until Confederation is re- shaped into a loose union of two "associate states." He said the government's de- cision to proceed soon with a distinctive national flag comes too late for French Canada. What French Canadians wanted was much more funda- mental--"an autonomous, self- governing state." Mr. Gregoire sought unsuc- cessfully to nftove an amend- ment to the government income tax legislation that will increase the provinces' share of the tax by about $200,000,000 by 1966. Under his amendment, the federal government would with- draw entirely from the fields of personal-and corporate income taxes and death duties by 1967. Finance Minister Gordon, who was piloting the budget meas- it would have to abdicate its responsibilities. The government had no inten- tion of abdicating these respon-| sibilities. He said the federal| |government occupied the direct tax field before the provinces did. Jean-Lux Pein (L--Drum-! mond -.Arthabaska) remarked that Mr. Gregoire is "sick."' He asked how the federal gov- ernment could: continue to ex-|* ist if it turned over all direct taxes to the provinces. What sources of reyenue would be left? t Mr. Gregoire relied that the federal government would have to withdraw from education, jhighway construction, hospital) ® insurance, agriculture, forestry and other 'provincial fields" it had invaded in violation of the constitution. Terrorist Suspect Turns Evidence MONTREAL (CP) -- An ac- cused member of L'Armee de Liberation du Quebec turned prosecution witness in a sur- prise move Tuesday and his evi- dence wiped the smiles off the faces of six co-accused. liminary hearing on an armed robbery charge arising from the Shawinigan raid. Dion said both| armory raids were plotted in an east-end Montreal apartment oc- cupied by himself, Hudon and Perron. Rene Dion, a rangy 17-year-| The seven suspected ALQ| old, 'calmly testified he and the rest of the accused staged arm- ory raids in Montreal and Sha- winigan, Que., as well as a num- ber of holdups. He made no mention of ideol- or motive for the raids security a x Hl as the armory. a as well as the fan of anmofy weapons to central depots. Both the Crown and defence lawyers expressed surprise at the development. He said no pressure had been put on him by an RCMP offi- cer who saw him Tuesday morn- ing although he had been told "my case would go better for me" if he appeared in the wit- ness stand. Dion said he carried arms in both armory robberies, held up a guard at the Shawinigan rob- bery Feb. 20 and helped tie up a terrorists face more than 60) charges arising from the anmed| robberies, LAOTIAN DEFENC '|Maryland vote of his stand| '/and pushed by President John-| PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT Elaine Miele, 24, and Dan | Navarro, 32, stand in front of a Los Angeles billboard which tells the world about their im- pending wedding. Navarro was so preoccupied thinking about wedding details he didn't when notice the new sign he arrived for work across the street yesterday, It was the work of his. brother, an advertising man. The boss' | secretary finally told Navarro | to look out the window. REGINA (OP)--The Liberal wing will grasp the government almost 20 years after it was'T swept into the political wilder-| ness by a CCF election victory. | } | feated in an April 22 election| potash -- producing province|i rides a crest of unprecedented dozen persons in Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal armory in Montreal Jan. 30. Co-aecused Andre Wattier, 23, Jean LaSalle, 22, Pierre Nadon, 19, Robert Hudon, 20, Jean Gag-| non, 26 and Claude Perron, 20,| were silent in the prisoners' dock during Dion's testimony. | They had smiled and ex- |that he will resign Friday and jturn over the government to | Liberal Leader Ross Thatcher. | Mr. Thatcher, a former |CCFer who bolted that party in | 1955 and joined the Liberals in 956, told a press conference | Tuesday that his government who had no represent fore Premier. Woodrow Lloyd, his|™an, Provincial Leader Martin| socialist OCF government de-| Pederson. Redistribution before the elec-| and « medical at a time when this wheat--and| tion added four seats in the leg-| plans in Canada, Medical care urance was brought in after Mr. Lloyd took over as premier prosperity, announced Tuesday|~ changed jokes particularly dur-|Would waste little time in im-| ing cross-examination, at pre- plementing the first parts of its vious sessions of Hudon's pre-| Program, : ------| The program calls mainly for jtax cuts, policies to he Progressive Conse: dissolution, slature. The CCF, under silver- Span Blasts Rock Calm In Havana HAVANA (Reuters)--Havana attract was outwardly calm today--na-| Liberals that economic diversi- The | first | ins: government-run Liberals Grasp Helm Saskatchewan, Friday legislature, won 33 in the elec-|tongued T. C. Douglas, now na- tion. The CCF, with 34 in the/tional lm in Saskatchewan Friday,| last le NDP leader, came to gislature, won 25 April 22.|power July 10, 1944, and began rvatives,|a 20-year reign during which ation be-| trai] - breaking legislation was elected one! implemented. legislation included the hospital care insurance from Mr. Douglas Nov. 7, 1961. islation Labor and social welfare leg- under the CCF led the way for other provinces. The CCF brought in the first | bill of rights in Canada and claimed credit for a tremendous expansion facilitie. | of communications Ss, The economy, based Wallace Beaten In Primary Test | | | BALTIMORE (AP)--U.S. Sen-|get rid of us by calling us bad ator Daniel B. Brewster, bear-|names." ing the shield of President John-| And the governor hinted of a json, defeated segregationist/ possible technical challenge of |Governor George C. Wallace Of/the results because of Mary-| Alabama in Wednesday's Mary-|jand's old unit vote system.| land presidential preference pri-|Similar to the Electoral College mary that was clouded by alvote in presidential elections, close vote and a murky legal/this makes it possible for a can- question. didate to win a primany even In a torrid Democratic race)though he trails in the popular pinned on his opposition to the} vote. civil rights bill pending in the; 4 U.S, district court in Balti-| '|Senate, Wallace drew 212,068 more has already nullified the ;| votes, 42.66 per cent of the party!unit vote system in Maryland ~~ | total. y _ |primaries for state-wide office. It was beter than his showing [t has set a hearing for Mon-| _|in either Indiana (29.8 per cent)/day on a suit to apply the ban| s\or Wisconsin. (33:7), and heion the CRUSHED BY REDS BUTCHERS TOOK Neutralists Flee Plain Of Jarres FOR TEN 'BOB' LONDON, (AP) -- Prince Charles has won 10 shillings ($1.50) in damages*from an ice cream man, Lawyers" for the 15-year- old heir to the throne com- plained in court Tuesday that Reg Butchers, 53, had for four years beer ice cream on Dartmoor, which is part of the prince's estates, without permission, They asked for £400 ($1,- 200) damages and £8 ($24) costs, All they got was the 10 shillings--plus an injunc- tion preventing Butchers from ever selling on the prince's property again. "It's put me out of busi- ness,"' said Butchers, a for- mer army sergeant with nine children: 7 Epo lng presidential primary} claimed vindication in thef also. | |against the rights bill originated) iby the late John F. Kennedy/ GREEN STUFF WORDING |son, | But Brewster, a 41-yeat-old) former marine elected to the| Senate two years. ago, was} elated by his effort to preserve Maryland's 48 national nominat- ing convention votes for Presi- dent Johnson. via The young Marylander had} , : ' been tapped by the party or-| OTTAWA NaghARP bills, ganization _--~ with Johnson's| bills. Not the kind you owe blessing--to take on Wallace in| but the kind you pay your a state still prejudiced with old) debts with occupied the Com- American Civil War attitudes) mons for an occasionally hil- and a recent history of fcial| @tious hour Tuesday. " ' y 4 out-| _ It all started when Maurice ye Ait mae ae Cam.) Cote (SC--Chicoutimf) took 'a bridge. | close look' at the wording on In the end; Brewster wound) some of the green stuff. It up with 264,613 votes, 53.23 per said, he recounted in shocked cent of the total. He had called] tones, the "Bank of Canada Wallace a bigot and a liar dur-| Will pay to the bearer on de- ing the campaign. i mae "Tower MWallace said the) What would the bank pay? Maryland vote "should let them) Well, it used to be gold but know in Washington and in both| since 1940 payment of gold national parties that they can't} was stopped. So, argued Mr. ---------------------- | cote, why not divest currency | | of the misleading and deceit- | 27 Bailed Out ful statement by replacing the In Montreal V-Day Protest tions" which don't really do | any harm because no one is Bearers Demand VIENTIANE (AP)--The last positions held by neutral- ist forces in the Plaine des Jarres region have fallen to the |Communists, Premier Souvanna Phouma announced today. | Neutralist Gen. Kong Le |abandoned his emergency com- jmand post and withdrew further southwest of the plain in the face of. continuing Commu- jnist pressure, a spokesman for |Souvanna said. (U.S. State Secretary Dean |Rusk urgently recalleq Adlai E. Stevenson, the chief U.S. dele- |gate to the United Nations, from a European trip because of the deepening crisis in South- feast Asia.) A government statement said "following massive attacks, prepared well in advance launched by the Lao-Viet (Pa- thet Lao and North Vietna- mese) troops against our (neu- des Jarres and Muong-Phanh, the last neutralist positions ex- isting on the plateau of Xieng Khouang have fallen... ." ORIGINAL SITE tralist) position in the Plaine Waste Of Time Muong Phanh, perched on the western edge of the plain, was {tions that have fallen. Earlier |it was reported that'the neutral- iss were clinging to several po- sitions on the fringes of the plain, including Muong Kheung, the headquarters for Kong Le's larmored regiment some 20 miles northwest of Muong Phanh. Kong Le's withdrawal -- hig |second in two days--was not re- {ported caused by a fresh Red jattack although two Communist battalions, roughly 800 men, were said to be close behind. It appeared to be that the neutral- ist general was seeking to avoid a showdown battle. A government spokesman said Kong Le might try to establish a headquarters at Ban Na, an- other high-ground position about four miles southwest of Ban Khong. Reds Mum After UK's really deceived. The words were now "hallowed by us- age" and the currency of Can- ada was no worse for them. He favored going along with the status quo until ;the "au- thorities" proposed a change. That was too much for An- drew Brewin (NDP--Toronto Greenwood), who labelled Mr, Francis a "crusted Tory" for urging that legal fictions be retained and, waving a $10 bill, asked rhetorically why perpetuate the statement that the bank would pay the bear- er anything. Straight-faced, Jedn Chre- tien (L--St.. MauriceLafleche) suggested Mr. Brewin table "the document from which he just read." Equally straightfaced, Mr. Brewin used the standard par- liamentary escape hatch to avoid surrendering his money -- it, he said, "'is a purely per- sonal document which I would prefer to retain." fine print with the words "'le- gal value." Into the rivate members' hour fray leaped Lloyd Fran- cis (L--Carleton) with a plea for retaining the "legal fic- MONTREAL (CP) -- Twenty-| -- seven persons appeared in court Tuesday, the aftermath of a demonstration - filled Victoria Day holiday that-ended with dis- covery of a bomb on the Vic- jlargely on agriculture in 1944, | was diversified. | Mr. Thatcher has claimed in his five years as leader of the toria Bridge. Twenty-six were charged with disturbing the peace and re- leased on $50 bail. The other was kept in custody on a charge After UN NICOSIA (AP) -- Interven- ree 7_Hostages Action inz the weekend. 45 Escape Ship Fire In Pacific "Oh, God, I love you, honey. I'm glad you're safe." At this greeting, Mrs. Randi Schjeldrup fell into the embrace nightmarish burning of a ship at sea, in which one died and nine others are missing. Mrs. Schjeldrup, 29, her three small children and her husband, ors from the explosion-racked Norwegian freighter Sandanger, on which Schjeldrup was chief engineer. Kong Le's original headquarters site which the Communists took Monday after an offensive dur- The statement did not pin- point additional neutralist posi- LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP)-- of her aunt Josephine after the} Sindre, were among 45 surviv- Laos Plea PEKING (Reuters) -- Britain has asked Communist China use its influence to dissuade the Terence Garvey, the. Britis! charge d'affaires here, made the request orally to a depart- mental official of foreign ministry Tuesday, the spokes- man said. He declined to give further details, but it was understood here that the Chinese made no immediate reply. ' (The U.S, earlier this week asked Western nations with rep* resentatives in. Peking to use their good offices to persuade the Communist Chinese govern ment to use its influence to stop the fighting in Laos.) | Observers believed a series of jreports on Laos which filled a good 'deal of space in today's Chinese press gave a strong clue to the line any future reply would take. - The main report, on the front page of all newspapers, con- cerned the Pathet Lao state- ment denying a claim by the Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma that pro - Communists had launched an attack on the neutralists, The 45 arrived here late Tues- day night aboard their rescue Ship, the German freighter Bo- denstein. The UN political adviser, Etobicoke § For Liberals' Joust TORONTO (CP)--Candidates for the leadership of the Ontario Liberal party have been invited to address the annual meeting of the suburban Etobicoke Lib- eral Association tonight. They are Charles Templeton. former executive news editor of the Toronto Star; Robert Nixon, member of th» provincial leg- is'ature for Brant; Joseph Gould, -member for Toronto Bracondale: and Andy Thomp- son, member for Toronto Dover- curt. tional independence day--amid| fication was slowed because in- unconfirmed reports from Mi-| dustry was shy of a government ami of sabotage by exile forces| with a socialist aura. on Cuban territory The CCF was the only social-| A report by Cuban exile|ist government in North Amer- sources in the Florida _resortlica. city Tuesday claimed that anti-| All 10 provincial governments . ite Set | more industry, increased farm credit and streamlining of goy- ernment operations. Mr. Thatcher said he hoped to set up within a month a Glassco-type commission to de- termine how to streamline gov- ernment operations. A session of the legislature likely would be called this fall. AREN'T DESPONDENT Premier Lloyd, more cheerful and relaxed than he has ap- spoke again with President Archbishop Makarios, the Greek Cypriot leader. Makarios last week denounced the taking of hostages after UN authorities criticized his government. for jof possessing an offensivejtion by the United Nations syc- jweapon--a lead blackjack with| ceeded Tuesday night in obta a knife concealed in it. ing the release of seven Tu Bench warrants were issued|ish - Cypriot hostages held by for the arrest of two others who| Greek-Cypriots, did not turn up in court. Sixteen| Their release followed a state- n , teen-agers also appeared in ju-|ment by the special political/not preventing such acts. Castro raiders had blown up six]in Canada went to the electorate|yenile court. | representative of UN Secretary-| Plaza took up with Makarios ridges in Cuba. jin the last 18 months and the! One senior police officer esti-|General U Thant that the UN) the cases of 91 Turkish hostages The raiders were led by/CCF in Saskatchewan was the|mated that as many as 300 per-|peace force on Cyprus was be-| known to have been seized since Manual Artime, leader: of the| Only governmen defeated. lsons were arrested in the dem-| coming a firm and positive unit] March 27, the day the UN force abortive Bay of Pigs invasion! The Liberals won. the election|onstrations which. began after|and, if need be, would get still} became operational, He said in April. 1961, the sources said./ with 40.1 per cent of the votes|rallies by French-speaking pa-| tougher. |the president "is equally con- peared since the election, told ~ exiles, whe at eon tal cast, the CCF 40.6, the Conser-itriotic and separatist groups.| Galo Plaza of Ecuador, who| °¢™ed. » tole'nected with Artime's Revolu-|vatives 18.9 and other parties 4\ Most were released because of left for New York today to re- a press conference: 'We move! tionary Recovery Movement per cent lack of pvidenc T : : a ary y I : pvidence. port to Thant, told a press con- to the role of opposition without (MRR). said the leader would) In three seats won by the CCF} Hoodliims were said to have) ference "I am glad that the peo- o Gets Encore: Frost Tonight either chagrin or despondency."' issue a communique about the|and five won by the Liberals, become involved. Some carried|ple believe we are taking a The Liberals, who held 21/operation shortly from "some-| the winning margin was less|broken bottles, bricks and firmer line because that is ex-| Seats at dissolution of the last' where in Central America.". 'than 100 votes. knives. actly what is happning."' TORONTO (CP)--Frosts were '*predicts,,for many Ontario areas tonight as cloudy skies| 40 SPIKE MIKES SPIKED AT U.S. EMBASSY Reds' Ears At Wall Get Twea pues a | | | | king WASHINGTON (CP)--For the last 11 years Soviet security agents apparently have been listening to conversations taking place inside the 10-storey United States Embassy building in Moscow--not only in conference rooms but in the living quarters as well, The state department § dis- closed Tuesday that after years f -f'or:, security. officials fin- ily uncovered a_ network . of more than 40 microphones _hid- den in the thick Walls of the embassy. The first of the micro- phones was found April 23 by ' ¢ | } CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | wrecking a room, ripping out the walls and ceiling. Fig 7s Foy D. Kohler, U.S. ambas. Sime siti sador in Moscow, made a formal protesst to the Soviet govern- ment Tuesday over the listen- ing devices A statement by the state de- partment's security chief, G Marvin Gentile, said indications are that -the devices were "placed in the building prior to its occupancy by United States" 11 years ago. The build- ing was assigned to the U.S. by the Soviet government for use as an embassy in 1952 and was actually occupied in the spring of 1953. th Officials said Moscow embas-|' sies of Western allies also havelé been "bugged"? but they ded 1 \ clined to di t} 1e cuss deta than s of d the coverie U.S. E Z didn't want to air security lems of their friends. -~ other those in mbas avin y ' profp. th MIKE FROM RUSSIA... WITHOUT LOVE It is understood, nat part, of. the hunch" that the embassy was scretly w iscover by ul declined ( anad involved but in n t 3 to say an embassy he said that he however, |co-ordinating all secufity work Amierican| with. them. | The microphone network was Iron Cu The state department had pre- than 170 } Western allies have been sumed from the outset, when it tC placed on the alert with the U.S.|took possessic4 of the embassy;|tage of the Stalin era of 1952,| ired came from new/described as the most extensive| Covered more than 130 listening ' ice re. ico shine friendly powers.|effort to Breach American se-|devices in the. premises behin? | curity yet uncovered b-hind the the Iron Curtain. The latest dis rtain that. the premises were wired | # and all official were warned to keep this in mind. They took no| were made of heavy metal with chances. All highly sensitive work was done in rooms within! rooms--specially constructed so! that they could not be pene-| trated by microphones. However, officials observed that the U.S. ambassador and his aides could not always take} visitors into highly - sensitive} rooms and therefore concluded|COnversation eight feet|i that the Russians had gathered) 4Way. iB some information. An intensive! They declined to say in what f review is under way to find out! roonis they found the equipment} whether "any significant com-| ' | promise of sensitive informa-| tion" took place, to them. The microphones had|t been placed well. back in the! plaster -- about from the interior the thin. tube reaching the inner|i surface but not penetrating the| plaster. Officials found that! some of the microphones. still| eight or 10 a long thin metal tube attached | bure: but said the Russians had pene-|"€WS frated not only the business|Where temperatures plunged in- |quarters of the embassy but|to the 20s Tuesday' night and were shown to reporters, They| with summer. The Dominion qveather au here predicted tempera- ure drops up to 30 degrees fol- ! lowing several days of heat and| ; inches) sunshine, | i surface, with} south where temperatures were particularly in the n the 80s Tuesday, Northerly winds up to 30 miles mums of 55 - 60 degrees and minimums around 30 degrees orecast for much of the area. But the bureau had_ better for Northern Ontario Since 1949 the Americans un-|alo the living quarters below. |0dd snowflurries. swept. regions contained sid wooden tubes in-| , leading down to/s streets. Officials in the walls total beneath the cover boosts the to mor Some of the microphones, vin- the gtreets buildirigs, fo nearby Soviet|t per The microphone wiring 'was|@S far south as Georgian Bay. It said a high pressure area tarting to move across the up- lakes district today will he beginning of a warming trend, ce} an hour were expected to move! worked, capable of picking up|into southern regions, with max-| Ottenbreit, just 11, of loves. pancakes, Jimmy | Regina, presumed the wiring led under! bring inteymittent. sunshine and| He had to this week in Regina, He was one of ur boys who | devoured 94 pantakes in a pan- meal. JUST LOVES 'EM % 7 cake - eating contest during holiday festivities in Regina Monday. While Jimmy wasn't the winner, he enjoypl the (CP Wirsphoto)

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