Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jun 1964, p. 1

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Thought For Today Poetry is like should always meter. VOL. # -- NO. 149 a taxicab -- it have a good ,OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JU NE 25, 1964 She Oshawa Cine as Second Cless Mell Post Office Department o' Authorized Ottewa and for payment Weather Mainly sunny Report and a little warmer on Friday. Winds: light. Postage in. Cash. Police Break Up 'Strike Violence TAR SPLASHES CARS, HIGHWAY PICKERING (Staff) -- A two and a half-mile traffic Two White 200 MARINES JO} SEARCH FOR TRIG | Men, Negro Missing Since Sunday -- spokesman, said officers would © fan out on foot ftoddy from Philadelphia to comb the entire WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Johnson ordered 200 marines to join the line-up was delayed for 35 minutes on Highway 401 BRADFORD, Ont. (CP) --| young woman from the older PIPER LEADS FUNERAL MARCH IN OSHAWA The skirl of pipes echoed through Oshawa streets today as the funeral march for Con- |Two persons were arrested and |charged with causing wilful) damage Wednesday after police} 4\broke up a wild melee at a strikebound vegetable process- | {ing plant | Paneiita Guglieuma, 23, and Mario Duscio, 25, both of this town about 20 miles south. of Barrie, were charged and re- leased on bail terment. Retired sargeant Don MacClellan is the piper --Oshawa Times Photo stable Dean Dillabough of station, His body is being Oshawa Police Department, taken to Osgoode, near Ot- made its way to the railway tawa, his birthplace, for in- Quebec Separatists Boo Famed Regiment MONTREAL (CP)--Quebec's| famed Royal 22nd Regiment was the target of a placard- waving demonstration by Que- bec separatists Wednesday night at the giant torchlight parade highlighting St. Jean Baptiste Day celebrations. About 15 or 20 chanting dem- onstrators opposite the review- ing stand on downtown Sher- brooke Street booed and waved separatist placards as the de- | them, urging them to raise the boxer Reggie Chartrand and Ri- erect past the Governor-Gen-| months of a six-months sentence eral, They were arrested in front of the United Farms Packing-| house, one of three firms struck Monday by Local 419 of the In-| |ternational Brotherhood of] Teamsters (Ind.). Police arrested Miss Guglie- uma,.an immigrant who speaks | |no English, after pulling her) away from an older woman to) whom she was clinging in ter-| ror. Pickets said the police used| judo chops to break apart the | DRINKER DIES | AFTER 3GULPS | LONDON (AP) -- "For a pound, I'll drink this," said 24 . year - old Patrick Do- herty. In his hand he held a full bottle of whisky. "Drink it," shouted some- one in the pub Doherty put fhe bottle to Organizers gave them per-| Some of.the flag - carriers | mission to do so after they|chanted 'Quebec Libre" in ca- promised to be "peaceful" andjdence with the knot of separa- |Monday when a car ran into a woman, whom pickets said was her mother. Witnesses said the young woman's neck and arms were} bruised and showed large welts | The outburst came when) about 20 pickets, most of them| women, jammed the roadway in| front of a truck trying to enter) the building. | When the truck, loaded with) produce, kept coming they stepped to one side and hurled stones and anything else that was handy, breaking windows of the truck's cab. The driver was unhurt. It was the third incident of! violence since the strike began. | Mrs. Alice Augusta, 38, of] Bradford suffered a broken leg picket line at the Federal Farm plant, carry nothing but Quebec flags.'tists opposite the reviewing) his lips, turned it upside When this group reached the| stand. | down .and drank, In three reviewing stand, some of them) Leaders of the separatist] large gulps he swallowed the lowered their fleur-de-lis ban-|\marchers were Marcel Chaput,| contents. ners to review position. But one|former president of Le Parti Re- Ten minutes later he flag-carrier ran back among|publicain du Quebec, former; passed out. The next day he was dead. Coroner W. R. S. Osborne was told that before down- ing the whisky, Doherty flags. All the flags were carried|chard Bizier, who served four! for taking part in terrorist WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con- tachment and Royal 22nd band marched by. Montreal police moved in swiftly to break up the knot of demonstrators and seize the signs which' carried such slo- gans as "Quebec Libre," 'Pas de Windsor a Quebec" (no Windsor in Quebec), and "'Can- ada Monarchie--Quebec Repu! | ' { " men and a girl were de-|tion Police |now when they resisted to surtender their | Governor - General Vanier,| seated in the reviewing stand beside Paul-Emile Cardinal Le- ger, Roman, Catholic Archbishop of Montreal, stood as the Royall 22nd detachment passed. The torchlight parade in} honor of French Canada's pat- ron saint was not disrupted, al- though its start was delayed at} least 20 minutes when about/ three dozen separatists insisted) on taking part. ; \ b:|Leader Diefenbaker said Wed-|command, and Pierre bombings a year ago. Among the dignitaries on the reviewing stand were Justice lgress and federal court suits lare the two likely obstacles to implementation of a new Fed- eral Trade Commission rule lrequiring the tobacco industry drank four pints of beer and two smail glasses of whisky. Osborne gave the cause of death as respiratory para- lysis caused by alcohol. His verdict--misadventure. Wild Party hazards. "The extent of the delay may ibe detailed today when repre- | sentatives of the tobacco indus- itry testify before the House of Representatives commerce |committee. Paul R. Dixon, chairman Participants yemed, Fined S254 rer TORONTO (CP) -- Ten-day| Voluntarily, but he added: jail terms and stiff fines brought| "They can take this rule to looks of consternation to the|the nearest court and ask for a faces of 40 motorcycle club|review. I'm satisfied this will members after their pleas of|/happen."" guilty to being found-ins at a wild Saturday night party. dan, a Democrat from tobacco- Firies Wednesday ranged from|producing North Carolina, said: to $35 or seven days. Buses For Castro -- Si, Trucks For Sukarno -- No LONDON (AP) -- Buses for| Fidel Castro's Cuba--si. Trucks for President Sukarno's. Indon- esia--no. That's the reaction of the British government to requests from two firms that it guaran- tee they'll get their maney for sales to Cuba and Indonesia. Leyland Motors: Sunday will ship the first part of an order of 950 single-decker buses to the Castro regime. The Cubans have an option to buy 1,500 in all, Vauxhall Motors has signed a contract to deliver 1,000 truck chassis to the Indonesians at a} cost of about $3,000,000. | The export credit guarantee} department,. an autonomous government agency, has under- written the value of the whole Leyland order. which will run to about $42,000,000 if all 1,500 buses are bought. This means} that if Castro reneges on his! payments, the agency will pay Leyland But government authorities report the agency is refusing to | ° | s s Dief Predicts Minister Favreau; Georges- | Emile Lapalme, Quebec's cul- Earl EI a |tural affairs minister; Mayor y ection ; Jean Drapeau; Maj.-Gen. Frank _..}Fleury,. general officer. com- OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition| manding the army's Quebec Dupuy, night that a federal elec-| commissioner - general of th could come at any time ed Montreal Manesiechek Sabicea i | ere were an "No one trons at's coming) applause yon 9 o tomorrow,"* 5 |pa y was ushered .to _Te- leadae GAA b pa connervative | viewing stand under a spotlight beac pth ced pcoallay a after inant, other guests had . _ ol nows Ww: een seated. trouble the Liberal' government} The Montreal police security will find itself in tomorrow, force, about sa dozen constables Mr. Diefenbaker said in front of the reviewing stand Minister Peascin reggae another half-dozen across election but that the Conserva-|the street, was doubled just as tives would win it. His party|the Parade began. It was re- had won the recent byelection|duced to its original strength in Saskatoon: and had reduced|@fter_ the separatist the Liberal majority in a second|marched by. at. Nipissing. The six ----------jroute along Sherbrooke Street} | was thronged with spectators--| jestimates ranged from 500,000) ? | 43 \to 1,000,000--and was well|drunkenness in his apartment/ately. $300 or 30 days in jail when he|have already agreed to take the pleaded guilty to permitting)matter to the courts immedi- it a.m. when reached the last |April 4 Albert G. Clay, president of When police raided the Satur-|the Burley Auction Warehouse point day night party they found 52) Association, questioned the com- Thousands had lined up early|persons, many of them teen-|mission's authority to enforce Wednesday, and a few had been heer he most : them mem-'the ruling. He said he thinks the holding down choice spots for|bers of motorcycle clubs. manufacturers will take steps donesia on the ground of na-itwo days, Folding-chair seats! Twenty-two police officers ar-|immediately to challenge it. Wi tional interest. And this despite] along the sidewalk were sold at\rested the motorcyclists and ; ; hat if th the fact that the export credit! ¢9 cach, their girl friends in the raid, Dixon estimated that if the agency last August insured the!" Before the parade started, alshortly before midnight. There|"dustry goes to court it will sale of 1,000 Dodge trucks to} jow-fiying light aircraft dropped|were 108 charges laid take four years of litigation be- Indonesia. separatist leaflets along the| Magistrate James Butler told/fore the rule can go into effect. Economic factors predominate! route. The pamphlets, in|Caulfield: 'You are no asset as| His estimate means there is in these assessments of a buy- gia po 4 ss ot as a citizen or as a little ey ee -- * it-wort s "Tn ependence is never given| householder sions rue eadlines wi e fie -- oe sian but must be taken. The time, Constable Arthur Machmer met but political and strategic con-/has come to finish discussion|testified most of the found-ins) The FTC in the rule an- siderations also play a part. and start agitation." were intoxicated nounced by Dixon Wednesday, 'DENIES SCRAP CHARGE, LYING _ . DENIES SCR Pearson Admits Asking CBC 1 the dispersal jafter | floats Cigarette Labels Face Two Hurdles ito label cigarettes as health | To Cut Out Portions Of Film OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min-|and political interference over|ary to "bring to the attention|a cabinet meeting, and a dis- ister Pearson revealed in the'a period of several months Commons that and some Wednesday aides he donesia. This m ens the order|cut out some portions of a "can-|the government was displeased will be cancelled unless Vaux-! hall can find other backers. Neither buses ncr trucks are classified as strategic goods, which the NATO allies are pledged to deny to Communist or hostile countries. When the US. government about the bus deal Cuba, the British said they had no power to cancel an ordinary commercial transaction. Yet the government is block- did camera" film about him self. He said he had every right see the film before it was to! to be telecast and to demand de letions and revisions CBC Producer good taste The prime minister emphatic .'with it. The. CBC blamed th cancllation on poor technical screen to hide the real reason. "HAVE A RIGHT "The Canadian cutting room floor,"' Diefenbaker said "What has taken place here is ing the deal with neutralist In-|ally denied ever asking the pub-|a serious act of censorship," CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 \Yected the CBC licly - owned broadcasting sys |tem: either to produce the one-jrivals in hour $35,000 documentary or to/1958, serap it altogether. He also de about the film. Opposition Leader Diefen the Commons since clashed head-on during | Wednesday's two - hour debate |nied lying to the Commonsijon a money supply bill. The prime minister became -jembroiled in a wild. scne 'requires that all cigarette man-| ufacturers must label their} early today while 20 tons of tar was scrubbed from the highway following a freak accident involving a bus, two trucks and a cat, An eastbound bus stopped -- as required by law -- at. the CNR crossing, just west of Church street. Police said an American, thinking a train was coming, stopped his auto in the pass- ing lane alongside the bus. His vehicle was struck in the rear by a truck, and a second truck carrying 20 tons of warmed paving tar, veered off the road, struck the signals, and flipped over dumping its hot load over vehicles, the road and into the median, Tar truck driver, Roy Sturge, 30, Downsview, and His passenger, Gerry Mar- tin, 22, Toronto, were taken to Oshawa General Hospital with severe head and shoul- der lacerations. Car driver Roman Kitow- ski, of Garden City, Mich., his wife and four children were unhurt. Ronald Ste- vens, Toronto, the other truck driver, was also un- hurt. search today for three civil rights workers missing in + Mississippi. : Fear mounted today among workers--two white men and a Negro--missing in this east-cen- tral Mississippi area may not be. found alive. "Tt is hard to believe that three people could be just swal- lowed up without somebody hearing or seeing something," said Grady Gilmore, public re- lations director of the Missis- sippi highway patrol. The trio was last seen Sun- day night, The charred hulk of the sta- tion wagon they used was found by agents of the Federal Bur- eau of Investigation in a swampy afea near a lonely read late Tuesday. : FBI and highway patrol tech- nicians combed the burned-out station wagon hoping to find a clue to their baffling disappear. ance. : Meanwhile, Allen Dulles, sent to Mississippi to gather informa- tioff*for the White House on the missing workers, conferred at Jackson with Governor Paul B. Johnson, products by Jan. 1 with a warn- ing. "'that cigarette smoking is dangerous to health and may cause. death from cancer and! other diseases." | The commission set a July 1,| 1965, deadline for this warning) label to be included in. all ad- vertising,~ although it. said it would postpone this deadline if the industry could convince the commission that it had changed its: advertising in such a way to make the requirement unneces- |sary. The announcement was re-| |flected at once in the stock mar- j|ket. While the New York Stock} |Exchange list was scoring its | best advance in a month, prices} 175 cents to $1.50 Earlier he said Britain ex-| lof this duty." | British Cut Cyprus Force LONDON (Reuters) ~ Com- monwealtt Secretary Duncan Sandys today announced that Britain's contingent in the Cy- prus peace-keeping force would be cut by half. The British now have 2,000 men with the Cyprus UN foree. Sandys made the statement following a cabinet meeting pre- sided over by Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home. In his stateent to the House Later, Senator B. Everett Jor-\of major tobacco stocks slipped|of Commons, Sandys said: "We have made it clear that we expect the Cypriot authori- group|a top of $75 or 20 days in jail|'I have been in touch with njained to Thant that "for rea-|ties and the secretary general leaders and representatives Of|sons that are well understood,|(U Thant) to take all possible - mile - long parade| Charles Caulfield, 26, of sub-|growers, warehousemen an dithe British government is anx-|steps to ensure our troops are urban Scarborough was fined|manufacturers and these groups|ious if possible to be relieved|treated with proper respect and courtesy." Doctors Back Birth Control VANCOUVER (CP) -- The jleaders of Canadian medicine Wednesday approved birth con- trol devices for those who want jthem, and discussed whether abortion is ethical and steriliza- tion legal. The general council of the Ca- nadian Medical Association also \eriticized smoking by television performers and sought to have |the treatment of mental illness |made just another part of medi- ie With the apparent support of lits Roman Catholic members, |the ruling body of the 17,000- member CMA called for the, amendment of the section of the Criminal Code that forbids the sale of advertisement of birth jof the CBC" certain portions of|cussion among a small number He charged that CBC execu-|the film that he wanted de-jof ministers gathered in the repeatedly|tives finally decided May 5 to/leted. 3 . insure Vauxhall's deal with In-|asked the CBC last winter to ditch the film after realizing]. These portions contained con-|formal discussion -- a kind of|The prime minister's office for in- versations that he did not want|meeting that takes place almost to make public, others "inappropriate, too personal." personal jocular remark" Mrs. Pearson who was were daily. There was no impropriety of standards, but this was a smoke| One sequence included a "very|any kind in having such _pic- by|tures taken, Mr. Pearson said.| not|He was sure that when Mr, aware she was being filmed and | Diefenbaker was prime minis- people have vy a "cadid camera." Ross McLean|the right to see this 'ilm as it eonme eX piameaiacs had promised him a veto power|was originally produced, before ASKEDn DELETION over the film. This would pro-\so much of it found its way into! tect his privacy and also ensure'the Another portion 'he cluded a comment Diefenbaker by ( | jtee. Recording prime Mr.|minister wanted deleted in-| about Mr. sordon Robert-| minister, asking him to set aside son, clerk of the Privy Council] pic The two party leaders, bitter|and Canada's top civil servant. The prime minister said flatly | there had been no filming of ei-| ther a meeting of the cabinet, ors ja meeting of a cabinet commit-| The CBC then set up' a pre- such meetings in|for public use would be against baker said the prime. ministey's'the Commons as he and Mr |ministers' oaths of secrecy, and! Minister ter, similar pictures were taken Mr. Pearson said the CBC) made some of the requested| cuts, but declined to make some| jothers. On Jan. 28 a CBC offi-| cial had written to the prime agreement with Mr. Ballen-} tine for a veto power over the! film : ¢ SET UP PREVIEW view of the film April 30 for | three cabinet ministers Sharp, External lcontrol devices and the disse- |mination of birth control infor- mation It marked the first time the association has taken this stand. recommendation came |from the committee on mater- . | ial welfare which has several Roman Catholic members. The} Women Said Weaker Sex | TORONTO (CP) ~-- Women have 25 to 30 per cent lower| physical capacity for work than men, says a bulletin issued by the women's bureau of 'the On- tario department of 'labor. The bulletin: quotes Dr. Sven Forssman, president of the In- ternational Association on Occu- | Roman Catholic Church opposes birth control devices, It was not opposed during| brief discussion before the coun- cil which represents every prov- ince, said committee Chairman Dr. b. J. Harris of Toronto in|: a press conference. "Winds of change," mented a Roman Catholic member of the committee. DISCUSS ABORTIONS The reports of two commit-| tees mentioned sterilization and): one mentioned therapeutic abor- com-|) DULLES COMMENTS Dulles, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, said he did not: plan to--come here. He told reporters _ that President Johnson a hifh to "come down here and talk with Governor Johnson and get first hand his view of the here on law enforcement." The governor praised Dulles, saying: "Men like him are here for the purpose of doing good. He has a carte blanche anywhere in Mississippi." The civil rights workers--Mi- chaél Schwerner, 23, and Andy Goodnian, 20, both. of New York,) and James Chaney, a 22-year- old Negro from nearby Meri- dean--were last seen Sunday night when Chaney paid a $20 fine for speeding. They were in the Philadelphia area to check into the burning of a Negro church used for civil rights rallies. FBI agents joined in the search for the trio Tuesday. The highway patrol said more than 200° persons were ques- tioned about the missing men during a house-to-house search that was halted by rain and darkness, county for clues. fered $25,000 be a erp ' the arrest. ai convi PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP)| those responsible for the Comedian Dick Gregory. + ot terious disappearance of , searchers that three civil rights) werner, Goodman and Gregory. said he bo' money from a Chi cago maga- zine publisher. 9c In Washington, some delegates to the National Asso ciation for the Advancement woercbed scoonh thaseriee: ma a . partment building' in silent' pro- test over the disappearance of the trio. : j Many carried signs reading: "Stop Mississippi terror," "Jag tice department must American rights." Swedish 5 Z =f as | $ building Wednesday. Khrushchev gave forces a bad moment plunged through a crowd to a group of Russians in borg to take back to refrigerator ship built shipyards and launch Khrushchev's wife, Nina. The 70-year-old Khrus' who sang songs with the yard workers during the tour-- suddenly pushed through crowd, brushing aside an stretched | 4 i F» a os gs see Art Richardson, a patrol policeman's arm, | see his countrymen, : tions--termination of a preg-|) nancy in order to save the life]: of the mother. The maternal welfare com- mittee said there is consider- able variation. between provin- ces on the degree of assurances received from the attorney-gen- acting in good faith will not |be prosecuted for performing | abortions. | There was concern whether|' there was sufficient legal pro- tection for the doctors. However, the committee re- jected the. idea of issuing a guide for doctors on these abor- tions and on sterilization, Pa- tients would have to be treated on an individual basis. The council rejected a recom- endation from the committee n cancer that would have re- quested television performers and their guests not to smoke in front of the cameras because it-could influence others to start smoking. The CMA believes smoking is a cause of lung can- cer. Officials said the council be- lieves it is up to individual doc- _ Trade |pational Health, as saying the|tors to speak to television per- Af-|lower physical capacity is due|formers about setting up exam- own admissions showed clearly|Diefenbaker waved each other|if it were permitted they should fairs Minister Maritn and'Labor|to women's lower oxygen con-|ple. The council said the reso- Minister MacEachen--and mem-|sumption and the lesser amount/lution would invade the "field that eral and Lib had sub the government party _ officials te censorship -/ down | Mr, Pearson said he. asked a resign, Mr. Pearson said *| All that was filmed was ajbers\.of the prime minister's member. of his. staff last Janu-'scene of ministers gathering for'staff. | of hemoglobin. relative: to body weight. of personal right" -of the tele- vision performer. A erals' departments that doctors| is HORSING Tackle Don Luzzi of. .Cal- gary Stampeders urges his reluctant horse around Mc- Mahon Stadium Wednesday in a desperate attempt to master the six-and-a-half minute. mile required of each player by coach-Bobby Dobbs. Luzzi-did AROUND the: mile'on 'horseback in: five. miriutes, 53 seconds but took eight minutes, eight seconds, worst time for the squad, when his steed was taken away. fh 30 : --CD Wirenhatea we

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