Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jun 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 8, 1964 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -- NEW DELHI (Reuters) 549,000 ROTARIANS IN 125 COUNTRIES Don't be surprised this week if you see Oshawa Rotar- ians walking about with visitors from distant lands whu are their house-guests and also delegates to the Rotary Interna- tional Convention in Toronto. For instance, Rotarian Michael Rudka (who just happens to be international president of the 17,000-mem- ber Refrigeration Service Engineers Society Interna- tional) is host to two male visitors from Thailand while Rotarian J. Murray Mac- Leod (assistant to the gen- eral manager of Duplate (Canada) Ltd. in Oshawa, is host to a couple from Ice- Jand. Mr, Rudka doesn't speak a word of Thai (the official language of Thai- land, a branch of the Indo- Chinese language family) but it does seem, as a re- MURRAY MacLEOD frigeration expert, that he would have more in com- mon 'with the couple from Iceland than he would with the gentlemen from Thailand (none of which is intended as a criticism of the hard-working local Rotarian convent.,on com- mittee.) There are also Rotary guests here from Brazil, Japan, East India, Switzerland, England, Ireland, Scotland, plus 50 Three persons were trampled to death Sunday and 20 others ser- fously hurt in a crush of people trying to get a last look at an urn containing the ashes of prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, The incident occurred at a railroad station near Aligarh where the special train carry- ing the ashes across India topped to permit people to see the urn, Thousands stood in the scorch- Three Trampled To Death! During Nehru Ash Display cn 9 mn oe TT ee aie ia ing heat on one of the hottest days of the year--the temper- ature was well over 105 degrees --to pay their homage as the train made its way on its 24- hour journey to Allahabad, where the ashes will be im- mersed in the Ganges. Crowds packed every station, thronged overhead bridges and lined the track at every town and hamlet, bowing heads in homage, scattering flowers and arlands and crying 'Chacha ahru Zindabad" Long live US. Politician Dubs Pearson Peace Builder OTTAWA (CP) -- U.S. Assist- ant State Secretary Harlan Cleveland Saturday night de- scribed Prime Minister Pearson as "the founding father of mod- ern international peace - keep- ing." He said Pearson's bold pro- posal in 1956 to halt the Suez conflict through a United Na- tions force--for which he won a |Nobel Peace Prize -- was a |"truly creative act... lof miraculous amalgam--deep junderstanding of great forces, jcombined with an intuitive lsense of the right moment to ltake the next step." | Mr. Cleveland spoke to the Ca- \nadian United Nations Associa-| a kind/craft next Friday over fields |where peasants of India work. Uncle Nehru) and "Pandit Nehru amar rahen'" (May Nehru live forever). BREAK BARRIERS Many broke through the. sta- tion barriers to peer through the compartment window at the urn and at Nehru's widowed daugh- ter, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, and her two sons, Rajiv, 20, and Sanjay, 18, seated with bowed heads, white-robed and bare-footed, on the white-sheeted floor beside it. Other urns containing ashes of Nehru have been distributed to all states in India, They too are destined for rivers and seas throughout the country. The remaining ashes are to |be scattered from air force air- Machinist William Henry Cooper, 32, inspects his bat- tered auto in Holyport, Berk- shire, Sunday which he said was a (otal loss after a colli- Work For Dole ai ili ili Na ita sion Saturday with a car bearing Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, The royal auto, driven by the prince, was only slightly damaged Rainfall o in the accident. No one was hurt. | 62 HEARD IN WEEK PERCE, Que. (CP) -- The; Quebec royal commission inves- tigating the case of Wilbert Cof- fin left this Gaspe resort Sun- day after hearing 62 witneses in one week, winding up with evidence about an inquest in 1953 at which he testified. It was the oly time Coffin ever testified publicly -- he was hanged Feb. 10, 1956, for the murder of one of three slain American hunters, after futile efforts to get a second trial at which he could testly. But Dr. Lionel Rioux, coroner, told the royal commission Sat- urday an "inept stenographer" at the second phase of the in- quest at which Coffin ta'ked copied only answers and not questions. Dr. Rioux himself was told by Mr. Justice Roger Brossard, the commissioner, that documents he had put together at tne in- quest were "worth nothing." The slender, 47-year old cor- oner had said he had asked wi- nesses to sign blank statements and later he had their teti- mony typed above them. --(AP Wirephoto by cable from London) | The inquest into the slayings jof the three hunters was run Hint Red Nations Eye Coffin Killings Hearings Ended | Pp , . off in three phases and Coffin ~ himself was cleared of compli-" city in the killings in the second ° phase. A month later, a jury" under Dr, Rioux found him" criminally responsible for the * shootings of Richard Lindsey, . gene Lindsey, 47, had been shot,.. as his head and a portion Jof. his body were never found.' The Gaspe prospector wasn't - present at this phase and Dr. Roiux told the commission. Crown Prosecutor Noel Dorion. had to'd him not to call Coffin as a witness, He was then enfronted with' a document in which Mr. Dor-* ion instructed him not only to call Coffin, but to explain to* witnesses they could testify un-» der the Canada Evidence Act as a protection, The coroner insisted he had never before seen the document, The jury members testifid they at first felt Coffin should ra charged with theft, not mur- er, WOULDN'T MATTER Owen Patterson, 43, a Gaspe bank manager who served on jthe jury, said that while they were deliberating, they were told that no matter what their verdict, Coffin would be charged with murder. 2 guests from Uruguay (who are billeted at the Hotel Gen- osha, Mr. Harry Finer's popular hostelry on King street.) The Oshawa club is holding an 'International Night" and Friendship Day' in this city following the Toronto con- vention -- the guests will be entertained here Thursday at a reception and dinner. They will tour local points of inter- est Friday, including Camp Samac (where a luncheon will be held.) Jack Lowery (who is a walking encyclopaedia on facts |tion. With 62 witnesses crammed into six nervewracking days that included two night sittings, some witnesses mumbled, oth- ers forgot, a few were deaf or illiterate. One result was Mr. Justice Roger Brossard's order that contradictory testimony by Re- gis Quirion, 40, a lumberjack, be looked into "to determine the Membership In GATT | GENEVA (AP) -- Romania, Soviet-sponsored plan for a new t a eS (Bulgaria and Hungary haveluniversal trade organiation to « jmade preliminary approaches|supersede GATT: : to the General Agremeent on! 'The prospects of the three So- WINDSOR, Ont, (CP)--Levels|Tariffs and Trade with a view | viet Ars pret fiyot joining of some Great Lakes will risejto joining the Western-domin- GATT dismayed a number of from one to three inches during ated trade organiation, reliable|delegates from the under-de- |the next 40 days, but the level/economic sources digclosed| veloped countries, | e e * Lauding Canada's peace-keep-| M t U T R jing role around the world, | 1nis er T es 0 alse | Cleveland, who runs the US.) state department's international | jtai y_ re organization affairs, raised ajchannel "employables'"" now on| ceiving something for nothing."'| |question, however, whether the|social aid into a program that} The minister said; "We are |UN would ever agree to Peat-| would compel them to work for/trying to convince the federal |son's idea for a permament in-|relief has been revealed by Gas- government these projects |ternational police force, |katchewan's new minister on s0-|should be shared on a similar He suggested also that while|cial welfare and rehabilitation.|basis of social aid." He suggested the municipal REGINA (CP) -- A. plan to,tainly don't want anybody re- ' | | and figures from the world of Rotary) said today that there ithe U.S, might possibly support| are 11,732 Rotary clubs and 549,000 Rotarians in 125 countries. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE The local group who would operate a trust company under the name of Laurentian Trust and Savings LAd. have a notice in the Ontario Gazette -- they will make application for Letters Patent incorporating a trust company, having an authorized permanent capital of $5,000,000 divided into 500,000 shares having a par value of $10 each, The head office would be located in Oshawa, . . . Norman Millman, Osh- awa'sh "Father of Town Planning', today approved the City's new "intrusion" into the green belt, or buffer zone, by describing it as "orderly -- the way we had always hoped for." The City has earmarked 547. acres -- six next resi- |the idea of an enlarged role for the UN in Southeast Asia, what ter of "guesswork." The UN) could not take the problem off |American hands "and let us go jaway and forget it." | 'Maybe more effective inter-| national machinery is needed to} ae ~ tea attractive [seeing every able-bodied man|Work for what they receive at peoples of Southeast Asia are| |left alone by their more POWET-| wooks, ihe" sald ie Sea: ; ployment situation is such that|be changed by the federal gov-| | "But even more ceftainly, Our! anyone who wants a job should/¢™mment where this would be |ful neighbors,' he said. |power and determination are jneeded to persuade the Commu- Dave Boldt said in a week- end interview the scheme, if|governments contribute roster within two weeks. It also|/federal goverment the remain ultimately would require other|der. recipients to work at special). a jects for any rellef benefits|/NEED MORE MONEY pees ey Mr. Boldt said social aid re receive. me cannot be asked "We're looking to | cipients forward resent. off the relif roll in the next two P : ' "We hope that legislation wil be able to get one." | Possible." Mr. Boldt said the plan would seven|tg remain implemented, would take such/per cent, the provincial govern-|j that role would be was a mat-|persons off the department's|ment 42 or 43 per cent and the) m to} jof Lake St, Clair is expected steady and Lake rie will drop one inch, the onthly: report of a United "|States lake survey says. Lake St. Clair is now four inches above the all-time low for this date which was in 1934, and six inches below the level lof the Jake one year ago. It is |42 inches below the record high j}Of 152 and one inch above last month, Lake Erie is 15 inches above |the 1934 record low inches below one year ago, The | His department will siill see|iiie is 37 inches below the 1952 and four here. This move represents an about-face on the part of these Soviet bloc countries, which have consistently joined the un- \der-developed nations in attack- jing GATT during the current world trade conference here. The move reported Saturday jappeared to spell the doom of a | | US. Continue | Aid To India The developing countries have used their superior voting power at the trade conference to|' Steamroller through a recom- mendation to the United Na- tions that a new international trade organization should be |set up, despite vigorous West- er objections. | The surprise move by the three Communist countries also appears to have saved the world trade organiation from facing a showdown on the question of a new trade organization when the three - month talks enter feasibility of charging him. "With perjury..." said Crown Prosecutor Maurice Dus-: sault of Gaspe, who will carry out the order. With whatever was appropri-: ate, the commissioner said. Leaps Off Span To Miss Train; Girl, 12, Dies jthat persons who need aid get jit as they have in the past, he added. The work program would be geared for projects that would {nists that it is in their interest], pitharh » parallel to social aid and |jto stop aggression. | ___|woud be financed through a } fund made avaiable from fed- | NBC SHOWS 'PARADE' eral, provincial and municipal| | Ten episodes of the musical-| governments. dential land parcels around the edges of the city to accom- modate approximately 7,200 -- for the plan... . The Oshawa Track and Field Council (under Barclay Law) deserves credit for arranging that mammoth track and field meet here ST, CATHARINES (CP)--Re- becca Rosalie Campbell, 12, of St. Catharines, died Sunday night after she jumped 38 feet, from a railway trestle to avoid |high and remained at the same) . WASHINGTON (AP) -- The| thelr final week today. level as recorded last month. | W : The level of Lake Ontario is|United States has agreed to} LONDON (AP)--Patrick Gol- continue military assistance tp Walker, the British Labor expected to rise three meraned aa at to nage tee during the next 30 days. It is|*ndia a e present leve arty's chief spokesman on for- s " around $60,000,000 a year and to opted June 26-27 for 600 - 700 youngsters. It will. give the Pro- vince's fitness program a good shot in the arm. HARBOR COMMISSION ACKNOWLEDGES HAZARD Dear Mr. Gearin: The Oshawa Harbor Commissioners would like to thank you for calling their attention to a' hazard which you state exists on the west side of the Oshawa Harbor. We refer to the report that children are climbing the gravel and coal piles, ignoring police warnings to cease. We would like to point out to you that the primary respon- sliblity, in regard to use of leased land, rests with the tenant. All of this land under it is rented on long-term lease to various tenants. However, the Harbor Commissioners are already work- ing towards having this situation improved. Your concern in this regard is commendable, and any suggestions you have will be appreciated. Yours, Truly, F. ©, MALLOY, Chairman, PROS AND CONS ON THE WARD SYSTEM One point should be stressed in impartial discussions. of |variety program Parade, pro- It couples with the govern- pos normally be undertaken by |duced by CBC-TV, will be. seen|ment's thinking of work for peo- jon NBC-TV starting July 17. [ple on relief, he said. "We cer-| TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson said Sunday night Canada had no reason to be proud of forcing persons of Jap- anese origin to move from the British Columbia coast during the Second World War. "That action by the Canadian government -- though taken un- der the strains, and fears and pressures of war--was a blac mark against Canada's tradi- tional fairness and devotion to the principle.of human rights," Mr. Pearson said at the official opening of the Japanese-Cana- PM Raps WW II Shift | {day basis and the other 25 per Of Japanese-Canadians mean any loss of the traditions} and cultures, the arts and skills} brought to Canada by Cana- dians from other ands." | That was as close as the| prime minister got to discuss- ing current stresses in Canadian| unity. He did not mention the| new flag. | municipal governments such as improvement of parks, clean- ups and painting. Mr, Boldt said 50 per cent of social aid recipients are unem- ployable. Another 25 per cent can be employed on a day-to- cent are capable of working. "The thinking within the de- partment is that social aid ben-e fits should be based on need rather than eligibility. Our aim is to get every employable per- son in the province off social aid." Department officials estimate five per cent of the 25,000 Sas- katchewan residents on relief could be cut from rosters com- plteely, said Mr. Boldt. _ WEATHER FORECAST 19 inches above the low of 1935. |The level is 16 inches below one year ago and 45 inches below the 1952 record high. The level has risen seven inches in the last month, |PREDICT RISE \for Lake "Huron in the next month. This level is one inch below the previous low of 1034 and 71 inches below the record high of 1886, The lake has risen four inches since last month. Lake Michigan will rise one inch in the next 30 days and is one inch below the previous rec- ord low of 1034, It is 71 inches below the record high of 1886 and four inches above the level last month, A three-inch rise is predicted for Lake Superior which is 22 |inches abeve the all-time low of |1962 and 15 inches below the high of 1876. The level is seven inches higher than last month. | A one-inch rise is predicted| add to this an unspecified amount of credit to help the As- ian country strengthen its de- fence industries, But India's request for three squadrons--about 36 planes--of F-104 supersonic jet fighters, at the top of the country's priority list as it shores up its defences against possible future conflict with Communist China, was left open. A joint communique was is- sued here and in New Delhi. Rather than supply the jets, which would have cost an esti- mated $150,000,000, the United States decided on "continued support for Indian mountain di- visions and defence communi- jeations equipment, transport aircraft support and road build- ing equipment for India's bor- der roads." Jeign affairs, returned Saturday ifrom a visit to Russia and ex- pressed belief in the truth of reports that Premier Khrush- chev recently visited Romania secretly in an effort to pull that country back into Moscow's eco- nomic fold. Walker, who would be for- this fall's British election, said that when he was in Bucharet he urged Romania to join the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, GEORGE C. MARTIN Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa BUS: 728-4511 RES: 725-2802 eign secretary if Labor wins),. a passing train, : Anne House, 14, also made, the jump but escaped with mul- tiple injuries. She was in fair condition in hospital. The train was a special carry- ing members of the Buffalo Na-, tional Railway Historical So- ciety home from a visit to Osh-' PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 187 KING ST, E. All Lines of Sunny Skies protected area in 1942. And Warmer Mr. Pearson said the action) Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Lake Erie: Winds Nariable |had one compensation -- it had/onto weather. office at 5:00 a.m.|five to 10 knots, increasing to |brought to the attention of other) Synopsis: There will be cloud|southerly 15 to 20 late tonight; |provinces the "strong character! and showers spreading into. the|partly cloudy with fog patches. jand fine qualities of our Jap-/Lake Superior area due to a} Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: ft janese citizens and settlers, \vigorous storm over the mid-|Winds easterly 10 to 15 knots need not be resident therein, as long as they meet the other HASTENED INTEGRATION Western [nited States. As thejincreasing to 20 to 25 tonight , "hag a qualifications; for instance, Alderman Gordon Attersley, who |° The forceful distribution also/$tofm mbves into Northern On-|and shifting to south Tuesday| Wear veils when appearing in perennially leads the aldermanic polls, could run in any ward |had "hastened the full integra-|tario and the clouds and show-|moming; cloudy fog patches. |public, of his choosing, especially the ward in which he traditionally |tion of Japanese-Canadians into/€Ts will spread into all but the) Lake Superior: Winds east-| gets the largest vote. If elected, he would have a moral |Canadian life." jsoutheastern corner of Ontariojerly 15 to 20 knots, increasing|Trenton .....++++.. responsibility, naturally, to support the policies and wishes | Mr. Pearson said the cultural|by late Tuesday, Midafternooa|to 40 to 28 knots this afternoon| Killaloe .. ot his particular electorate (especially if he planned to seek lcentre 'is a new, a living mon-|temperatures today and Tues-jand shifting to south Tuesday|Muskoka .. re-election there.) the Ward system -- there is no positive assurance that its zestoration would provide a cure-all for the many ills, ad- ministrative and otherwise, in this City's municipal world. There is one thing it could achieve -- it could effect a sound shake-up mm the personnel of our present City Coun- cil, so- sadly over-populated with public representatives who | have been at City Hall far too long. This factor alone makes it most attractive to hundreds, Critics of the Ward system, deliberately or otherwise, con- stantly fail to point out that candidates in a certain ward dian 'Cultural Centre. | Almost 22,000 persons of Jap- janese. descent were forced to leave British Columbia when lits coastline was declared a} carr omowrs | DIRECT SALESMEN! DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)--The| * : Kuwait parliament has made| , Would you like the opportunity to earn importing liquor a crime pun-} : 2 lishable by up to three years in| | $600 to $1000 a month? No high pres jail, exempting only foreign dip-|~ sure or gimmick selling. The oldest and lomats, Now, the newspaper) ~ : Akhbar Al Kuwait reports, |" largest company in its field requires honest, reputable salesmen to keep up with growth. All enquiries confidential. Must have own car and be bondable, there is a movement afoot to) | require all women, including|. Write and give particulars. We will ar- range an interview. wives, daughters and secre-| BOX A-3, OSHAWA TIMES tariés of foreign diplomats, to 55 50 50 55 55 50 55 50 50 70 75 80 BUEHLER' Forecast Temperatures , Low tonight, high Tuesday: Windsor .. 65 NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? PERRY 723-3443 P ; Ss Fo P43 "-- . / sv eneees ey | Day or night 12( KING E. -- 723-3633 © ' Tues. and Wed. Specials! CHICKEN WINGS 4 «.*1 SMALL PURE PORK | LINK SAUSAGE 2 «I BLADE STEAKS «59° © FREEZER SPECIAL ¢ FRONT QUARTERS - 39: | BEEF CUT AND WRAPPED FREE EXPERT WISE You "'dig" the latest jargon? Everything Is something-wise these days. Well, house-wise and property-wise, we're expert-wise. We're -- construction-wise, plumbing - wise; neighbourhood - wise, tax + wise and budget - wise, Come see the homes we list . . . that may end up os the wisest move you can make! Housing Idea "Over A Quorter Century of Service" SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 KING WEST BEGoodrich HOME AND AUTO CENTRE 88 KING WEST 725-4543 A lument to the fact that our Ca-|day will range from the 80s injmorning; cloudy with fog/North Bay.. t {nadian unity, our Canadian pur-|the south and in the 70s in the|/patches and occasional show-|Sudbury ... It is inconceivable that the Ward system would produce {pose which seeks a Canadian|north country. ers and thunderstorms, |Earlton .....+ a Council inferior in over-all make-up to those returned in re- |identity, need not and does not) Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,) |Sault Ste, Marie.,. cent years. Pee eereeeerterrer erat onsnrees - Lake Huron, southern Georgian Kapuskasing cheek The Ward system would enable the retention of the best Arti P pag hig cer 2 pong ae oom Write TUyER..++s of the current crop of councillors, while allowing for the en- | ists rune ers by evening. Warmer Tues-|9t. Thome try of some new faces, with fresh ideas -- an able newcomer | day. 'Winds southerly 15 to Ce would have a much better chance of being elected at the first | P Flag; Tuesday. try under the Ward system than he would under the cross- | earson a ! Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- a city-vote plan (which seems to favor old, established names, | M4 tri burton, Hamilton, Toronto: Hamilton . : ' | Sunny with a few cloudy pe- "3 : regardless of ability.) | 1 en riods today and' Tuesday. War- St, Catharines It is naive of anyone to believe, as some councillors | gp paAwa (CP) -- Artists|mer 'Tuesday. Winds light to- Toronto allegedly do, that the present cross-city-vote system is a. pro- have "refined" the govern-|day and southerly 15 Tuesday. Peterborough .... tection against "parochialism" on Council; municipal areas ment's proposed maple leaf) Northern Georgian Bay, Tim- without representation on City Council have not fared well flag, a spokesman in the primejagami, North Bay, Sudbury: on a comparative basis with other areas. The inequalities | Minister's office said Saturday. sing 2 cloudy tonight and Tues- in assessments between places like Lake Vista and Apple The basic design mas anteey wie 8 ee a iat Fre ' : e been altered," he stressed.'and thundershowers, Seasonable i as compared with north-of-King-street areas has fre- (These are the changes: itemperatures. Winds 'light to- quently been pointed out Herein. Would such conditions exist 1. The vertical blue bar at|day southeasterly 15 to 25 Tues- under the Ward system, all things being equal? each edge of the flag has been day. widened slightly. The color has aoe wie bier A few ' also been deepened to "bring it/showers or thundershowers in |Clause 5 ot Bill 135, passed by closer to a rane blue." . the late afternoon or evening. | the Ontario legislature last May 2. The size of the three red Tuesday cloudy with showers 7, would place unions within the/maple leaves has been reduced|and thundershowers. Seasonable I ab Th t definition of the Public Servants | <lightiy, and their color also has|temperatures. Winds east 15 to- Or rea Act, lbeen deepened, They will be day and outheasterly 20 to 25 Union members would thereby|close to scarlet : - |Tuesday. R h Cl ® ibe made civil servants, Mr.|. 3. The stems of the leaves) Cochrane: Increasing cloudi- o0ac QIMS Roach said in a statement, and! have been straigatened and|ness tonight. Tuesday mainly) {S 4 numerous labor unions which! made slightly thinner, remoy-|Cloudy with rain by afternoon. |S - TORONTO (CP) -- A clause/now enjoy bargaining rights|ing the noticeable nodes that|Winds light today and easterly | in a bill authorizing the proy-|with housing authorities would! appeared in the original design.|15t 0 20 Tuesday, ince to set up a corporation to|be wiped out. - ; Some MPs had called these) TORONTO (CP) Marine | deal with all Ontario -housing| Mr. Roach said his union|nodes "a plumber's lament." |forecasts issued by the weather| authorites contains a deadly|hopes for a clarification of in-| The changes do not. imply any/ office 8 a.m., valid until 11 a.m threat to organized labor, a un-|tent regarding the bill from La-|amendment of the government's|EDT Tuesday: : ion representative said Sunday. /bor Minister Leslie Rowntree.|flag-and-anthem resolution now) Lake Ontario: Winds variable Donald Roach, president of He said the government should|before the Commons. The reso-|five to 10 knots, increasing to Local 767, Canadian Union of |not allow such power to be used|lution described the flag design|southerly 10 to 15 late tonight; Public Employees (CLC), said| against labor unions. 'only in a general way. 'partly cloudy with fog patches. | ' é 723-2265 |--

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