Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Aug 1964, p. 2

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| 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 4, 1964 4 Ships using the strait were forbidden to use radar or photo- faphic or survey equipment. hey must use the' middle of the strait, cruising only in cer- tain areas, and must obey any query or challenge. RULES ARE STRICT Ships were not permitted to enter the strait from either side without 48 hours' prior notice and must give cemplete details: marking, identification, nation- ality, tonnage, cargo, destina- tion and the like. Ship s not obeying these regulations will © By WHAIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent The Torpedo attack on a U.S. er in the Gulf of Tonkin y be just the beginning of an to heat up the South-, east Asia situation to the danger Fah'hity out of the ordinary perhaps a big military build- seems to be going on "Communist China's sensitive Luichow Peninsula, across the gulf from North Viet Nam, If there is a link between this and the Communist North Vietnam- ese attack on the U.S. destroyer Maddox there is a good chance Further Incidents -- Are Feared In Asia - aprnipe va -sepoeigeelipoaly be stopped and searched, China' said, | The orders, issued by the Pek-| jing council of state June 28,| suggest extreme vigilance in the area. - The Luichow Peninsula and Kwangtung province could have yast importance with regard to China's future plans for South- east Asia. A 600-mile military highway snakes from Canton, down into the peninsula and, then over to a point inside! {North Viet Nam, where it con- inects with: a coastal "Tonkin jread. This road was used to supply Ho Chi Minh in his war against the French a decade wy oe aye OIA Pe ick BS eg « Re ae ee WEATHER FORECAST Sunny With A Few Clouds Official forecasts issued by the,afternoon and this evening; Synopsis: Cooler air is set-) \tling southeastward in Ontario. | The influx of cooler air has| _|been the cause of the cloudi-\rondon ..., ness across the North and will Kitchener ..... (likely initiate some cloudiness yount jaeross central Ontario Wednes- wingha FE iday. | Lake Huvon, Lake Ontario, Ni-/Toronto ....+++++++ } jagara, southern Georgian Bay Kingston .....+++«. regions, Windsor, London, Ham-|Peterborough ..... ilton, Toronto: Sunny with a few Trenton ...+++++0» cloudy intervals today and Wed: Killaloe ... nesday. Season a ble tempera-|Muskoka .. tures, Winds light. Lake St. C.air, Lake Erie,| Algoma, northern Georgian bf more incidents. Behind these will be a suggestion of political avertones, taking into consider- ation the presidential election in the United States and a) gathering showdown storm .within the Communist world. | The Chinese are touchy about) the Tonkin Gulf area. Over the! signature of Premier Chou En- Lai, the Peking government has issued warnings to foreign ship- ping in the area of the Luichow Peninsula, the southern - most identified the woman as Toni say point of militarily - important Kwangtung province. The warnings were form of new regulations for for- eign shipping, concerned prin-| cipally with the 15-mile-wide Strait separating China's Hai-) nan Island from Luchow Pen- Woman Rescued From Near Falls NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)! the rushin ara River water of the Niag- unday, only 100 feet $ and rescued a 59 woman, Niagara Falls - year - old! park police Moser of New York City and said she apparently had at- in the tempted suicide. She was taken ------------- to Niagara Falls Hospital. Patrolman Tom Stone, who joined the park police this sum- mer, waded into about two feet of swirling water to grab the ago and probably remains an important supply route for Ho {n his drive to envelop South! Viet Nam. } Involvement of the U.S. 7th' |A rookie patrolman waded into'Fleet in shooting incidents in Southeast Asian Waters could apply heat to generate a new }from the brink of Niagara Falls,|situation which could play upon the political uncertainties both in the East and West in the next few months. Incidents ould use acrimonious debate in the U.S. election' campaign which might add to the apprehensions of Asians. Arm Fun WELL HELLO blow up a storm for some At. 64, Louis Armstrong swung into London, Ont., Sunday night to 2,000 jazz_ patrons. War Hit Britein" Fifty Years Ago By CARDL KENNEDY lembourg Aug. 1 and France LONDON (CP)--War came to| mobilized in a patriotic frenzy. Britain exactly 50 years ago, at|Britons rallied emotionally to 11 p.m, Tuesday, Aug. 4, t came to a nation still in| gium"'--but I worried more im-| Bank mood, enjoying) mediately that 1914./the plight of "brave little Bel-/ |Bay, Haliburton regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Killaloe: Sunny with cloudy intervals today and Wednesday. Seasonably warm today, a little cooler Wednes-| day. Winds light. White River, Cochrane, Tima- gami regions: Sunny with clou- dy intervals today and Wednes- day, Little change in tempera- tures. Winds westerly 19 to 20 today, light Wednesday. TORONTO (CP) Marine forecasts issued at 8:30 a.m. EDT today. Valid until 11 a.m. Wednesday: SATCHMO Satchmo displays ever-ani- "famed trumpet and belts, mated face 'as he toots on bear-voiced through a blues. Negroes Seeking Office 'Are Making Some Gains ATLANTA (AP)--Armed with, for the increase in Negro candi- growing vole power and a few|dates and their: successes. patel OO OE : political successes, Negroes in| 'In Georgia, reapportionment Lake Superior: Winds west- the southern United States arejof the Senate made possible my/¢rly to northwesterly 10 to 20 campaigning for some 'public of-| election," he said. Johnson's dis- knots shifting to northerly 10 to fices which previously had beentrict is 55-per-cent Negro. 15 knots this afternoon and this left for white candidates to con-| "Then, there is a growing evening; partly cloudy. 'woman and pulled her to safety. Holiday their holiday} Toronto weather office at 5:30|partly cloudy, y 'a.m,: s ' Windsor ....ssse0+ St. Thomas. Forest..+es 1D s6 . Hamilton ...++esee St. Catharines..... SBSSesSSssssssR North Bay. Earlton ie sibvs Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing ..... . . No Investigation ay * 8 wo . Suspicious" Pair OTTAWA (CP)---NDP Leader Douglas remarked in the Com- mons Monday that the John Birch Society @f the United States has accused Prime Min- ister Pearson and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker of connec- tions with an international Com- munist conspiracy. The House rocked with laugh- ter when Mr. Douglas asked whether the justice department was investigating "these two suspicious characters." Justice Minister Favreau ad- SSSRARASSSSSSESSESSS insula on the mainland. "Rebels May Split Congo Into Warring Factions By ROBIN MANNOCK Charged with a wiich-doctors' brew, Communist-backed rebel warriors have driven legal gov- sernment from a sixth of The ,Cango, They threaten to. split "the farmer Belgian colony into warring factions. Each new day brings frighten- line their own pockets Tsho tng news to Leopoldville, capi-/has tackled this charge vi tal of Premier Moise Tshombe's ° " storming around 1. Towns in the east are fail- Congo, he appealed directly t reconciliation government: fore the country anarchy. APPEALS TO PEOPLE In most rebel areas, local tribesmen claim that adminis- trators often did little more than mbe gor- usly. In eight days of barn- the eastern 0 Grows Slowly MONTREAL (CP)--Response jto an appeal for $30,000 to ac- }quire the rights to a motorized jartificial arm has "'not been too jfantastic" up to now, Dr. Gus- jt ve Gingras, head of the Re- jhabilitation Institute of Mont- lreal, said Monday. | taking effice, he must find ways) Dr. Gingras saw the artificial, symbols LEOPOLD VILLE (AP)--! of turning the warriors back be-|2'™ during a recent trip to the|Strength. ollapses into|S°Viet Union and was told he|hungry amid the plenty, could acquire rights for $30,000. But he said.response to an ap- peal for funds has mainly been in small amounts. The appeal was made at a press conference July 24. He. said most people expected the institute would launch a fund-raising campaign. the Canadian test. Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, southern 'half of Lake Huron: its last fling of a golden sum-|weekend would be spoiled. mer and an era when you Could Cowes Regatta was aban-| uy a double gin for the price|qoned and some people. began of a 1962 -newspaper, -A %iX-/hoarding food. Prices were ris- course supper in Landon's West!ing ominously, But otherwise End for less than 20 cigarettes|things seemed normal as the today. great exodus began--so normal The gold sovereign and the|that the railways were still ad- Royal Navy were world-wide) vertising the "shortest and most) white ranks of southern polities of stability and)comfortable route 'ts Ger-|in some significant posts. Many Britons went|/many." | There are Negro but even a laborer earning 27 shil-Monday heard Foreign Seere-'tion- in Mississippi, Alabama lings a week ($6.75 at the then|tary Sir Edward Grey define|and South Carolina, as well as prevailing rate. of the pound) British obligations to Belgium.| other states. could manage a day at the sea-|News of the Belgian invasion Their objectives shore on that last weekend Of) was followed by an ultimatum US +n) a ae long rn 4 to Berlin. council and board of education umor: uzze on ; beaches "the piers and. the 'SCRAP OF PAPER' gdh . Bera pleasure-boats, but war still| In Berlin, British Ambassador) Their most dramatic success seemed as far away as Sara- Sir Edward Goschen presented| came in Georgia two years ago ' the ultimatum to Chancellor) With the election of a Negro They are making some gains, a survey by The Associated Press showed. Negroes hol ding important southern elective offices today are few. But they have in re- cent years broken the solidly- range from the jevo--that town in Serbia where candidates A packed House of Commons|for the Nov.3 U.S. general elec- congressional seats to city jawareness on the part of Ne- igroes to register and _ vote," Johnson said. "And--very portant--I think we are seeing in the South more evidence of some type of liberalism among the white people." | 22,000 Watch Rerialist Die DETROIT (AP)--Twenty-two thousand persons watched in +horror Sunday night as an aer- ialist fell 85 feet to his death in Detroit's flood-lighted American im- Winds variable 5 to 10 knots. be- | COSENS & MARTIN mitted that he had been "'de- linquent up to now" in issuing such instructions te the RCMP. fone a HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL | 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE coming westerly to southwest- erly 10 to 15 knots this after- noon; partly cloudy. Northern half of Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: Winds westerly to southwesterly 5 to 10 knots increasing to 10. to 20 knots this afternoon and shifting to north- erly 10 to 20 knots late this Insurance 67 King St. E., Oshawa 728-7515 All Lines ef Insurence Res: 725-2802 or 725-7413 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS League baseball park. Some thought as Edward |Henry Knipschield, 55, of New Ing without a fight to howling the people, over the heads of the 'Warriors armed with spears, ar- Politicians. "I was hoping there : would be'th. Austrian archduke had been one. major contributor, as 1 assassinated five weeks before. |' Bethmann-Hollweg, who cried senator. No other southern state pritain, Conn., spun toward his that Britain was going to war has a Negro in its legislature,|qeath that surely there was 2 although a Negro has won the 4 rows and a few captured mod-) Promising a new deal,|#0siand," he said in an inter- ern weapons, Tshombe was given delirious| View. "It hasn't happened up to 2. Rebels menace the north-| Welcomes even in Stanleyville,}20W- ern hub city of Stanleyville and where the people once held him) In England, where the big army base at Kamina in| responsible for the 1961 murder}was published, one North Katanga province. of leftist Patrice Lumumba, The,donor put up the 3. Rebels have crossed the Congo's first premier. an appeal anonymous money to buy the rights within two days. st scr a -- For a month nothing had hap- she pias uate Bs Oa pned, then the crisis boiled up fa in five European capitals. Aus- tria unreasonably declared war on Serbia, which had abjectly met all her demands; Russia In the British cabinet room five men watched the clock tick- ing away the end of an era They did not expect a _ reply Democratic nomination for a North Carolina House of Repre- *| sentatives seat. WIN COUNCIL SEATS Negroes won election this year $500 REWARD For information leading to the arrest and safety rope around an ankle that would break the fall. There wasn't. Knipschield was _ perferming in an annual police field day whinh features: snceiaqulat conviction of a person or persons involved in Conge River from the neighbor-- Tshombe claims Communist ing Congo Republic (Brazzaville), Chinese diplomats in Africa are and have reached a point 105|aiding the rebels. miles from this capital, vowing' gut Tshombe"s: biggest head- to seize it. 4. Rebels control the towns of July, 1960, mutiny which sent the Mushie and Kwamouth, imperil | country into chaog only seven ling traffic on the Kasai River,/days after independence. Thé the key export route from Ka-| soldier has no stomach for fight- tanga province's copper. ing rebels who charge in the be- Tshombe is in a race againstilief their magic "'dawa" (medi- time. Scarcely three weeks aftercine) turns bullets into water. ; She a mobilized in defence of her Dr. Gingras said his imstitute Slavic ally and Germany de- could develop a motorized limb,|clared war on Russia. but would take '"'enormous"' py EDGED TO AID BELGIUM ache is the army, born of the|#™ounts of money and two to} France, caught in the web of/ish time. four years of work. It would bejalliances, would be Germany's cheaper and faster to buy the target in the west, but the Kai- ' ser's army first had to cross Soviet model and improve upon Belgium and Britain was it. pledged to defend Belgian neu- The arm would cost a patient|trality. about $300. German troops invaded -Lux- "ARCTIC ACTIVITY -- PART 1 | | | forms Scientists Probe Hinterland By ALLEN SACKMANN As in other years, the infor- MOULD BAY, N..WT. (CP)-- mation they obtain is shipped Each year since 1959 teams of to Ottawa where it is analysed scientists have ranged over the during the winter when the Arc- Arctic archipelago in a system- tic is shrouded in continuous atic exploration project. aimed darkness. at learning more about Can- After six seasons, Colin Grant. ada's hinterland. the project field supervisor es- The research is under aus-'timates the job is half finished pices of the Polar Continental An example of the sort. of Shelf Project, a federal govern things the scientists have found ment operation that draws was the discovery last season of scientists from several govern- an anomaly in the earth's crust ment. departments and at least pelow Mould Bay on Prince Pat- eight universities. rick Island 1,800 miles north of At a cost of $1,500,000 a year Edmonton. It's being investi- the Artcic Ocean and islands gated this summer by a federal are charted by topographical government geomagnetic team. gurveys, the mineral potential The fault, perhaps 18 miles 4g- probed by seismic and aero- thick, is thought to be -about 'magnetic surveys. and the his-'10,000 feet below the surface story is studied through marinc| Higher - than - normal temper- geology, giaciology and zoology.|ature is one of its features. ' This year 110 men are spend-|) Geomagnetic survey. officials ing six months -- the Arctic say information obtained from tapring, summer and fulli--irying studies may be useful in de- tte unlock some of the secrets termining changes in the earth's jheld in the barren, rugged ter--magnetic field. It could also «Fain, lead to better understanding of how mountains are created, and. Seismic crews set off charges perhaps indicate the degvee tojup to 5,000 pounds of TNT to which the North Américan con-|gain information about the for- tinent is drifting mation of the rock on the is- Impetus for the Polar. Conti- lands and, the ocean floor. nental Shelf Project was pro-| Tied in with the seismic stud- vided by the International Con- jes are aeromagnetic surveys ference on the Laws of the Sea conducted from a_ specially in Geneva in 1958. One of the equipped aircraft. Flying at 1,- resolutions adopted was _ that/000 feet, it electronically records mineral and other resources ly- the magnetic properties of the ing beneath continental shelves'islands and ocean floor. would be considered the prop-| «Jt doesn't point out where erty of the country claiming the the minerals or petroleum are coastline adjacent to them. located," says Allan MacNutt, in Aside from the scientific and charge of the Survair Limited poential economic value of ex- crew, "but it shows where not ploring the region beneath the'to look, cutting exploration sea in the Canadian Arctic, the costs." project has the effect of con-| phe terrain is also photo- firming Canada's sovereignty in is vith i st tha eka. grap ed with movie cameras which means the surveys can DIVIDED INTO BLOCKS only be carried out in nearly The Arctic archipeiago is di- perfect weather. vided into blocks to enable men Seismie crews ave making to work in a variety of projects soundings from the northern from a single base camp, get- shores of Melville Island to a ting maximum us* of aircraf, point near the 80ih parallel, and other equipment at min® Listening stations record the mum cost. thength of timie it takes the From the base camp at!sound to reach them, providing Mould Bay, Mr. Grant directs information about the kind of the loosely knit organization -- rock being encourtered. "I've got more PhDs per square) Hydrological surveys meas- foot than any other place offjure the depth of tae water and university campuses," he says./gravity surveys done from the Crews, usually headed by at ocean ice tell how thick the least one scientist, are distri-earth's crust is and what it's buted over several islands and made of. parts of the ocean ice in the Other scieiitists are studying western Arctic. glaciers found on Meiville and The project maintains its own Ellef Ringnes islands, making air force of chartered aircraft periodic checks to see whether to take men and supplies to and/they are receding or becoming from the research sites. larger. On the ground dogteams were' Another project is a precise used until last year but have survey between Ellesmere Is- been replaced by autoboggans. jand and Greenland "The only way 'you'd get husk- mine the ies back on the project would two be over my dead body," says Mr. Grant. 'They eat when they're not working." The continental shelf is that part of the ocean floor which extends from land at a rela to deter- relative positions of land masses. If enough, the information will permit the detection of move- ments of the land in the next decade or two from Berlin, They were only to two city council seats in Vir-/stunts, games and a tug-of-war afraid Germany might jump the pinia, Their only other victory in| between Detroit and Toronto po- gun and launch a surprise at-| that state was 'the 1948 election lice. tack at sea before the ulti- of a Negro councilman, Negroes) Captain Kddie, as Knipschield matum expired at 11 p.m. Brit- hold a council post in North billed himseMfor his 100-foot Carolina and Tennessee. And/high act on a swaying pole, be- In the war room at the ad-| four Negroes have won nomina-| Came the victim of Detroit's sec- miralty, telegrams were being tion to offices in an Alabama ond catastrophe to befall an aer- prepared to send to British! county. ial performance in the last 24 commanders and consuls across) Elsewhere in the South, Ne-\¥e4!s- the world the moment war was) groes have made no important) It was in Detroit's fairgrounds declared. An official joked. that) pains, Although they comprise|coliseum Jan. 30, 1962, that the they had been ready for years 99 per cent of the population inhuman pyramid of the Flying just waiting for the blank space) 14 southern states, Negroes have|Wallendas came apart on 2 high for the name'of the enmy to be! pushed up their voting power|Wwire and two died and another filled in. only to about 12 per cent, Most| was paralysed for life. Three in- As Big Ben struck 11 the of it now is concentrated in the! jured lived to perform again -- were rubber - stamped. big cities. A loop of twine that Captain They read: "War Germany,| Georgia's 36-year-old Negro Eddie used to dangle above act upon instructions." \senator, Lawyer Leroy Johnson|sround broke and apparently Outside the palace, the calm, of Atlanta, cites three reasons caused his death, although wit- starlit night was filled with the) ---- TRS Nae nesses conjectured for hours : somted atnand ' : - afterward on why he fell. The pe ha a sea Cyprus Force |broken twine: had deteriorated Meet Planned 7; Maw |from age and mildew under a briefly on the balcony. Next | i : nie : si . }covering of tape, said Detroit morning, he would sign the. dae- \\Police Nueces Hiram Phipp uments committing the Great | a cae the fall aha esaciaen British Empire to war--a war th ig at e ; ; that was confidently expected to ; le $00D. OTTAWA. (CP)--External. Af- fairs Minister Martin said Mon-} day there is to be a meeting to | day or Wednesday with UN Sec- jretary-General U Thant con- be short and decisive, "all over lcerning access for the UN' by Christmas." peace-keeping force to places N.Y. State Police Leave Rochester in cyprus. He told NDP Leader T, C ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)--| Douglas that the Cyprus govern- Governor Nelson Rockefeller or-| ment has indicated that the UN} dered New York State police) ommander would not be bar- withdrawn from Rochester Mon-|req personally from such places day, leaving local pelice with' a, the port of Limassol. How: the theft of the following 12 G.E. 16" Porte able T.V. sets. Model 61-T-41, Serial Numbers 259, 260, 1375, 1376, 1362, 0351, 0352, 1359, 1360, 0364, 353 and 667. ALL REPLIES CONFIDENTIAL TO BOX "D" -- THE TIMES Announce New Heaiing Substance... Shrinks Piles, Checks Itch Exclusive healing substance proven to shrink hemorrhoids... and repair damaged tissue, A renowned research institute has found a unique healing substance with the ability to shrink hemor- rhoids painlessly. It relieves itch- ing and discomfort in minutes and speeds up. healing of the injured, inflamed tissues, One hemorrhoidal case history after another reported "'very strik- ing improvement."" Pain was promptly and gently relieved. . . actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. Among these case histories were a variety éf hemorrhoidal condi- tions. Relief even occurred in cases of long standing, and most im- portant of all, results were so thorough that this impro many months, This was accomplished with a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne) which quickly helps heal injured cells and stimulates growth of new tissue. Bio-Dyne is offered in oint- ment and suppository form called Preparation H. In addition to actually shrink- ing hemorrhoids, ion H lubricates and makes elimination less painful. It helps prevent in- fection which is a principal canse of hemorrhoids, Just ask your druggist for Pre- paration H Si itories or Pre- paration H Ointment (with orn applicator). or your precise'> the sole responsibility for main- \taining law and order in this calmed racial battleground. His order followed a similar directive Sunday night, with withdrawing about 1,500 na tional guard troops, whose "show of force" early last week helped quell racial violence. Acting on Rockefeller's instru tion, state Police Superintendent Arthur. Cornelius Jr. directed the last contingent of troopers to pull out of the city, There were about 150. At the peak of the rioting, | ever, there was to be a meeting later after which he might be able to say more. | The minister said later outside the House the meeting at the! 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