Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Pop rap ap ep eny Sapetep ipely Map lng ny ep, Thought For Today Resort owners are glad vaca- tions aren't taken just by those who can afford them. VOL. 93 -- NO. 139 ' ce - SN Fe aor ar ae be) te le a a at wip PIPE FECES he Oshawa Fines Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 13,1964 Authorized os Second Class: Ma! Ottawa and for payment PTE Weather Report Showers clearing overnight. Mainly sunny seasonable temp- eratures-Sunday, I! Post Office: Department of Postage in Cash, EIGHTEEN. PAGES Flag Test Flight arget Of Wrat From Opposition OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament Hill was given a stormy pre- view Friday of the Liberal gov- ernment's contentious maple leaf flag. For a total of four hours the| proposed Canadian national flag lew in bright sunshine on a 25- foot white pole on the lawns in front of the Peace Tower But the test flying provoked angry shouts of protest inside the Commons and a New Demo- cratic MP to try to stop the flag from being hoisted outside. Full-dress debate begins in the Commons Monday on the resolution proposing a flag de- sign of three red maple leaves on a white background with ver- tical blue bars at the borders, \ The same resolution would al- 'low the Union Jack to be flown as a symbol! of Canada's Com- monwealth connection. Meanwhile, clouds of another storm loomed late Friday in the Commons. Notice was served on the government by opposition parties that they will have a lot to say about persons being held for long periods in jail on im- migration cases. FIRE QUESTIONS In recent weeks Immigration Minister Tremblay has peppered with questions about i such cases, and Friday David} Orlikow (NDP -- Winnipeg } North) said he and a. number of his colleagues are unsatistied with the minister's explanations. The New Democrat rejected a suggestion by President George Mcliraith of the Privy & Council that the matter could be disposed of by skipping the usual one-hour private mem- | , The Alfred D. Hales, a backbench Conservative from the Ontario riding of Wellington South, moved that the Commons set| aside its regular business to de-| bate whether Prime Minister ASKED FOR FLAG Pearson should 'without legal authority display an unauthor-} ized flag" on government prop-; | erty. prime minister was aele cused of circumventing and ig- noring a 1945 cabinet order de- signating the Canadian Red En- sign as the flag to be flown on federal property. Mr: Pearson replied that some MPs had asked that the maple leaf design be flown and that the government decided it would be , courteous and useful thing' 0 do. After some 45 minutes of wrangling, Speaker Alan Mac- naughton ruled the emergency debate wasn't needed any more} since the urgency had passed, The focus then turned to the temporary flagstaff dug in the green parliamentary lawsn. At 1 p.m., a burly public works employee started to run up the proposed flag, watched by MPs, civil servants, tourists and school-children--and a large contingent of reporters. On to the scene marched Har- old Winch, NDP MP for Van- couver East. He reached for the rope. "Until Canada and Parliament decide to fly this flag it should come down," shouted Mr. Winch, a Red Ensign supporter, ; Title Given Billy Batlin | cee ae | manville town council toured LONDON (CP) -- A former the company's new $1,600,000 $3-a-week Toronto office boy| rubber reclaim plant Friday, "NEW BOWMANVILLE INDUSTRY stock is wound on heated drums, then sliced off and stacked in inch thick sheets. The plant operation is a "'dry" process (as opposed to chemi- following the official opening. This picture shows the re- finer mills, the last operation in the almost completely auto- mated plant. The reclaimed who became a holiday - camp} a knighthood in Queen Eliza- beth's birthday honors list an- bers' period on the grounds this ~ wouldn't be time enough. * The chief Commons' business aft the ei aera tat , Bhe Farm Credit Act--was fin- "ally inipletea Peiday, Third and final reading was given to the measure doubling the lend- ing limits of Farm Credit Cor- poration loans. The bill now goes to the Senate, Almost as soon as the Com- mons began its day's work, the flag issue was run up. tycoon in Britain was awarded FLQ B nounced today, _ Millionaire Billy Butlin, a na- tive. of South Africa who went to Canada at the age of 11 to join his mother and stepfather, }Was-among the more colorful of the 2,000 persons honored. He! now controls eight holiday! camps in Britain and recently MONTREAL (CP) -- Roger FLUTTER ON HILL Members Pl edge Force Extension UNITED NATIONS (AP) --|tin said '"'war between two Secretary-General U Thant was| NATO countries simply cannot understood to have got informal|be allowed to happen." pledges late Friday of enough | pe pENDS ON REPORT troops to keep the United Na- The shia aha pl Cikian tions peace - keeping force in|, a , ated, , "ond three epends on a report by Sakair Crprar fora) second rs /STuomioga, Normer premier months y ' ; present termination date, the Cyprus dispute He called in delegates ~~ st limes 1s, discos Vi bee: 5 ic i 000-|S0nal thinking on the situation wood te oe yl ve. [but he did say that any indi- phe to. a query he put two| cation of Soviet participation in couse 4igo: Whether their gov-|Peace-keepng chores by the ernments would stay in for an- UN would be a other three-month term. step. Diplomats said Thant would) He also said that the Rus- issue a report early next week/sians are delinquent to the tune 'recommending that the Secur-jof about $60,000,000 in their ity Couneil continue the force|share of UN operations for another three months | Resear -- the council would take it up CL Wednesday j its lof the nine countries having s Finland who is mediator in I spent £3,500,000 improving Tetreault, the only Front de them. |Liberation Quebecois oak The Royal honors, ranging|to stand trial, was sentenced 'o |from peerages to minor titles | four years in penitentiary Fri- jincluded three new viscounts,|day for placing a bomb in a perso barons, two privy coun Oe a yee gt a sellors and two baronets. But no|ing a year ago. one received the two highest| All but one of the others awards, the Order of Merit and|Pleaded guilty after preliminary the Companion of Honor. |hearing last year and receive Sir William Butlin, who now|sentences of up to 12 years for probably will be called "Sir|the ringleaders of the 10-week Billy," was born in South Af.|wave of violence in which one |rica in 1900, and soon after his|man was killed and another | boyhood arrival in Canada_ he) Seriously injured. quickly showed the inventive touch that was to bring him a Tetreault, a 24-year-old unem- ployed journalist, was found fortune. | guilty late in May on a charge lof public mischief endangering WAS OFFICE BOY life, arising from the placing of His main job as office boy at)a bomb in a 14th floor wash- |a Toronto department store (Ea-|room of La Prevoyance Build- |ton's) was to deliver goods injing on Place .d'Armes. Police arge Wickerwork truck/bomb: expert Leo Plouffe dis- mounted on wheels. Bilijmantled the bomb minutes be- strapped roller - skates to his|fore it was timed to go off on feet and trebled the speed of his|May 3, 1963. | deliveries. Mr. Justice Roger Ouimet told After serving. with the Cana-|Tetreault he could have beet dian Army in the First World/held in contempt of court for in his pocket to make his for-|peared before the court. How- tune in England. His first ven-leyer, the judge said Tetreault ture, a hoop-la stall, snowbaliled/ recently wrote him a letter in jinto an amusement park in tie! which it appeared he 'realized |Lincolnshire resort of Skegness.|the seriousness of the offence OSE-UP ON TROUBLES They indicated that Austria,| Australia, New Zealand, Den- mark, Ireland and Britain were disposed to stay in the force-- Ireland with the proviso that the terms of reference must re-| main unchanged and _ Britain] with the proviso that other countries concerned must agree to her staying on. men said what their countries) did would depend on what the council decided. A Canadian) spokesman referred queries to} Ottawa. | LONDON, Ont. (CP) Al United Nations Security Coun- cil meeting beginning June 27 will decide how long Canada's} 1,150 - man Cyprus force will stay in that country, eereran| Affairs Minister Martin said Friday. He was being interviewed by) 21. newspaper reporters and editors attending a Press Insti- tute of Canada seminar at the University of Western Ontario. The Canadian force's commit-| ment was for three months. Questioned about the deepen-| ing crisis between Turkey and| Greece over Cyprus, Mr. Mar- | PHONE NUMBERS -- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 j--make regular CITY EMERGENCY | Hellyer In Cyprus NICOSIA (CP)--Defence Min- ister Paul Hellyer will be given a close-up look at some of the visits the island next week Details of his itinerary were released Friday by Canadian army officials, along with some hints about security precautions being taken by both the United Nations force and the army. When. Hellyer tours the so- called front-line positions in the suburbs of Nicosia and in the Kyrenia mountains 15 miles north of here, both Greek- and Turkish-Cypriot troops will have been advised to put their rifles own. Members of the UN force here--both military and civilian tours through the areas where the two races most frequently clash and the Greeks and Turks are kept ad- vised by the UN of their move-|% ments. But Hellyer is the first man of cabinet rank to visit Cyprus rom a country participating in the UN force and UN officials don't want any incidents. SPREAD THE WORD Liaison: officers working with both the Greeks and the Turks have .passed on word of Hel- hyer's visit to them, In addition, 'Canadian officers in the field| Hellyer 1 | who deal constantly with Cyp-|with Galo Plaza Lasso, special jriot forces are making surelenvoy in Cyprus for UN Secre- |they don't misunderstand the|tary-General U Thant, and' then Swedish and Finnisn spokes-|hottest spots on Cyprus when he/rank of the visitor or the na-|will go 'o a reception at the headquar- jture of his visit. Canadian contingent Hellyer will arrive Monday ters in Nicosia. evening for a two-day tour as Wednesday morning will be part of a visit to Canadian|Spent in the Kyrenia Mountains, forces in Europe and the Mid.|where the bulk of the Canadian dle East. soldiers are stationed. Hellyer's Canadian High Commissioner| itinerary calls for a brief heli- Arthur Andrew will hold a re- copter flight to a mountain top epti i ~|known. as Gin where Canadians os cage bios ae we ee stationed permanently be- cee Se peereweny, ner ues tween opposing Greek and Turk- day morning on visits to Presi-| i coulars. dent Makarios and Vice-Presi-| "11, sal tour by car. more seni iota Raich. 2, nen he! than half a dozer small villages visits UN headquarters here for]. th here Canadians talks with Gen. Prem. Singh|" te area Ww : ' ype sted to keep the peace |Gyz Indian commander of|27 POS Pearsall sets sad Z answer trouble calls ithe Cyprus force and answer ] ii. | ty : And he will be given a close- The afternoon will be spent)y) jook at the Turkish strong- jtouring Canadian units in thelnold of St. Hilarion Castle--a |Nicosia area, including a tour|medieyal ruin with a command the "green line,' the NOling view of the valley and the man's land that divides Greek! yoqgiterranean beyond--as well jand Turkish quarters of the),. 4 Greek-Cypriot position at {eity. Karmi Forest not far away. Canadian After lunch at the battalion troops are respon-| sible for patrolling a section in} command post on -a_ hill over-| main Nicosia-to-| the suburb of Trakhonas andjjooking the Hellyer will be given a chance|Kyrenia highway, Hellyer' will to see an area where barri-jreturn:to Nicosia airport by |caded homes. flying the blue|helicopter and leave for the |Greek flag or the red star-and-/Gaza Strip in Egypt, where he crescent Turkish emblem -are!will* inspect Canadian troops only a stone's throw apart. with the UN Emergency: Force will hold talks later'there. Jailed. al office build-| omb Terrorist For 4 Years and had profited by his deten-|before. the courts as a result | tion." : : |of the FLQ's bombing spree in Tetreault's lawyer said the) the spring of 1963, only one re- prpenpet started from the date|mains unsettled. Ten resulted of his incarceration last Novem-|in prison terms. |ber when he fled to the French-|° Gilles Pruneau, 20, owned islands of St. Pierre -|/faced clerk charged in connec- |Misquelon and then to the Un-|tion with the Westmount mail- ited States. He was picked up|box bombings of May 17, 1963, in Boston, unsuccessfully fought] Skipped bail last September. He deportation, then was returned|is believed to be in Algeria. to Montreal. The FLQ operated in cells of Of the 17 other cases brought/three to four persons each. It - eecies announced its. existence in leaf- lets left at three Montreal arm- ories, along with kerosene in- a_baby-| Typhoid VANCOUVER (CP) -- New dangers loomed in British Co- lumbia today as flood waters from snow-fed rivers seeped through protective dikes and flowed through homes, forced further evacuations and con- tinued to disrupt rail and road communications. The mighty Peace River had risen to a record flow of 295,000 cubic feet a second, causing concern at the giant $73,000,000 Portage Mountain dam _ con- struction site in the northeast- ern BC. At Prince George, health of- ficials were considering the pos- ; jsibility of typhoid inoculations cal) recently developed by the U.S. Rubber company. There are only two. other similar plants in the world. --Oshawa Times Photo My Marriage 'Legitimate' | Garland Says HONG KONG (AP) -- Judy Garland said Friday her mar- riage to her travelling compan- ion, Mark Herron, is "absolut- ely legitimate." In a gaily - decorated suite aboard an American liner, the |singer said she and Herron |were married June 6 aboard the | 18,000-ton Norwegian cargo ship |Bodo three miles off this Brit- ish colony. Earlier Herron said they jwere married "six or seven |days ago" aboard an unidenti- | fied ship in Hong Kong harbor. Miss Garland, 42, and Herron | are sailing for Tokyo aboard the liner President Roosevelt. for residents of the adjacent Cottonwood Island residential area. The muddy waters of the Nechako and Fraser river have nearly covered the island. At New Westminster, port ot- ficials were taking precautions against high tides as water lap- ped at the top of protecting dikes and seeped through in places to low-lying farmland. | Dr. Gordon Shrum, co-chair- man of the B.C, Hydro and Power Authority, said in Van- couver capacity of the diver- sion tunnels, which carry the jings, is 320,000 feet a second. Peace River around dam foot- NEW DANGERS LOOM IN PEACE RIVER FLOO Threat; Dikes Crumble The CNR line was severed in six locations, one a major wash- out, and the PGE in two areas. Both railways said it was in- definite when service would, be. restored, Two families in Delta municipality, bordering Vancou- ver on the south, evacuated their homes when silt - laden water crept an inch above their floors. ; A survey of dikes in the lower Fraser Valley, from Van- couver to Hope, 100 miles to the east, indicated the river could rise safely another one to six feet before flooding would re- semble the disastrous 1948 flood in the area. Police Chiefs Urge Driver Arrest Right | KINGSTON (CP)--The Chief Constable's Association has ap- proved recomm that police be empowered to atrest drivers for speeding or refusing to produce a driver's licence, ° The recommendations . were made by the association's traf+ Ten feet of fill has already Attorneys Organize ' Legal Aid PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- The {Ontario Crown Attorneys Asso-| jciation Friday appointed a com-| /mittee to establish a system of | "real forward ; 7 > : a : irst aDp- War Butlin left Toronto with £5) what he said when he first ap: | providing interim advice to ac- cused persons. The committee is comprised of H. H. Bull, of Toronto, W. A MacDo p tay nald of Parry Sound, and} Pringle ©f Belleville. will begin work immediately, | The resolution establishing the| committee was tabled following| presentation of two papers in-| volving the rights and needs of accused persons by R. P. Milli- j}cendiaries, March 7, 1963--the| Miss Garland said the couple beginning of a series of bomb-| went through another marriage lings and attempted bombings by| ceremony Friday afternoon ina this particular group. The ter-| hotel. ror ended with a dynamite ex-| "This time it was a tradi- plosion at another armory] tional Chinese ceremony with nearly three months later, May|candles and joss sticks," she nation was 20. Flag, Race Split |said. 'Worst Ever -- Dief NORTH BAY (CP) -- Oppo- jsition Leader John Diefenbaker 1t|* aid Friday that Canada has has never been as divided as it is today. "Can you ever recall when the so divided?" asked during a campaign raily n behalf of Richard F. Don- he! gan, chairman of the Ontario|nelly, Conservative candidate in Police Comuffssion, and Mr.|the June 22. Nipissing byelec- | Pringle. ition. : Mr. Pringle said that although| 'There have -been difference advising accused persons was|and divisions in the past but not generally considered part of/mever to this extent," he said. a Crown attorney's duties, as of-|'"Never with race against race, ficers of the court Crown attor-|individual versus individual, |/neys should attempt to ensure,and province: against province, that the accused is aware of his|as we have it today." position, | He also said that next. week, Dominican Dump Blast Kills 10, Injures 300 the main. streets, a SANTO DOMINGO (Reuters)} In | Sh jin a' munitions store killed 10 }persons, injured more than 300 | te jand razed a Dominican Army | thousands of persons who tried |training camp here early Fri-| to reach the area after the first day, unofficial sources reported. | explosion. Those who loitered | The first official casualty list|/near 'the road-blocks fled in ter- |was four dead and 112 injured/ror when a new series of explo- but officials who issued the list/sions began three hours. after said the figures. were expected) the first. to rise' Troops"were 'combing| The burst of heavy shells and the..smouldering ruins..for fur-|the crackle of small - arms' am- ther victims. munition 'could be heard, Occa- |. (in Washington, the: U.S.navy| sionally the pre-dawn sky above said it was dispatching a fire-| the column of flame was lit up fighting ship to the Dominican/by scores of flares going off, Republic to help put out fires. Cause, of the disaster was not |The navy said it was_also send- immediately known ing four explosive experts and) The camp was capabie lother assistance.) 'holding up to 1,300 men. prevent looting. of mer-|} attering explosions and a fire| Chants were sweeping up broken), glass. Armed police patrolled to/ Police and troops turned back! with serious problems awaiting attention, the government will spend its time dealing with the |'Pearson Pennant," as he de- scribed the new flag proposed by the Liberal government. "You cannot impose a flag upon a nation," he said. "It must originate in a feeling of national pride, in our heritage and in our hope for the future." sary. com north-central B.C. with northern centres Vancouver, was near Lillooet in the province's interior. been placed atop the coffer dam and engineers were stand- ing by to pile it higher if neces- Highway and railway -crews teamed up in an effort to over- the raging Skeena River east and west of Terrace in The government - owned Pa- cific Great Eastern Railway, main freight and passenger link from washed out fic committee and were ac- cepted by 145 delegates to the association's annual meeting which. ended Friday. = The association E ed a recommendation that On- tario transport department use its own men to issue driver sus- pension orders, ' ' Another proposal passed by delegates recommended that a pool of replacement officers be established to relieve police in smaller departments and en- able them to attend the Ontario Police College. KENORA, Ont. (CP) A white-Indian workshop Friday heard a proposal for a $100,000 federal fund to support a pro- gram "'for the economic emanci- |pation of the Indian people." The suggestion by Alexander Phillips, general manager of Northwestern Ontario Develop- ment Association, followed 2 charge earlier in the day that a Fort William separate school was segregating white and In- dian children. Mr. Phillips said a fund such as the one he proposed would not set a precedent because similar funds already have been established. He cited as an ex- ample the $100,000,000 given to aid the Atlanite provinces for a development fund. Mr. Phillips told 100 delegates that it is time Canada helped discharge a "long-unpaid debt" to Indians, who are '"'measur- Indians Ponder _ 'Freedom Quest | ing up their own responsibill- ties and obligations." "What is $100,000,000 con- structively spent in assisting Ine dian bands, teaching new tech- niques, improving sanitation?" Mr. Phillips asked. The money could be spent on community halls on Indian reserves, where the population's activity could focus. Earlier Friday, the executive director of the National Indian Council, Wilfred Pelletier of Toronto, claimed that Indian pupils at a Fort William separ- ate school ate lunch in a separ- ate classroom and played to- gether apart from white chil- dren. Although he did not name the school, he said later outside the meeting it was St. Annes Sep arate School. The Indian pupils are from the Fort William re- serve, Pilot John Taylor escaped death twice 'yesierday when A a ditch in Delta, south of Van- couver, 'Thrown clear of the | his light plane crashed into 'wreck, Taylor landed in the t DOUBLE DICE WITH DEATH water-filled ditch but was pulled. out by a bystander. '. (CP. Photo) 4

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