Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Sep 1964, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

\ Thought For Today Every well-dressed man has at least one necktie that doesn't go with anything. VOL. 93 -- NO. 215 he Oshawa Zimes Price Not Over 16 Cents per Copy , OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1964 Authaized a3 Second Class M Ottowa and for' payment Weather Continuing cool 10 to 15. jai! Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, Report Sunday... Var iable cloudiness. Winds westerly TWENTY PAGES P| election. empleton Withdraws From Race TORONTO (C) Charles|of the campaign found him in Templeton has withdrawn from|debt to the tune of $10,000 to the race for leadership of the|$12,000. He planned to take a) Ontario Liberal party. following|rest and then get back to work! his defeat Thursday in the Tor-|with a corporate design firm. | onto Riverdale provincial by-| The. remaining contenders for) |the leadership are four legisla-| re members--Andrew. Thomp-| He made the annnouncement tu i Experts Seeking lat a press conference Friday E\Toronto Riverdale the scene of BEAUTY DISTORTED Mary Lou Farrell, Miss Dominion of Canada, takes a long look at herself. The 21- year-old beauty from St. Johp's, Nfld,, was examining Western Fair, which she helped officially open at London, Ont., Friday, when she made swollen-head- ed picture in front of a dis- torting mirror. i (GP. Wirephoto) GRRL OPES 'Of A Tory Receptive Ears FREDERICTON (CP)--Four Conservatives took a stab Fri- day night at defining what a Conservative is and what he should be. The definitions fell on receptive ears at the na- tional conference on Canadian goals, sponsored by the Pro- gressive Conservative Associa-| tion of Canada. | Two men -- Egan Chambers, | immediate past president of the association and former member of Parliament for Montreal St. Lawrence-St. George, and Gor- don Fairweather, former New Brunswick attorney-general and now MP for Royal--came down firmly on the side of the preser- vation of Confederation as the Conservative's chief duty today. Mr. Fairweather won sus- tained applause by saying: "We are told by those who 'like to add up columns of figures that, in the- numerical sense, it is possible to form a government in Canada without str rep- resentation from Quebec: I sub- mit that it is an objective un- worthy of atempt." - Mr. Chambers argued that Conservatism was the chief architett' of Confederation and its task since then has been to reserve it« Confederation founded on evolutionary society not a revolutionary one such as the United States. Lack of evo- Jution or frustration of evolution "can lead to revolution." | George Hogan, Toronto auto dealer, author of Conservatism and secretary of the Ontario Progressive Conservative As- sociation, said the first priority 37 Men Abandon Burning Freighter |Conservative is with those who must be maintenance of liberty in an ordered society. The| other half of that concept was that Conservatives never favored unrestrained liberty or unbounded individualism. Senator M. Wallace McCutch. eon, fourth member of the panel, said the place for the reject a "mechanistic philos- ophy"--thosec who say man is man. * Moralit: morality and "we can still control ma- chines."' A Conservative accepted man's fallibility and acted to see that each individual had "ample--I. do not say equal-- opportunity" to develop his tal- ents. land said he will 'undoubtedly {son, Toronto Dovercourt; Eddie Sargent, Grey North, Joseph) Cause Of Blast increased. in the political arena again." Gould, Toron to Bracondale, tis ter er evangelist and|Robert Nixon, Brant, vane "tive had made|Copps, mayor of Hamilton; and newspaper executive ha ae et ois Sates Ihis first bid for political office.|the House of Commons for Ren- Mr. Tepleton, 48, said he " fonrgg received more than 100° tele-| eas M phone calls from supporters Greene, Mr. Nixon and Mr urging him-to stay in the lead- Thompson, believe they will) ership contest. One was from|benefit from vetes which would George Hees, former Progres-|have gone to Mr. Templeton. ter, who said: 'Don't be Pe MP Favors "Best Man' couraged, I lost my first elec tion by 6,000 votes." Mr. Templeton said he 'de Within an hour of the an-| nouncement, Toronto lawyer) Clemént Neiman made _ its that a "draft Temple-| three of them, Mr. | OTTAWA (CP)--J. J. Greene, Liberal MP for Renfrew South, made two speeches in his bid) : for leadership of the Ontario) com a toe hae oeea| Liberal party Friday, but: his Ae " ' Lae YP jtheme in both was the same-- , eneves = ™T-| the party should select the man Templeton is the sate pes | most likely to lead the party| equipped for the leaders IP, 1€K"\to an election vietory. | vacant with the sesignation of "The only commitment you John Wintermeyer when he pe have is to the Liberal party and, jhis legislature seat in last/ine people of Ontario," he told| jyear's Ontario general election.| 199 delegates at the eastern On- | tario leadership convention. Ma arden beaten' by| He said all delegates to next ; s Ren-|Week's convention at Toronto payed at = usted t6| should be free of commitments, | H " -.7;man for the job,"' rather than pagar: aie ot oe just select a man to head the able to complete either of two| Party: : planned. le ha the "Liheral vote "in as difficult a riding es onc could find." The seat had been F T T Ik resigned as Progressive Con- or een a servative minister of economics| TEEN-TALK will be launch- and development for health TOA" od again next Tuesday, Sept. porting the world of those : between 12 and 20. | MacDonald Says Summer holidays over, a . es jready to entertain, inform and Grits Finished | delight readers with everything TORONTO (CP) Donald C [aoa hit parades to stories of agers in the Oshawa district. prat Party, ° ae ria yg ssdutie of} The editor wants to know all Thursday's provincial byelec-|the social scenes and set ups, Liberal party is a '"s pentjand your contributions will be force." : welcome. The ofrthcoming Liberal) TEEN-TALK is for teenagers. "political wake,"' he told a vic-/perents read it--fine, But, we| tory dance for James Renwick,| are aiming at representing the the NDP candidate who won/teens the way they want to be OVER BIRTH £ONTROL lack of manpower. He said his|#"d ready to vote for "the best) poe | Watch Tuesda , Y held by. Robert Macaulay, who Mr, Templeton said the ena|i5 for another season of re- \"*new look" weekly edition. is} MacDonald, Ontario leader of/°#! Hife adventure by teen tion in Riverdale indicates the/during and after school hours, leadership convention will be ajIt is their paper If grand-| the byelection. ; 'represented Emoti OTTAWA (CP) Ignoring party lines in favor of religious lines, members of Parliament Friday waged an emotional, and sometimes angry, . battle over the proposed legalization lof birth control. The proposal jwas killed by enraged Credi- | tiste members. "Diabolical . . . straight from |hell itself," shouted' Charles- |Arthur Gauthier (Creditiste -- |Roberval) as he mounted the idefences against the proposed MPs Wage Angry onal Battle | |drops to the bottom of the list,|this bill with all our might." |with little chance of coming up|Contraception violated the jagain at this session--and no-\"'Thou shalt not kill' com- \tice' was served that any new|mandment. attempt to pass it wou'd be met) [Lloyd Francis (1 Carle- with the same stiff opposition./ton) protested against any sug- Mr. Prittie said the proposed] gestion that supporters of the amendment drew support from) pill were not Christians. "I for organizations and boards within|one support the bil! and I am the United, Anglican. Presby-|not endorsing murder or terian, Unitarian and Baptist} thing like that © said Mr. |churches, the Canadian Medi-! ojs cal Association, the Canadian Council of Women, the Voice of Women and the Children's any-| Fran-! Mr. Gauthier said passage of} the bill would mean that in 15 |nel today to seek the cause of| azine for a speech against Indonesia paratroopers early today with rockets near MONTREAL (CP) -- Experts,truck hit the switch - box and will grope and pick their way) wires fell on the magazine." into a blast-ridden subway tun-| The newspaper says the mag- "was believed to contain an explosion that killed three|300 sticks of dynamit.." men and injured 16 others. Investigators' findings, relat- There were reports dynamite'ing to the cause are not ex- figured in the blast. pected to be made public be- Andre Guiguere, a city of|fore a coroner's inquest is held, Montreal engineer who had|Probably next week. been assigned to the construc-| Mr. Guiguere said all the tion site, recalled that there;men "in the tunnel have been was dynamite in the tunnel at| accounted for--dead, injured or the time of the blast at noon|Unscathed--and search opera- Friday, "but none of my col-|tions have ceased. leagues can figure out how it| The tunnefwas part of a myr- could have ignited.' iad of such underground _pas- The Gazette says Roger Roy, |Sages being blasted and bur- one of the victims who died|rowed to form tubes for Mont shortly after arrival at hospi-|real's projected subway sys- tal, is reported to have told an|tem, ambulance attendent: 'My| Police said about 40 men were -sihesiontaroc eae eect ----|in the explosion area, 35 feet _ under east - end Lafontaine Street. The tunnel measures Rusk, Martin |2,000 feet in length. ia Killed were 19-year-old Roger Plan Meetin Roy, a driller, and Alfred Hu- g bert, 50, and Steve Filipcezyk, WASHINGTON (CP)--No sbe-litontreaises et eee cial significance should be read} William Allen, the project into the brief Sunday visit|superintendent at the site, was planned between External Af-| among the injured. He was fairs Minister Paul Martin andistanding a short distance in- 'S. State Secretary Dean Rusk! side the tunnel when the blast at Windsor, officials of both erupted and threw him 100 countries said Friday. |\ feet, 3 They indicated that Martin as am y * took the opportunity, - since ped pte vig gy "Lage etn Rusk was so to be in Detroit pe i the a They be- onday, fo invitelcame "the objects of an inten- him across the river for what|sive rescue effort that lasted a state department spokesman| ynti] jate Friday night. called "strictly private and per-| The- rescue workers found sonal conversations \the three dead men among the He said the event was added|missing workers: Mr, Allen, 45, to the Rusk itinerary at the 1 st|was reported suffering from moment and said he doubted| multiple fractures and under- any formal agenda is planned.'going surgery. Britain Reserves Right To Attack -- KUALA LUMPUR (CP) --,bushes set up around the strike Britain warned today .that it) zone. reserved the right to strike} Britain, under a defence pact back at Indonesia if attacks on! with Malaysia, supplies most of Malaysia continue, The state-| this young country's military ment came as the defence min-jair power. The tiny Malaysian istry announced RAF jets al-|Air Force has no combat ready had gone into action! planes. a ay A British High Commissioner in Malaysia, : _ __|spokesman made the announce- The ministry said. eight|/ment of possible retaliatory at- Hunter jet fighters, rhage: tacks on' Indonesia: ; in two sections of four each.) qhe spokesman was : mounted an attack Friday and menting a London iberte Gat D ' |Britain has informed 'i i the Labis area, 105 miles south-|o¢ its intention to fake fetatinn west of Kuala Lumpur. |tory action if Indonesia carries The ministry announcement|out further raids similar to said further air attacks are/jandings staged by air and sea likely. on the Malaysian mainland, Five Indonesians were re-| An air force spokesman in ported flushed -out in today's | Singapore said the attacks re- air strikes. |quested by Malaysian authori- The operation appeared pat-|ties, were carried out Friday terned after tactics adopted|and this morning. during the 12-year war against) A Malaysian defence ministry Chinese - led Communist guer-|statement on Friday's attack rillas- in Malaya, -when planes|said "similar operations are bombed and strafed an area tojlikely to be continued in the force the guerrillas into am-|area following this strike," It was not immediately known jwhether the attacks produced any Indonesian casualties, The defence ministry state- Church Urges Health Service roe an effort to '"'dis- ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--The|lodge"' guerrillas "believed hid- general council of the United|ing in deep jungle... ." by Hunter aircraft, were e in ment said the attacks, carried|# | KISSES BLOWN | BY EAGER KING | ATHENS (AP)--King Con- stantine of Greece, too eager to await the formal ar- rival here of his teen - age bride-to-be, flew by helicop- ter 80 miles Friday to blow kisses as beautiful Anne- | Marie of Denmark neared | her new homeland in her | fathers royal yacht. | |. Then he rushed back, sped out into the harbor in a motor launch, raced up the yacht's ladder as it anchored in Phaleron Bay; and swept his fiancee into his arms. On her best royal behavior, Anne-Marie dropped a_ de- mure curtsey before she re- turned his embrace, Greek naval vessels fired 21 - gun salutes and air force jets roared overhead. All Greece was eagerly awaiting arrival of the 18- year-old princess who will be married next Friday to their 24-year-old king. Hurricane May Smash Bermuda | By DAVID LANCASHIRE NICOSIA (AP)--The threat of more violence over Cyprus loomed today after the Greek- Cypriot government issued stern warnings against Turkey's plan to convoy food to the is- land. President Makarios warned Turkey Friday against proceed- ing with her plan to furnish an air and naval convoy for ship- ments of food and supplies to lthe village of Kokkina on the island's northern coast, Turkey had announced she intends to end the blockade of Turkish- Cypriots in Kokkina with the shipments and warned against interference. "The 'consequences will be very grave," Makarios said. "We shall not permit any _arbi- trary action and we are deter- mined to react with every means at our disposal to any arbitrary action." Defence Minister Polycarpos Georgadjis also warned that convoyed shipments would be opposed as '"'a kind of invasion" unless Turkey obtains permis- sion from Cyprus and pays im- port duties. The Turks say large concen- trations of Turkish - Cypriots cause of an economic blockade imposed by the (AP) -- Hurri- of son, n British Crown colony of Ber- muda today with 95-mile winds - threatened to score a direct Hurricane - force winds were expected to begin lashing the resort island in the mid-Atlan- tic around noon, Meanwhile, thousands of peo- ple in Georgia and Florida be- gan a massive cleanup and re- pair job In. the wake of hurri- cane Dora, Ethel's destructive sister storm. They had President John. son's promise of full federal support. He picked his - way through muck, debris and shat- tered buildings in Jacksonville, \Fla., and Brunswick, Ga. dur- ing a personal inspection tour Friday. The cause of the crisis, Dora, second hurricane to strike Flor- ida within two weeks, was dy- ing a watery death in Georgia after losing her punch in the Florida panhandle. VEERS TO NORTH For a while, Ethel whipped along the same path that Dora took toward Florida. But Fri- day night, she veered sharply to the north, Col. H. W. Tarkington, Flor- ida civil defence director, esti- mated - Florida's damage at |$200,000;000, Dora swept more than 2,500,000 cubic yards of sand from Florida's white beaches, more than would nor- mally be eroded in 20 years, the University of Florida esti- | order to embarra ernment. Queen's Car Bullet-Proof QUEBEC (CP)--Queen Eliza- beth will ride in an enclosed, bullet-proof car whef she: visits this historic provincial capital Oct, 10-11. Col. J. P. Martin, co-ordina- tor of the royal visit, said Fri- day the car probably will be the same one she will ride in during an earlier visit to Char- lottetown in connection with the centennial' of . pre-Confederation talks. He stressed that there is 'no question of taking meas- ures in Quebec other than those taken in other cities" to 'safe- guard the Queen and Prince Philip. RCMP Inspecor Maurice Na- don, chairman of a police com- mittee dealing with security aspects. of the visit, denied a published report the Royal Couple will be whisked through the city at high speeds. _ "There will be slow zones and medium zones. She won't be travelling at high speed." Both he and Col. Martin said a full report will be published within a week to indicate to the public where the best vantage |mated. points will be. face starvation in Cyprus be- th VIOLENCE THREAT LOOMS IN CYPRUS Plan To Convoy Food Brings Stern Warning atives of the UN Peace Force and the International Red Cross to visit Kokkina to report on the food situatién. The latest exchange coincided with a proposal by UN Secre- tary-General U Thant to extend the UN peace-keeping force on the island another three months to avoid "utter disaster." He adme the recommendation in a report to the 11-nation Security Council which will take up the matter next week. Thant also warned that any attempt to bring food into the Kokkina area without the con sent of the Cyprus government 'would have possible dangerous consequences."' Uneasy Calm Has Returned TEMBLOS, Cyprus (CP)--An uneasy calm returned to the Temblos area in northern Cy- prus Friday as Turkish - Cypri- ots slackened their efforts to build a road linking this iso lated village with. their strong- hold, St. Hilarion Castle in the Kyrenia Mountains. Canadian troops remained in ositions they Greek-Cypriot|cupied ron ss" the gov- Makarios called for represent- Gig, eeqmusedee 9f , ler o} Company of the Royal 22nd Regiment's ist' Battalion, said the Turkish-Cypriots were still doing on the road by hand but had stopped using their bulldozers and dynamite. The announced purpose of the road is to facilitate the move ment. of supplies to Temblos, an entirely 'Turkish village hemmed in on three sides by Greek-Cypriot 'positions, It has to rely on a steep. mountain path to St. Hilarion Castle as a supply route. Eight Persons Die In Maritime Fire SPRINGHILL, -N.S. (CP) ~ Eight persons, including @ father and his six children, are believed to have died in a fire that swept a single storey frame home at nearby. Spring- hill Junction today. RCMP said the deaths could not be confirmed until a medi- cal examiner checked the ruins. Believed to be in the house were Laton Chisholm, 36, and his children, Heather, 11, nae | aret Lavoni, 10, Crystal Ann, Thomas Duncan, 3, % and Richard, six months. second adult, a friend of Chis- holm, was missing and was be- lieved to have been in the home at the time. Mrs. Chisholm is a patient hospital at Halifax, An NEW YORK (AP) -- Thirty-|amendment to the Criminal years English-speak'ng Protes-|Church of Canada Friday urged| 'The aircraft .-. . fired two- Aid. Society of Ontario. seven men who abandoned a/Code, introduced by Robert Prittie (NDP -- Burnaby-Rich- ; Mr, Ganthier said "it is our tants would dwindle to the van-|the federal government to de-|inch rockets into the suspected ishing point and French-Cana- velop a-national health service|area after the local military burning freighter in the Atlan-| | mond). |duty as Christians to oppose) gians would be the only_ones|plan '"'as soon as possible." {commander had satisfied him- tie were reported safe aboard another ship today. | PAR Pn Ne The Panamanisn freighter La we -- 8 a an Pintada, which rescued the men) jo) cin, ee ae rs bath peel? | . ghby (PC -- Kamloops), a radioed the U.S. Coast Guard) adical doctor who seconded| ight: " ds ac- , | Friday night: "'All hands ac-|1,, proposed amendment. "If| counted for, Vessel burning|ihe jaw involved was enforced, | fiercely but looks like will stay| most medical. men and drug. afloat." 4 sists '. . would bein jail." The message came at 11.2 Under the Criminal Code now, p.m., about seven hours after), js ijlegal to sell, give or ad- the first § 0 S. vertise any instruction, . medi- The men left. the 13,790-ton cine, drug or article intended freighter Globe Explorer in life-|for use in birth control boats and rafts. | 'Any physician who advises | patients on contraceptive meth- |ods is breaking the law," \Mr. Prittie. 'Any who sells contraceptive pills or} devices breaks the law Any/ cleric who advises his parish- jioners about family planning is breaking the law." Creditiste lout the bill _ CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 members lalked -- which means it' left. At another point he said) all Canadians would disappear and "blacks and Chinese would jreplace us." PASS APPROPHKIATION The spirited debate on birth the control followed a quiet session thorny flag issue out of the in the Commons, when mem- way, the Commons will turnibers passed the health depart- next week to legislation boast-)ment's $1,263,666,750 appropria-| ing farm improvement loans/tion and began working through} and implementing recommen-|the estimates for the mines de-| dations of the royal commis-|partment. sion on. transportation. Health Ministery LaMarsh The next items on the agenda/said no increase is being con-| Farm Loans \. Next Item OTTAWA (CP) With said! will be the deadlocked electoral] sidered now for federal grants|Taising drugzist/yedistribution bill and legisla-|for hospital construction, Nova|Purposes. In another report, the tion to set up farm machinery) Scotia, Quebec and Ontario are "syndicates" operated by the particularly short of hospital) government. beds, she said, increased Justice Mini 14, aid to. t hese government house' leader, an-."'hardly seem fair" nounced the top-priority itemsjothers, whose services in the Commons Friday. fairly adequate. but ter I provine tu the seven were At the church's biennial con- ference, lism and social service stressed a need for urgency in working out the plan so that "'the health needs of all citizens (will) be adequately met, regardless of income, age, isolation. or chronic illness." The board said. the plan should also em- brace dental care and pharma- ceuticals, The board also.asked the council to. oppose strongly lot- teries of any kind as ways of money for charitable board called on the church's membership.to "'rout out racial prejudice - and. discrimination racial an ethnic within the denomina- tion of groups," tion. the board of evange- {self that the target area was free from inhabitants," the Statement said, CHASE INDONESIANS An estimated 30 Indonesian paratroopers, including several women, jumped into the Labis jungles Sept. 2. A British |Gurkha battalion and Malay- jsian para-military field police have been pursuing the Indon- esians since last week after re- lieving a' Royal Malay infantry force which was then sent to Singapore following rioting there. The Labis area is ahout halfway between Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. Villagers have said there were about 40 would|and to promote further integra-|paratroopers in all. The Gurkha and Malaysian forces Friday were said to have killed about eight and captured about 20. | in the Labis area) Edmond Guenette (stand- ing) faces preliminary fear- ing Friday on charge of capital murder for the death of one of two men killed in t an attempted firearms store holdup Aug. 29. Co-accused seated in dock are (left to right) Gilles Brunet, Marcel Tardif and Cyriaque Deliste, ¥ CAPITAL MURDER HEARING While a fifth Francoie Schirm, wounded at the scene, lies on a stretcher nearby. --(CP. Wirephoto) ,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy