Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Nov 1965, p. 1

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Home Newspaper manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham. Counties, i". ° $f: Staste UE PF Ween none: Sg Seen Weather Report Cloudy and cold today. Snow- flurries, Clearing, cold Wed- nesday. Low tonight, 22. High tomorrow, 38. 2 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1965 MICHAEL STARR'S most loyal and faithful sup- Porter -- his wife Anne -- added her congratulations in after the popular Conserva- tive won his seventh con- secutive federal election in Ontario riding. Mrs. "My heart each and every one of you. . . » God bless you all," Starr told about 250 victory. supporters, at election-night headquarters. Other mem- bers of the Starr family helped "Mike" celebrate his --Oshawa Times Photo a personal way last night Denis Halts Hearing... "is really warm today -for Honey Keeps Durham In The Liberals Fold BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- On To Trial 'OTTAWA (CP) -- Raymond Denis' preliminary hearing came to an abrupt end Monday and the former executive assist- ant to the federal immigration minister was committed for trial on two charges arising out of the Lucien Rivard affair. 'In the wake of a surprise de- fénce motion to dispense with the rest of the preliminary hearing, then in its third day: Magistrate Glenn Strike com- mitted Denis for trial in county court at sessions starting here Feb. 8. No specific date was fixed for the trial and Denis' $1,000 bail was continued. Bail of $5,000 for Mrs. Marie Rivard, wife of the convicted dope smuggler, also was continued. She was put on bail to guarantee her appear- ance as a witness. -Denis declined Magistrate Strike's invitation to make a statement or to call any de- fence. The committal followed a four-hour discussion between defence counsel Louis Assaly and Crown attorney Jehn Cas- sells while the hearing was sus- pended. FOLLOWS DECISION Mr. Assaly had introduced an unusual motion for immediate committal after a decision by Magistrate Strike to admit cer-| tain evidence to which the de- fence objected. Mr. Assaly first asked for leave to appeal the decision to the court of appeal but was turned down. Russell C. Honey: Durham Rid- ing MP in the last parliament, was re-elected in Monday's fed- eral election: He had a plurality of 1,248 compared with 638 in the 1963 election. Slightly. over 81 per cent of the eligible voters cast their ballots. Mr. Honey had a total vote of 7,945. He was followed by Gar- net Rickard, the PC candidate, who received 6,697 votes. Tony Ketchum, the New Democratic Party candidate received 3,941 votes; while Wilbur Crandell, the Social Credit candidate, re- ceived 174 votes. Townships, the village of New- Mr. Honey topped the poll in j Hope, Clarke, and Darlington '4 castle and the towns of - Port Hope and Bowmanville. Mr. Rickard received the yote in Cartwright, Manvers and |Cavan Townshi Newcastle. largest After and _ Port|stop: we must go on from here,"|Hope where Mr. Hope. A total of 293 votes were|he said. east for Mr. Honey, 185 for Mr. Rickard, 77 for Mr. Ketchum|congratulations to Mr. Honey at|the Liberal Party in the 1963|clear of the exploding wreck- and six for Mr. Crandell. Mr.|the Liberal committee rooms,'election when he defeated Dr.|age. One died in hospital. Four Honey led in Bowmanville and|Mr. Honey said: "This was not|R: P. Vivian, of Port Hope, who|lived, but one was in critical Port Hope, and tied with Mr.|a one-man show. You all worked|had won over John James, of|condition. Rickard at Millbrook. Mr. Rick-|together. Throughout the whole| Bowmanville ard won the advance poll injriding the organization ticked|James, who won two elections|engined 727 jet smacked near . : : over like a clock. You all knew for the Liberals, won the seat!the ter of a 300-foot wooded hill- Addressing his workers in the your jobs and did them. It is a\from the late Charles Stephen-|side a mile and a half from the PC committee room, Mr. Rick-|tribute to the Liberal workers/son, of Port Hope. | ard expressed his appreciation) we were able to win. As this is of the work done and of the the only Liberal riding in this|jelection day was the fact that} 'About 75 feet more and he very great interest displayed by|section of the province, it means|road work and the heavy rain| (veteran pilot Capt. Daniel Tee- all the workers. He said he had/that great tribute is due all the)made access to the poll in the|lin made many friends during the! workers." campaign. | dressed his supporters. Mr. Honey won the riding for Mr. Rickard extended | - She Oshawa Zimes Authorized @s Second Clase: Mall Ottawa and fer" payment ot Postage tn Came TWENTY PAGES By RON DEVANEY Of Oshawa Times Staff Hard work in the face of confidence. This was the winning recipe Michael Starr and his Con- servatives used to salt the On- tario Riding seat away for the seventh time in 13 years. "{t worked harder this time, harder than ever before," Mr. Starr said candidly, while shak- ing hands with jubilant sup- porters in Hotel Genosha last night. With another Liberal minor- ity government certain, the former Labor Minister, and Opposition House Leader in the last parliament, said: "We never obstructed them last time. And we will help them again this time. We will help them get the good things through the House, not the bad things." NEVER IN DOUBT Mr. Starr's victory was never in doubt from the re- ceipt of the first returns. In fact if you are an early-to-bed type you could have retired at} 7.30 last night. First returns 30 minutes after the polls closed showed Mr. Starr with 1339 votes, Lib- eral Dr. Claude H. Vipond with 1212. The New Democrat's Oliver Hodges had 858 and Inde- pendent Dr. James Edward nuadle 68, Translated into percentages, these vote totals give Conserva- tives 38.5, Liberals 34.8, NDP's 24.7 and Dr. Rundle 2. And that is very. close to the' finaf-tally: Mr. Starr--22,707 for 38 percent; Dr. Vipond--19,740 and 33 percent; Mr, Hodges-- 16,259 giving 27.2 percent; and Dr. Rundle's 1022 votes for 1.7 percent. With 8400 new votes in the riding since the 1963 election, the vote total of 59,728 was just 1567 more than last time. Rainy TOUT HODGES Oshawa .seeeveeees 8997 Whitby .....+5 a 1457 7 aN ASS 1015 Pickering Village .. 172 Pickering Township 2284 East Whitby Twsp. 250 Whitby Township . 811 Reach Township .,. 247 Scugog Township .. 31 POR PONY Cine 208 Uxbridge ° 192 Uxbridge Township 215 Scott Township ... 87 Advance Polls .... 207 NOIAL Five sawes 16173 PUL ONTARIO (TOTAL ELIGIBLE 78,786) a RIDING RUNDLE STARR VIPOND 631 10760 10071 92 2216 2021 34 1128 1151 7 305 295 116 3227 3187 26 425 387 52 1166 820 20 654 468 3 89 69 13 586 403 5 527 431 13 557 357 10 352 288 10 600 442 1032 22592 20390 Liberals Returned Without Mandate IT'S MIKE AGAIN By BEN WARD Prime Minister Pearson's| plea for a majority government fell on many deaf ears Monday as Canadians elected their fourth minority Parliament in| 8% years. | The Conservative. and New| Democratic parties managed) scattered gains to offset the Lib- | erals' small increase in seats in| their traditional Quebec bastion. But generally the outcome was almost a repeat of the last elec- tion. | With one seat--Algoma West} in Ontario--still in doubt, an as- tonishing 222 of the 265 seats -- no political change from 1 With all seats reported, an as- tonishing 223 of the 265 seats showed no political change from 1963. |Oshawa with 10,807 votes. Dr. Vipond was right behind with 10,075. Mr. Hodges had 8995 here and Dr. Rundle, who pas never in contention, 621, Mr. Starr won 68 city polls, tied three. Dr. Vipond took 47 here and also tied three. Mr. Hodges captured 40 polls and tied two. Dr. Rundle said early in the evening he has learned a lot in this campaign and he promised to run again. 'SOLID AND GROWING' At 9 p.m., Mr. Hodges issued a statement saying New Demo- crats have a "solid and grow- ing base" in Ontario Riding. He predicted an NDP repre- sentative from here in the next election and said redistribution would be a factor but the main reason would be the 'much organizational work" to be done here. Dr. Vipond conceded at 9.40 p.m. The three-time loser (all to Vote results of all but four of the 324 riding polls were known at 9.45 last night. (The service vote will be known later this week. Servicemen and their wives voted last week.) At 7.45, pith 110. polls re- porting, Mr. Starr had 7289 votes, leading Dr. Vipond. by 127 and Mr. Hodges by 481. PATTERN CONTINUED This pattern continued all night, At°8.20, with 230. polls re- porting, Mr. Starr's total had climbed to 15,666. He led Dr. by 3409. Dr. Rundle had 760 votes. By 9 p.m., with 280 polls in, risen to 2447 and Mr, Hodges was 4957 behind with 14,444. Three hundred. polis had re- ported by 9.15 and Mr. Starr had 20,715 votes. Dr. Vipond was trailing by 2476 with 18,239, and Mr. Hodges was 5399 in Vipond by 1814 and Mr. Hodges) His lead over Dr. Vipond hadjing on in the best interests of in 1958.: Mr./ {Base Line School in Darlington | Shortly after the returns were/Township difficult. At about 3 "I have been proud to have |complete Mr. and Mrs. Honey!p.m. been associated with you. You|and their supporters, led by the/moved to Prestonvale rd. s.|Cincinnati. all worked hard. For you I am|Bowmanville Legion Pipe Band,'There were 215 eligible voters} The crash was the third ma- disappointed. The effort you put left on a triumphant tour of the,of whom 129 cast their ballots|jor air disaster in the world in forth was more than I expected.|southern part of the riding. Theat the poll. the polling booth was percent this time. tion, perhaps totals generally. weather is blamed for the drop in percentage vote from 1963 record of 82.59 to 75.81 Party vote totals and per- centages were also close to a carbon copy of the 1963 elec- largely unchanged distribution across the country and party the{a '"'clean, Election machinery night to Mike Starr took his hometown'regulars. well" according to Riding Re-|(18,809) by 2709. turning Officer Roger Gordon reflecting the|Conant. He had 20 persons in|582 the Brock st. n. headquarters in Whitby helping him last/2744 vote lead over Dr. Vipond's augment the three|19,418. Mr. Hodges, at 16,112, Starr) told party workers it was|4rrears. exciting and good campaign." He said redistribu- tion would not have helped. Mr. trailed by 6050 votes. Ten minutes later Dr. Rundle broke 1000 (he had 1001) while Starr continued strongly "went)|with 21,518 to lead Dr. Vipond Mr. Hodges had 15,697. and was trailing by 1. By 9.45, Mr. Starr had built a RUNWAY WAS IN SIGHT CINCINNATI, \jet airliner within Honey 162 persons aboard Five persons greater Cincinnati \less than a week: Jetliner Crashes, 8 Persons Die In 2 Crashes Ohio '4 Of 62 Survive Hage of Millbrook, oo ra AND MRS. RUSS HONEY--REASON TO SMILE Five hundred and sixty-one} ballots were cast in the advance/I enjoyed working with you im-jcavalcade made stops at New-\of the runway crashed and ex- polls held at Bowmanville, Mill-/mensely. This is: no place to/castle, brook, Newcastle (AP)--A landing sight Newtonville and Port|ploded during a thunderstorm ad-|Monday night killing 58 of the were thrown The American Airlines three- airport after The only unusual incident on/a flight from New York. ) would have nmiade it," said The two other crashes were) last Wednesday. An Argentine Air Force C-54 carrying 68 per- sons crashed near Costa Rica and no survivors were found. Thirty French soldiers were killed when a French military DC-3 went down in French So- maliland. In Monday night's disaster, the wreckage flashed flames into the murky night sky for hours. Workers, certain no one lived in the melted metal, waited for fires to subside be- fore beginning the gruesome search for bodies. Aboard the plane, but not among the survivors, was Jack CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -- Five members of a_ Chicago family and three Cleveland area persons were the victims of two small-plane crashes near here witli a 2i-hour~period; The Chicagoans died Monday night when their 1962 Cessna Skylane crashed in Chardon Township, a few miles east of here. Killed were Dr. Robert K. Hagen, 52, a pediatrician; his wife, Margaret, 52, sons Paul, 14, and Leon, 11, and daughter Irene, 9. The victims are sur- vived by four other Hagen chil- dren, The family was returning home after a weekend trip to Niagara Falls, N.Y. The crash 21 hours earlier was late Sunday night in Wayne County, about 25 miles south of here, and wreckage wasn't dis- covered The William Wilkerson, director at the airport in Ken- tucky 13 miles from downtown ions|F. A. Flynn, 44, son of F. M. gp age Flynn, president and publisher of the New York Daily News. Also on board were Mr. and Mrs. Rex C. Larkin of Lexing- ton, Ky., stable owners noted in harness racing. until' Monday. Cleveland. three victims in a Cessna 172 that crashed in a field were Thomas Helman, 38, Broadview Heights, Mrs, Frank Engel, 44, and her daughter Sharon, 19, Communications disrupted by a storm kept one seat in doubt until this morning. A Liberal held a 28-vote lead in Algoma West with one re- mote poll unable to report Mon- day night because a storm knocked out communications. WO MINISTERS Mr. Pearson, who lost two of his cabinet ministers, said he was disappointed but "all of us are concerned now with carry- the country," Conservative Leader Diefen- baker said the prime minister called the election to obtain a Commons majority and "he has received his answer." T. C. Douglas, leader of the NDP, said the election was use- less and unnecessary and an- other would follow soon. He ruled out a possible NDP-Lib- eral coalition except in "'some unforeseen crisis." A few hours earlier External Affairs Minis- ter Martin had said such a co- alition might be studied. Social Credit Leader Thomp- son called the election "Pear- son's greatest political blunder" but said there should not be an- other election until 1969. Creditiste Leader Caouette said his group would support legislation of benefit to Canadi- ans. There remained a possibility Pearson Fails In Effort To Gain A Grit Majority sults of the armed services vote Canadian Press Staff Writer |@fe announced Saturday and jadded to the civilian results in each riding. There was almost no chance of this changing the minority situation. A new session of Parliament |is not expected to be called un- til early in 1966, probably in January. The question then will be the willingness or otherwise of the opposition parties to unite on a confidence issue and overthrow the government. If this hap- pened, Mr. Pearson could ask Governor - General Vanier for another dissolution of Parlia- ment or suggest he call in Mr. Diefenbaker to form a govern- ment. Mr. Diefenbaker Mon- day night declined to say whether he planned to present an early non-confidence motion to the House. The standings: SEE ELECTION 1965 1963 1962 1958, (Continued On Page 2) Lib 129 129 100 49 PC 99 95 116 208 NDP (CCF) 21 17 19 8 Ike Rushed Cred 9 0 0 0 sc 5 2% 30 0 Ind. PC 1.8.49 Ind ee ee To Hospital FORT GORDON, Ga. (AP)-- Former president Dwight D. Ei- senhower was admitted to Fort Gordon army hospital and placed under an oxygen tent after suffering chest pains early today. Col. William W. Cox, senior medical officer at Fort Gordon, said Eisenhower the former president had "no ; complications" and was sleep- ing comfortably. Cox also said Eisenhower had been given narcotics to relieve the pains in the chest and. that they had stopped, allowing him to rest easily. The doctor was one of four, including a heart specialist a a cardiologist, who were in con- stant attendance on Eisenhower po og the early morning ours, Fire Destroys Stores, Homes BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Four stores and two homes were re- duced to rubble today by a spreading fire that blazed through a downtown block. One fireman was injured. With damage already heavy, firemen from four departments fought the blaze still raging in that some narrowly-won victor-|two other stores and apart- ies might be reversed when re-|ments above them. ST. LOUIS, NO. (AP) -- tion was halted Monday when in front of the huge complex. spacecraft used for manned started her rise to fame as a sonality by circling the globe Broadway syndicated column. yun NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Strike Halts Gemini Construction Gemini spacecraft produc- 16,000 machinists walked off their jobs at McDonnell Aircraft Corp. in a dispute over what strikers called pre-space age wages. space with horse and buggy wages,"' read one picket sign "First man in McDonnell built the Gemini orbitgl flights. Geminis 8 through 12 still are under construction. The 'Voice Of Broadway' Is Silenced NEW YORK (AP) -- Dorothy Kilgallen, dead at 52, columnist and television per- in a breathtaking 24 days. Death came to Miss Kilgallen Monday as she slept after appearing as a regular panelist on the Sunday night What's My Line? television show and writing her Voice of nt PEARSON AND DIEFENBAKER GOING... ...- SOME PARTY INSIDERS THINK, SAY zovcares' RObarts And Lesage Next Time? Could Be and submitting that you should commit my client at this time." A 15-minute adjournment was called but it stretched to more than 90 minutes before the hearing was suspended until the afternoon. During the- adjournment, Crown attorney Cassells ad: vised the Ontario attorney-gen- eral's department in Toronto of the unusual development. Denis came up for prelimi- nary hearing last Thursday on two charges connected with events surrounding the extradi- tion to the United States of dope smuggler Rivard, TORONTO (CP)--Will it be Iesage vs Robarts the next time? Some insiders in the two main parties figure that neither Prime Minister Pearson nor Conservative Leader Diefen- baker will be around for the next federal general election-- whenever it may come. They say the likely choices for the next round are Liberal Premier Jean Lseage of Quebec and Conservative Premier John Robarts of Ontario. It would be a rash govern- ment or opposition that would force another early election ) after the voters' stunning rejec- tion of Mr. Pearson's plea, re- peated almost daily for two months, for a majority in the Commons. The Liberal party's main job now will continue to be to gain wider acceptance in provinces outside Newfoundland, Quebec and Ontario, It gained only in Quebec Monday. French - speaking observers say the two key men in this sit- uation are Jean Marchand, the new Liberal MP for Quebec West, and Robert Winters, a for- mer Liberal cabinet minister who.returng to federal politics as MP for York West after an absence of eight years. The Liberals hope Mr. Mar- chand will make a favorable im- pression on English Canada and perhaps allay fears that the party has become the "Quebec party." Mr. Winters, some informants say, is the choice: of Mr. Le- sage as his chief English-speak- ing colleague in the cabinet if Mr, Lesage becomes prime min- ister. The relationship would be same as the late C. D. Howe's to Prime. Minister St. Laurent. Mr. Lesage and Mr. Winters were cabinet buddies in the St. Laurent government. Liberal insiders say that if Mr. Pearson leaves Mr. Mar- chand out of the cabinet for long, the Liberals will find it extremely difficult in future to' attract top men from . Quebec into the federal field. The Consefvative problem re- mains to get some adequate representation in the 21 Mont- real, 18 Toronto and nine Van- couver area ridings. Of these 48 seats, they won only one Mon- day, repeating their 1963 perfor- mance, Since .1963,.the Conservatives have tried vainly several times to unseat Mr: Diefenbaker as leader. It is believed now that the 70-year-old chieftain may go quietly--but not right away. At the moment, he is having as much fun with pollsters as he did in 1957 when they also predicted a Liberal majority. Mr. Pearson, 68, and Mr. Diefenbaker now are tied 2-2 in their four electoral meetings. It's possible but not likely they will get an opportunity for a rubber match. Mr. Pearson has led the Liberals since 1958, Mr. Diefenbaker the Conservatives since 1956. Election Night -- P. 9 Committee Rooms -- P. 5 Crushmen Win 8-1 --P. 6 Ann Landers -- 11 : CityNews --9 Classified -- 16,17, 18 Comics -- 14 Editorial -- 4 = Financial -- 19 = Obits -- 19 Sports -- 6, 7 Theatre -- 12 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 10, 11 Weather -- 2 In THE TIMES Greater Oshawa Community Chest's drive for funds has reached the $226,005-mark of its $306,300-target. Now in its 22nd day, the ey

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