Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today A cynic says a real friend is one who understands you and still is, Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO, 135 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1964 ah Hike eee Si i ED roy he Oshawa Cimes Weathe Cloudy with and Wednesday. Authorized as-Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. r Report some thunder- storms and showers overnight . Slightly cooler. AGES oy TWENTY-FOUR *P. Py " ae st two month old twins Joy (left) winks while their mother and Japhia, daughters of Mr. shops on King street this and Mrs. Denzil Dale, 127 morning. The double-vision Sutherland avenue, grab~-40_ sleepers, all bundled up in With worldly cares un- known, what could be better than a snooze in the sun and a visit to Dreamland. Twenty- Government To Unturl Flag Debating Plans OTTAWA (OP) -- The govern-| He quoted a report which/as the national anthem and God DOUBLE DOZE IN SUN best bib and bonnet(s), cumbed to the heat as store windows lost magic. CANADIAN-BORN suc- the their | | --Oshawa Times Photo by Bruce Jones UK-Newspaper Tycoon Lord Beaverbrook Dies ment unveils plans for the par-|said the vertical blue bars at savé the Queen as the 'Royal LONDON (Reuters) -- Lord | Beaverbrook, the owner of the 4 New Greek Alert 'On Invasion Hint | ATHENS (AP) -- The armedjent constitution and not to en- forces of Greece have been/force partition of the island be- placed on the alert again amid|tween the rival Cypriot factions. new fears that Turkey is about|The costitution gives the Turk- to stage its long-threatened in-|ish - Cypriot minority a veto vasion of Cyprus. over major legislation and the "We are on the eve of an out- Greek - Cy priot government break of war,' 'said a high|wants to amend the veto out of Greek government source. the constitution. illi doll in pelted The "invasion" port of Isken-| 'The informant said the note ae a ae the ron vralant derun in southéast Turkey, /would 'say that Britain and|q eee home base of the Turkish|Greece, the other guarantors of th standby force, reported no un-'the constitution under the 1960 Ste rs usual activity. agreement setting up the Cyp-|- othe Both Greece and the Greek-|rjot republic, do not appear Cypriot government of Cyprus|ready to fulfil their obligations ordered an alert during the and have forced Turkey into act- weekend, but pressure from the ing on her own. |United States was said to have|____ averted any Turkish move. The Greek government source said the new alert was ordered after information was received that 'Turkey is prepared to in- vade the island of Cyprus to- night or early tomorrow." He declared Greece would '"'defend Cyprus in the event of. aggres-| GREAT FALLS, Mont. (AP) Floods described as the worst tana's northwestern mountains |Monday, killing at least eight persons including a Canadian motorist, sweeping away dams and bridges and leaving hun- dreds of residents isolated. Damage estimates ran into Canadian casualty was rd Creighton, 35, of Card- ston, Alta. His car plunged into the raging Kennedy Creek north of Babb. His body was recov- ered, authorites said he died of exposure. Authorities said the death~tqll jincluded five members of on \Blackfoot Indian family. Rescue workers struggled to jenter the area but were blocked jin many places by washed-out bridges and long stretches of in- undated highway. At least 20 bridges and four earthen dams Police Squads Fight Negroes jin memory swept out of Mon- | In Tuscaloosa | sion.' |were carried away by the) CRISIS IN WEST Montana Toll Mounts; - FRAO " Alta. Resort Swamped : reached their highest . levels since 1936. Inoculations were adminip- itered to 222 persons and mone serum was ordered from Ede monton. | VACCINATE 200 | At Dawson City, 110 miles /northwest of Mayo, one-quatter of the community's 800 resis dents were vaccinated by Mon |day night. om | About 175 persons were eva® juated from Mayo and were 'live ing in tents, trailers, cars and trucks at the Mayo airport, le& jcated on higher ground several miles from the village, Othera who remained in the town were prepared to evacuate if a wattle ing is sounded, ud same patients were ordered m the Mayo Hi pital and schools were closedw At Dawson City, eight famie jlies were taken from th homes when water from sewa? boxes flooded part of the low: lying area of the town. 'ee | 1 jevacu rs {Beaverbrook, Canadian - born|mass - circulation London Daily \British newspaper tycoon, died|Express and the London Even- today at his country home ating Standard, served during the Greek Foreign Minister Stav- jros Costapoulos called in U. {Ambassador H enr y Labouis liamentary debate on the pro-|the borders of the proposed flag posed maple leaf flag today. (are to be widened and made a Justice Minister Favreau,|deeper blue and the three red government leader in the Com: leaves on the white ground are mons, told the House Monday/to be made smaller and closer the government expects the de-| to scarlet in color. bate to get under way Thurs-| yj, piefenbaker called it the day. , _..|"new model flag" and said But, he said, more definite) parjiament apparently isn't to Plans would be given today. he given this information. is greg vid eg de-| Mr. Martin denied the flag de- gonnds. Sy mition Leader sign was being changed and anthem," producing two resolu- tions--one covering the maple} leaf flag and O Canada and a} second covering the Union Jack and God save the Queen. fe 4 g .! A pounding water of streams and} S-/Negroes and i i Hy s police battled with 4 Ban y itain' 3¢ | clubs, |RESCUED BY AIRCRAFT the age of 85. Second World War as Britain Sand Balik: "Amtemeder clubs, rocks and bottles today He was no more successful |Max Aitken, died only a few! The fiery, opinionated _ pub- situation. the racial demonstrations. psd gg cot ---- i that Mr, Diefenbaker in getting weeks after newspaper Meéfijisier, whose name was a near | The violence came after po-|°°° ae A P , ewspapers: Mr. Martin maintained the time Pay him homage on the occa-|was also widely-known as a| In Ankara, the Turkish cap-jthe Negroes to march on Po payet hong cane ee at a for debate would be announced|sion of his 95th birthday. philanthropist who lavishediital, a high source said the|downtown area. he cal hn-oe ' 80) In Ohio Ci ra ject would be dealt with in the "i Brunswick, where he grew up.|ing a note to President Johnsonjonstrators back into the First ce GS Saree fevoe ony, 2 1 debate. TUSCALOOSA, Ala, (AP) --\rivers. | Strik Hit Beaverbrook. wh as born|minister of aircraft production Sir|after officers refused to allow| Despite poor flying weather, | y eaverprook, who was I '\Ralph Murray to dicuss x the details. Mr. Favreau and|from around the world met to|legend in London's Fleet Street,, REPORTS NOTE lice twice repulsed efforts by |2nging iain teen linens te root today and the rest of the sub.| em gifts on the province of New/|Turkish government was send-| The officers herded the dem- * A man of unlimited energy|asserting that the sole aim of al Canties, "Sm sper Tor aeuls to Diefenbaker to know whethr f ; with the two parts of the flag that parliament was being de-| resolution: separately. prived of any information. He The flag resolution calls for, argued that the time to discuss! the maple leaf flag to be Can-| the flag details was Thursday | ada's national flag' and adds} When the flag resolution is up that the Union Jack may con-/for debate. | tinue to be flown as a symbol; Mr. Diefenbaker referred to of Canada's Commonwealth|the "two-flag" resolution at one | membership, point and drew a reiort from) At the same time, Mr. Dief-|Mr. Favreau that the govern-| enbaker fired questions at Mr.| ment has n plans for "intro- Favreau and Acting Prime Min-|ducing debate on any two-flag ister Paul Martin over reports! resolution." last weekend quoting a spokes-| Gilles Gregoire (Creditiste--| yor, Township council in a let- man in the prime minister's of-| Lapointe) asked whether the ter Monday he respected its fice abut modifications of the/resolution would be combined | yiew that the Red Ensign should maple leaf design. with one proposing O Canada pe recognized as the official Ca-| Shastri's Cabinet Council approyed the Red En- jsign as Canada's official flag | three weeks ago and notified |Mr. Pearson. | But the prime minister said that while he shares council's | affection for the Red Ensign, he NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Laljtri's main rival for the prime Bahadur Shastri, 59, was form-| ministership. ally sworn in today as prime; Also excluded was minister to succeed the late/Ram, another rival of Shastri Jawaharlal Nehru. s who is leader of the Harijan His 16-member cabinet also/(untouchables) and a former feels it is time for Canada to have a flag that is "really dis- was sworn-in to rule over In-\cabinet minister. dia's 470,000,000 people. tinctive and national in charac- Shastri, who became the sec- ter; as Canadian as the maple leaf which should: be its domin- | ond man to rule modern India,| earlier submitted his cabinet ant design; a flag easily identi-| fiable as Canada's; a flag whic list to President Sarvepalli Rad- hakrishnan, cannot be mistaken for the em- The three top posts in the new Pearson Says He Respects. - Ensign Men TORONTO (OP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson told suburban Jagjivan Congress Party sources said Desai declined Shastri's invita- tion to join the cabinet because the offer did not make him the most senior cabinet minister next to the prime minister. of the future which honors the past." parliament. sand staying handicap. of power,, despite the 'had one of the most am z i ehronic asthma, he azing careers of modern 'times. Starting life in Canada as the penniless son of a Presbyterian minister, he made a fortune as a financier and was a million-| aire when he arrived in Britain) fat 30 to make his mark as a} LORD BEAVERBROOK power in British politics and as) the promoter of popular journal-| ism. As a politician he failed in his Empire Free Trade Crusade which arose from jis undoubt- edly sincere imperialism. But he remained undaunted. } Grudge Shots Hit Fonteyn PANAMA CITY (AP) -- Ro- berto (Tito) Arias was given a chance to live today while po- associate who pumped three versial Panamanian politician. Arias' wife, British ballerina law, Harmodio Arias telephoned government went to Guizarilal) Nanda, home mimister, Tiruval-| lur T. Krishnamachari, finance! minister; and Mrs. Indira Gandhi, daughter of Nehru, minister of information and broadcasting. Shastri also retained the ex- ternal affairs portfolio for him- self, as did Nehru. DIDN'T HOLD OFFICE Mrs. Gandhi was the only} member of the new cabinet who! had never held office before, al- though she is a past. president of the ruling Congress Party. Excluded from™ the cabinet as Noranji Desai, former fi- nance minister who was Shas-; TO HALT RUSH TO ALTAR OTTAWA (CP)--A brief un-| will have their say on the prob-| der discussion at the Canadian |conference on the family today lyrecommends that the minimum marriage age in all provinces be raised to halt the increasing number of teen-age marriages. The brief, prepared for the conference by the marriage preparation service of the Ro- ily; | The family conference, held under the sponsorship of the Governor-General and Madame Vanier, is being attended by about 350 sociologists, welfare workers, psychiatrists and psy- chologists from across 'Canada. Convict Caught Brief Urges Hiking Teen-Nuptial Age ual immorality among _ the Salvation Army of Canada in a brief to the conference. The army's brief said "open and unchecked" contraceptives must be halted if Canadians are to combat a serious deterioration of sexual values among young people, the |African Baptist Church. Then ihe ie = Pearson Quietly Raps Goldwater BALTIMORE (CP) -- Prime| Pearson spoke after having Minister Pearson touched deli-jreceived an honorary law de- cately on the November United | gree, States presidential fight today Turkish landing on Cyprus would be to preserve the pres- tens with deep hope or anxiety|to the press before delivery. to American leaders "especially, Pearson noted that Canada during elections when politic-|and the U.S. have the largest ians can use words in the heat|trade of any two countries in of a campaign that send cold/the world but there was a mat- shudders or warm impulses of|ter of greater importance in co- appreciation to the people whojoperation and friendship be- are affected by evenything you|/tween them, 'do--and that is everybody." That should be as an exam- | | Husband out} jher that her husband was " jof danger." But Dr. Antonio Gonzalez Re- lice sought a disappointed party|villa, who headed a team of | r , jneurosurgeons in a 24-hour op- blem of another country; a flag|bullets into the colorful, contro-/eration on Arias, said it would|noss wisdom-and patience," he| be 72 hours before he could say} jwhether his 45-year-old patient) He said such a distinctive de- Dame Margot Fonteyn, said in| Would live or whether he would) politicians are no different from sign was being submitted to|Bath, England, her brother-in- be paralysed. Police sought Alfredo Jime-| nez, a member of Arias' Pana-| menista party and an old friend, | as the gunman. | It was the second political shooting since Panama's na- tional elections May 10. SHOT AT EDITOR Panama's UN Ambassador Aquilino Boyd fired two shots } } | paper which accused Boyd of }election fyraud. The editor, Es-| | Arias was in surgery twice) jcolastico Calvo, received a mi- nor wound. Monday night. over a -period of lems of youth within the fam-| young were also assailed by the almost eight hours. Dame Margot said that unless her husband had a relapse, she hoped to go ahead with her sale of first of three performances with| Rudolf Festiv Nureyev' at the Bath al tonight. tn May 21 at the editor of a news-| Addressing the graduating|ple to the rest of the world "of| class of Johns Hopkins Univer-|how two free and. separate na- sity, Pearson said the U.S. has|tions of great disparity in power been called on to give world) and wealth can work together| jeadership at a critical time in without fear on the part of the} history." "In this leadership the U.S.|the larger." will need strength and steadi-)- - ai sitiaicintaemeigedsitil i said, "J hasten to add that your those in any other democracy, including my own, But in the U.S. they have more power than others over man's destiny once they are elected, "You should not be surprised en when we listen to them so carefully when they are trying to get elected." WATERTON LAKES, Alta. (AP)--Rampaging water turned ----|this peaceful tourist resort into MP Decries 2. 2taE 'Separatism' On Station }day as creeks and lakes spilled {over their banks after a week- end of torrential rain. Between 125 and 150 residents jwere evacuated 'to the posh OTTAWA (CP)--Auguste Cho- quette (L -- Lotbiniere) com- plained in the Commons Mon- day night that separatist views are being aired over television | Prince of Wales Hotel on a knoll at the north end of the lake. There was no report of injury or personal hardship. Fred Browning, Waterton Lakes National Park superin- jtendent, declared the town a disaster area during the after- jnoon as water in the Waterton \Lakes rose five feet. . He estimated damage at $500,- smaller or force on the part of Alberta Town Disaster Area the children, 1. y schools. housed in emergency accommo-)coverage t t dations in Great Falls, including |for the*toss 'of 'Columbus' twe Typhoid vaecine was dis-| their homes to seek shelter) COLUMBUS Forth ch praewageers uy e oday to 'Sigs 8 compensat: strikebound newspapers, fs As the strike against the Dis- patched to a number of cities|patech Printing Company, : where community drinking wa-|Prints the morning Citizen '* ter was polluted by floodwaters. |The dams that broke at Choteau and East Glacier held city water supplies. MAYO, Y.T. (CP)--The Yu- hour alert Monday night as riv- ers flooded their banks in the wake of a rapid spring runoff in warm weather. Parts of each community were under water but there were no reports of injury or se- rious damage. | Townspeople were inoculated) against typhoid as swollen riv-| ers caused sewers to overflow. One quarter of Mayo, a com- munity of 350 persons 1,100 miles northwest of Edmonton, ay under water Monday niglit as the Mayo and Stewart rivers | | around his waist, and rescued three and~ four years old. Sewer lines and water lines} stopped functioning in mid-after- noon and park officials were preparig to use water from the; swimming pool -- which was) filled and chlorinated Sunday-- to provide drinking water for persons staying in the hotel. Journal and The Evening Dis- |patch, went into its second day, the city's electronic media were adding numerous newscasts ang expanding present ones. The strike began at 5 aunt ; é His remarks were contained|kon communities of Mayo and|Monday when the printers' a |when he said that the world lis-|in a text of his address issued) pawson City remained on 24-|mailers' Unions set up lines around the dispatch belie ing. ; | Shortly afterwards, The patch announced it was sug jpending publication, and the |Citizen-Journal, a Scripps-How- jard paper, followed suit later i® |the day after publishing ; its onday morning edition, Ps The Dispatch has a cireula- tion of 200,000 daily and 300,000 Sunday, while the Citizen-Jour- nal's six-day-a-week circulation is 100,000. . Columbus, with nearly 500,008 people, is Ohio's second large est city in population and. the largest in the state in area. . WON'T CROSS LINES In addition to the walkout by members of the Columbus 'Ty- pographical Union No. 5 and the Columbus Mailers Union Ne, 103, The Columbus Newspaper Guild, after an overwhelming vote of approval, announced members won't cross the pic! lines. The mailers' and printers? contracts with the Di Printing Company expired J 2, but employees remained their jobs during continuing ne gotiations, ' : Both unions, with a total membership of 484, are a part of the International Typograph- ical Union. M * station CFCM-TV Quebec City residents In Flight Bid BELLEVILLE (CP) -- A 31 year-old convict Monday night made an unsuccessful escape bid while returning from Ot- fawa where he had vainly tried to escape serving the balance of a 10-year jail sentence. 'Norman Douglas McCaud, who travelled to Ottawa from Toronto Don Jail in a taxi, slipped away from his two es- corts while dining in a_ hotel here CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 _j civil man Catholic diocese of Mont- real, says that at present both and ecclesiastical laws seem concerned only with the physical capability of marriage They disregarded psychological and emotional maturity Present minimum marriage ages in the provinces range from 12 years for girls and 14 years for boys in New Bruns- wick, Newfoundland, Quebec and Nova Scotia to 18 years for gitis and 21 years for boys in Prince Edward Island, All proy- inces Vy allow mar s be- low their minimum a if the girl is pregnant The brief notes the growing support for extension of compul- sory education to the age of 18 and "Says the minimum ar riage age should at set tin cordancge with compulsory pedusationst requirement Tonight, five young | 5 n least be people! Its purpose is to study the prob- lems of the family in modern|and colleges organize "anti-illi- society, and to stimulate further research in this field. The brief from the diocese of Montreal recommends to prevent early marriages; It also cautions. Roman Catholic priests to resist pressures to perform marriages among the young, regardless of whether the girl is pregnant. Main causes of arly mar- riages were said to be early dat+ ing and going steady, preg- nar unhappy homes, and the hyper-sexuality of modern so- ciety Some teen-agers marry to. at- tain status, the brief adds. Their early marriages resulted from failure of society to)grant the It urged that communities cit sex'? groups, and recom- mended an intensive campaign to educate parents on the best greater| methods of guiding their chil-| efforts at counselling in order;dren and preserving discipline! in the home, The two briefs dealing with adolescent marriage are among 40. Canadian reports dealing with a wide variety of welfare problems associated with the family A brief in French, prepared by the Farm Women's Circle of Quebec has strong criticism for middle class families. who, it says, are "little concerned with their self-preservation." All 40 briefs are under dis- cussion at closed workshops throughout the family confer- Canada Troops Training For Peace Force CAMP GAGETOWN, N. B. (CP)--Canadian troops, under- going training here during the next nine days for possible use a United Nations peace- keeping force, are learning how to deal with riots, . espionage, unfriendly natives, border inci- dents and the press, Designed to acquajnt Can- ada's UN stand-by force, the Ist Battalion Canadian, Guards from Camp. Picton, Ont., with land urged that the Board of|900 although some Broadcast Governors take ac-|Pla ion to stop the practice. 000 He said the Broadcasting Act requires broadcasting ced the figure nearer $1,000,- Waterton Lakes is a 12-mile the separatist' broadcasts were|in southwestern Alberta. essentially " anti-Canadian and destructive 'of Confederation. were flooded at nearby Card- He said that' another Caouette|ston when a 'creek spilled its |phenomenon' mustn't be allowed | banks. to develop. This apparently was| Waterton roads were washed a reference to the widespread|out, cars overturned and some use of television and radio|buildings wrenched from their broadcasts by Creditiste Real|foundations by the deluge of wa- Caouette before the 1962 andjter that tumbled out of Cam- 1963 federal elections, eron Creek into the south end Surely BBG regulations were of the town, not intended to allow the tearing) A road grader, being used to |apart of Confederation by dema-|rescue Mrs. Paul Madge 9nd gogues who want to destroy|her two children from their Canada. home, tipped over but the oper- He said the programs in ques-|ator wasn't injured. Motel adolescent a stature and respect, ence which is being held at Car-jall the problems they might face|tion were broadcast weekly and owner Frank Goble drove near in his own right Teen-age marriages and sex leton University. It ends Wed jnesday. as 4+ UN contingent, Exercise INo Name 'opened Monday, featured representatives of yari-|the house with a four - wheel lous separatist. groups, drive vehicle, tied a rope k ey content|!ong. body of water that strad- P to be basically Canadian, But|dles the international boundary ® Several homes and businesses |

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