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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Nov 1965, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, November 9, 1965 A Single Liberal Out Of Prairies By PHIL ADLER SESILONTON (EP): ~~ Liberal representation on the prairies was cut to one from three when the Progressive Conservatives swept 42 of 48 seats in Mani- Saskatchewan and Alberta in Monday's general election. The Conservatives, under leader John Diefenbaker who won an easy personal victory in Prince Albert, increased their' p strength by one over but lost a seat to Social Credit in British Columbia ewhere other party standings re- mained unchanged. Ten of Manitoba's 14 seats went to the Conservatives. The New Democratic Party in- creased its representation to three, a gain of one. Sole Liberal elected on the prairies was Veterans Affairs Minister Roger Teillet in St. Boniface. As in 1963, all 17 seats in Sas- katchewan were Won by Con- servatives. Major upset of the west was the t in Calgary South of Agriculture Minister Harry Hays by Calgary Alderman Ray Ballard, giving the Conserva- tives 15 of 17 seats in Alberta. The Conservatives had 14. Social Credit retained two Al- berta seats. In British Columbia, Liberals won seven seats, Conservatives three, NDP nine and Social Credit three. CHANGE IN NORTH In the North, Erik Nielsen re- tained Yukon Territory for the Conservatives but Bud Orange of the Liberals defeated Con- servative Gene Rheaume of the last House in Northwest Terri- tories. ' T. C. Douglas, NDP leader, was returned in Burnaby- Coquitlam and Social Credit leader Robert Thompson held Red Deer. Mr. Ballard, 47-year-old ac- countant, held a 789-vote mar- gin over Mr. Hays, former Cal- mayor who won Calgary South in 1963. However,- Mr. Hays said he would wait for the service vote next weekend before conceding. The service vote in 1963 went heavily in favor of the minis- ter, who was knocked out of campaigning three weeks ago because of pneumonia. Manitoba Conservatives lost Springfield to Ed Schreyer of the NDP but picked up Winni- te NDP but picked up Winni- Sherinan, a Winnipeg televiion news. director, defeated Liberal Margaret Konaniz who was up for re-election. Former Conservative cabinet ministers Gordon Churchill and Walter Dinsdale were re-elected along with Stanley Knowles, veteran NDP member. Successful Conservatives in Saskatchewan included former agriculture minister Alvin Ha- milton in Qu'Appelle and Dr. Lewis Brand in Saskatoon. ARGUE LOSES Hazen' Argue, Liberal farm spokesman, failed to regain As- siniboia, the rural constituency he had represented from 1945 until 1963. Mr. Argue had been a CCF supporter until 1962. Conservative winners in Al- berta included Douglas Hark- ness in Calgary North, a for- mer Diefenbaker cabinet minis- ter who resigned from the gov- ernment in 1963 in a dispute over nuclear policy. Jack Bigg, Cons er vative member for Athabaska, had no problem disposing of Dave Hun- ter, Alberta Liberal leader who resigned to run federally after two unsuccessful attempts to get a provincial seat. Former Conservative justice minister Davie Fulton returned) successfully to the federal field) with a victory in Kamloops but| Howard Green, former external) affairs minister in the Diefen-) baker government, was defeated by a Liberal in Van- couver Quadra. H. W. Herridge, former NDP house leader, was returned in Kootenay West. NO MR. BENNET IRES OLD DEAR KELOWNA, B.C. (CP)-- A lady in her 80s who rode to the polls on her bicycle Monday harangued poll clerks for about 10 minutes because the name of Pre- mier W. A. C. Bennett of British Columbia was not on the ballot. When they explained the difference between a fed- eral election and a provin- cial election, she cast a bal- lot but stayed huffy. "She was still mad when she got back on her bi- cycle," a polling official peg South when L. R. (Bud) said. WEATHER FORECAST LIBERALS' 50-5] SEATS DOZEN BELOW EXPECTED GAINS By JOHN LeBLANC TORONTO (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson's plea for major- ity government was just the sig- Wednesday; Some Snow TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts cold. Winds north 15 to 25 today lissued by the weather office at/and light Wednesday. 5.50 Be : po Nerd Synopsis: Crgestey : Georgia Northern ne Bay; Al- eat chairs-in- Ontario: Monday Strong northerly|goma, Sault Ste. "Marie, Timag-| When the shuffling was over, Little change is forecast for|ning. Wednesday cloudy with|scores. today but some clearing will oc-|snowflurries and continuing; Ontario's voters cur in most areas this evening|cold. Winds northwest 20 except and overnight temperatures will/light tonight. drop sharply. ' ; Cloudiness will return to most areas Wednesday. Snowflurries|Low tonight, hig are expected in the north and|Windsor ... in southwestern Ontario late in|St. Thoma the day. Temperatures will re-|London .... main well below the seasonal|Kitchener ........ normals. Mount Forest..... Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,| Wingham southern Lake Huron, Windsor,|Hamilton London: Cloudy and cold today|St. Catharines.. clearing this evening. Wednes-|Toronto day increasing cloudiness with chance of snowflurries late in the day and continuing cold. Winds north 15 to 25 today and southeast 15 Wednesday. Southern Georgian Bay, northern Lake Huron, Halibur- ton, Killaloe, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hamilton, Toronto: Cloudy and cold with a few lsnowflurries today. Clearing|White River.... this evening: Wednesday vari-|M able cloudiness and continuing|Timmins .. ler | Forecast Temperatures h Wednesday: oe 38 38 35 35 35 seeeeeee ae QUEBEC (CP)--The Liberals lfor a total of 55 in Quebec Mon- |Killaloe |Muskoka North Bay.cessese Sudbury ..cesseses Earlton Sault Ste, Marie.. Kapuskasing .. | cial Credit factions. lfour seats that went Social tives. ec. 99 | ----/|accused of being anti-Quebec by nal for a political game of musi- winds have brought a strongjami, White' River, Cochrane'jthe only winner was the New outbreak of cold air into On-|North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy|pemocratic Party, The Liberals tario and its depth indicates thejand cold with a few snowflur-land Progressive Conservatives cold spell will last several days./ries today. Clearing this eve-|did not come up to their 1963 took back cz the government party mere than they gave, confound- ing Liberal strategists who had Quebec: Grits Gain Eight 'But Tories Refuse To Die picked up an extra eight seats day, largely at the expense of \the feuding Creditiste and So-! | While they were losing ground jor holding steady in all other |provinces, the Liberals gained Credit in 1963, three from Credi- jtistes and three from Conserva- The Conservative party, often ELECT ION REPORT, 1965... \its opponents, refused to die in ithis province. Conservatives won nine seats, including three gains from the Rhodesia's Chief Justice Deties Smith, Tries Talks (Continued From Page One) jleaving Mr. Thompson to lead a _ |party of nine. With 96 per cent of the civil-| ian polls reported Monday| WIN IN CITIES -- \night, the Liberals had 39 per} Only the big cities gave } P 'cent of the popular vote. The|Liberals the kind of aupport Conservative. \Conservatives had 33 per cent,|they sought. Montreal elected| the NDP 18, Credtistes five,/Liberals in 20 of its 21 ridings, | Social Credit three and others|a duplicate of 1963; Toronto . bapa vlad play at fogge ane. survived the Liberal tide, a far This compared with the 1963 i aa cry frem the 26 Caouette men preference of 41.7 per cent for peating 1963. ae ciecet ta il snd Sk Sas Ithe Liberals, 32.8 for Conserva-| On the Uraittes, ihe Bovenollater. There were 13 Creditiste ltives' 18.2 NDP, 11.9 Socialjment party ran into a stone) 7D ai ccolution \Credit and .4 per cent for oth-|Wall, winning only one of 48) d ers. seats. They took three of them 'wingeppRs RETURNED | The voting turnout was about We tec é r Conservative) Quebec's eight cabinet minis- |73 per cent of the 10,225,000 el- + ins lters and the three new-guard lore cabinet ministers made it back|'© 3 igibles, well below the 79.6 per|iitg the Commons Liberal intellectuals all swept jcent of 1963 and the record 79.8) George Hees toppled Liberal|into office with |per cent of 1962. Pauline Jewett in the Ontario|margins. The three newcomers, | Canada now has had five elec- tions since 1957 when the Con- Liberals, and former Conserva- tive MP Maurice Allard mace This with eight Conservatives chosen in 1963 and 14 in 1962. Creditiste Leader Real Caou- ette and eight of his followers a fiercely-fought campaign that|!eader Jean Marchand, law pro- servatives took office on a mi-|caught national attention. The fessor Pierre Elliott Trudeau nority win. In 1958 the Conserv-|former trade minister, who re-|@N@ syndicated columnist Ger- atives won a record majority,|signed from the cabinet after a\ard Pelletier. slumped back to a minority in|policy split with Mr. Diefenba-| The Liberals' provincial total /1962 and lost to a Liberal mi-|;er in 1963, has been consid-|of 55 Commons seats was the inority in 1963. ered a contender for his party's|largest since 1957: when they It cost the taxpayers $13,500,-|leadership. |swept 63 of the 75 ridings but 1000 to finance the latest elec-| Davie Fulton regained the |lost power to a minority Con- |tion, it has been officially esti-/Kamloops seat he left in 1963|Servative government. mated. to take over the Conservative! The New 'Democratic Party, The Liberals were shut out in leadership in B.C. which like its CCF predecessor three provinces -- Prince Ed-| Richard A. Bell, immigration|has never captured a Quebec ward Island, Saskatchewan andjminister under Mr. Diefenba- seat, was blanked again Mon- |Alberta--and lost the two cabi-|ker, won Carleton from the Lib-|day despite its strongest cam- Inet ministers in the process, eral who ousted him in the 1963|paign evér and a new platform Agriculture Minister Harry |election. Martial Asselin, for-|featuring bilingualism and the minister, took|two-nation concept popular with comfortable riding of Northumberland after|#!l in their 40s, are ex-labor Hays, who missed most of the|mer forestry }many French-Canadians. looked confidently to fair pick- ings from the Commons' largest block of seats. The Liberal total on the civil- ian vote -- 50 or 51 seats -- is about. a dezen. below the party's below the 52 won last time. The NDP will have nine members, three better than in 1963 and two ahead of the count at dissolution. The Conserva- tives will have 25 or 26. They won 27 in 1963. Everybody. won and lost seats. Just how the shuffle panned out ment and is the first man since Confederation to break the fed- eral Liberals' hold on the St. Jean seat. The Conservatives elected jtwo of their former ministers, but lost a third. Former forestry minister levoix from the Creditistes and former minister without port- folio Theogene Ricard was re- elected handily in St. Hya- cinthe-Bagot. Former mines minister Paul |Martineau, who won with the jreturning officer's vote after a jtie in 1963, was edged out by Liberal Thomas Lefebvre. Two 'New Guard' Liberal a comeback in Sherbrooke as an| members of the last House lost the anti - Diefenbaker independent compared to Conservatives. In Gaspe, ex- Conservative MP Russell Keays trimmed Alexandre Cyr and in |Argenteuil - Deux - Montagnes, Perd Regimbal ousted Vincent Drouin. |\YOUNG CAOUETTE LOSES | Mr. Caouette's son Gilles, 25, | years. He was turned back in Labelle by Liberal Gaston Cler-| The NDP brought back David deputy party The closest race took place|leader in the Commons, who re- in Shefford where Creditiste Gil-| captured the York South seat he lost to a Liberal in 1963. The NDP also added Toronto Broad- |view and Nickel Belt in the north from the Liberals but failed to cut into the Conserva- mont. bert Rondeau: the former mem- ber, trailed 35 votes behind Lib- eral Louis Neveu and 113 votes behind Conservative Paul Tre- panier, mayor of Granby. The outcome there could be affected by the service vote to be announced Saturday or by a recount. A record total of 327 candi- dates; 32 more than the previ- dates, 32 more than the previ- ous high in 1963, fought it out in Quebec. The only separatist standard- |bearer, ex-boxer Reggie Chart- rand, picked up a mere 250 votes in Montreal St. Jacques. Turnout was cut to about 67 per cent by poor weather and lack of interest. Only a handful 'of voting imcidents were re- pre - eleciion assessmecinis ana' Martial Asselin regained Char-) was not known fully early today pending a final result from the northern riding of Algoma West where the Liberal defender was leading narrowly with one poll to be reported. Apart from Algoma West, the Liberals lost six and added five. The Conservatives lost four and gained three. The NDP gained three and lost one. Liberal hopes foundered chiefly: in eastern Ontario, where they lost three seats to the Conservatives; in the Tor- onto Metropolitan area, where they dropped two to the NDP; and in southwestern . Ontario, where they gained a couple but failed to make expected major inroads. They broke even in the north, trading a pair with the DP. The Liberals continued their recent trend towards pushing jcogservatives out of city terri- tory by taking Peterborough 'and Waterloo North -- mostly Kitchener--but failed in an all- out bid for London, home-town lof Conservative Premier Ro- barts. They also lost a piece of Ottawa in Carleton. | Prime Minister Pearson was re-elected comfortably in Al- goma East over Conservative Joel Aldred and all eight On- tario cabinet members went back without trouble. ADD WINTERS | The Liberals also added in- jdustrialist Robert Winters, a former works minister due for a cabinet post, who held hockey star Red Kelly's old Toronto- larea riding of York West. Prize catch for the Conserva- tives was Northumberland, where George Hees _-- who walked out of John Diefen- |baker's cabinet in 1963 in a split over defence policy--got back into political life by |squeaking* past Liberal college lost his third race in as many |Professor Pauline Jewett, mem- {ber of the last House. \Lewis, former \tives. The NDP also lost the huge northern riding of Port Arthur) to the Liberals. It was left vul-| nerable by the retirement of | Douglas Fisher, deputy NDP leader in the House who be- came a noted giant-killer when) he knocked off Liberal strong- man C. D. Howe in 1957. | The other Liberal gains were) from the Conservatives in Elgin} and Middlesex East. | BELL WINS Besides proyiding a return) ticket to politics for Mr. Hees} riod as president of the Mont- real and Canadian stock exchanges, the Conserva- tives snatched a major trophy in Carleton as former immigra- tion minister Richard Bell got lis Old "riding "back trom a -Laid- eral. The other Conservative gain was in Hastings South, which the party won in the 1963 civil- ian vote and then lost in the service vote. It was the only constituency turned over by the armed forces. Monday's . vote was close enough so that it could turn over again. The Conservatives failed in at- tempts to return several of their prize candidates. Dalton Camp, national president of the party and a top strategist for years, lost to Trade Minister Sharp in Toronto Eglinton. t George Hogan, PC Ontario secretary-treasurer, ran second to Mr. Winters in York West. Richard Thrasher, a former parliamentary secretary, quit servatives to try for his old Essex South seat but lost to a Liberal. BLANKED IN TORONTO The Conservatives were again shut out of one-time 'Tory Tor- onto." For the second straight election they failed to get one of the 18 Toronto and York seats--all of which they held in 1958. One of the losers was Frank McGee, briefly a minis- ter without portfolio before the 1963 election. The Toronto-York | block now is split 14 to 4 be-' tween the Liberals and NDP. NDP candidate Reid Scott, | who squeezed into Toronto Dan-| forth by 202 votes in 1963, | boosted this to 8,565. Andrew) Brewin was re-elected for the| party in Toronto - Greenwood and his lawyer - daughter) Martha, 24, made her political debut by running up a respec-) table 20,954 in York West, though she lost her deposit in Mr. Winters' win. Generally, women fared poorly in Ontario. Of 13 candi- dates, only 'lealth Minister Judy LaMarsh in Niagara Falls and Conservative Mrs. Jean Wadds in Grenville - Dundas were elected, both retaining seats. Miss Jewett's Northum- berland loss reduced the On- tario feminine contingent. as national director of the Con-; Cloudy And Cold Today. Ontario: Only NDP Gains; Oldliners Drop As usual, the Communist party got nowhere. Three candi- dates ran and lost deposits, in- cluding National Leader Wil- liam Kashtan in Toronto Daven- port where Finance Minister Gordon won handiiy; William (Whipper Billy) Wat- son, a favorite wrestler, lost as a Conservative 'in York East. But Liberal Jack Roxburgh, former president of the Cana- dian Ameteur Hockey Associ- ation, squeezed back in Norfolk by six votes. Deputy Commons Speaker Lu- cien Lamoureux was returned in Stormont. So were férmer labor - minister Michael Starr and former health minister J. Waldo Monteith, both Conserva- tives, in Ontario and Perth. Erhart Regier, who gave up his British Columbia seat of Burnaby - Coquitlam to maké way for NDP Leader T. C. Douglas in 1962, tried unsuccess- fully in Algoma West. MANY VOTE DEATH TUEBINGEN: Germany (AP) The death penalty for sex crimes was favored by 47 per cent of West Germans ques- tioned in a poll by the Wickert Institute. Capital punishment is ilegal in Germany. About 20 per cent of the respondents fa- vored life prison terms, 17 per cent sterilization and 16 per per cent other punishments. ' | i | { | | OLD WORLD TRADITION LONDON CREAM Conakry LONDON © ONTan@® Canmaoa NEW WORLD PERFECTION ---- % TERMS EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY 5%4% for one & two years 6% for three, four and five years GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE OPEN SATURDAYS 'ported, all in Montreal. jin Northumberland after a pe-| Call Lander for Fuel Oil campaign because of a bout of/Charlevoix from a Creditiste. pneumonia, was defeated by| wINTERS GETS IN Conservative Ray Ballard in| Robert Winters, Liberal works Calgary South, the only Alberta) minister prior to his defeat in seat won by the Liberals in) Nova Scotia in the 1957 election, 1963. nee won easily in the York West | Mines Minister J. Watson | coat vacated by Liberal Paaimia aia | MacNaught fell in Prince 8S\Kelly, the hockey star. He| Ps Meco sai? aaa the Conservatives swept all four | turned back George Hogan, \eader Gales icoret tenet |Prince Edward Island seats. He|,ominent Conservative orgam-\cliche was defeated oy bearty ee ee, ae ae pee (nee 3,000 votes by Liberal Jean-Paul to seek political office in P-E.I.. "ceveral former cabinet minis-| Racine in Beauce, south of Que-' 'including |hee City. : United Church minister David tare wate: deteated, Howard Green who was the MacDonald, 29. €/Conservative external affairs DUPUIS. BEATEN Conservatives romped again in all 17 Saskatchewan minister when the Diefenbaker| Yvon Dupuis, dismissed as However, the NDP boosted its, popular vote to more than 235,-| 000 from 160,000 in 1963 and its) candidates made strong show-)| ings in several Montreal ridings | and in the depressed lower St. | LONDON (AP) -- Sir Hugh Beadle, chief justice of Rhode- sia, arrived today for talks with the British government on his country's constitutional cri- ais in apparent defiance of Prime Minister Ian Smith's government. Beadle is the chairman-desig- nate of a proposed royal com- mission to chart a passage for Rhodesian independence agree- able to the British and Rhode- sian governments. However, Smith has con- tended that Prime Minister Wil- cilable with the minority white- ruled colony's demands for full independence. Wilson countered by offering to meet Smith for a third time in a month--this time in Malta --in a further attempt to solve the issue. At the same time Wil- son sent a message inviting Beadle to London. Beadle's coming to Britain Was seen as a sign that the Rhodesian administration is far from united over Smith's fre-| quent threats to grab inde-| pendence for Rhodesia without! Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corp. OSHAWA -- 19 Simcoe St. North -- 723-5221 BOWMANVILLE -- 23 King St. West --- 623-2527 eS ae esa: Let a ae ae MS The Florsheim Imperial m5 i seats. son's terms for the commission has slammed the door on its ex- istence. Smith has been quoted in Sal- isbury news dispatches as say- ing his government was highly displeased by Beadle's flight to London. He called Beadle's trip a private one. Beadle apologized to report- ers at London Airport for being "tnable to say anything about his journey. Beadle's visit followed Smith's letter to Wilson _con- tending that the British govern- British approval. sian government would mean that the country's small white minority would keep its pres- ent dominant position. Wilson has warned Smith that such a moye would unit most of world opinion against Rhodesia and might bring on an inflam- matory situation. There are 220,000 whites in Rhodesia and 4,000,000 Negroes. Negro leaders want the coun- try organized on a "'one man ments' position seemed irrecon- one vote" basis: Abolition Of Death-Penalty Takes Effect In U.K. Today LONDON (AP)--The abolition of capital punishment for mur- der came into force in Britain Monday. As the first full Parltamen- tary session under Prime Min- ister Wilson's labor government adjourned, the abolishment bill and tyro other pieces of legisla- tion were signed into law by a commission acting for Queen Elizabeth The other measures make the incitement of racial violence a crime and set up a nationwide "procedure for fixing fair rents. because of objections on some details by the House of Lords. Parliamentary action was com- pleted last week. The race relations bill, in ad- dition to banning racial incite- ment, prohibits discrimination in public places, except for shops and boarding houses. The new rent law had been a basic plank in Labor's cam- paign platform since the Con- servative government removed rent control in 1957. The new law makes it a crime for land- lords to evict tenants without a These three bills had been 'held over the summer recess' court order or to try to intimi- date them into leaving. overnment fell. minister without portfolio last | A unilateral declaration of in-\erals manage to improve on dependence (UDI) by the Rhode-|\their 1963 showing and even Only in Quebec did the Lib- ® prising almost no one. \there the increase fell far short of what many observers had predicted. They gained 11 seats but lost three for a net gain of eight. : A ee ., law. professor Pierre That Quebec performance Trudeau, 45, had been hailed as | = lof the Confederation of _Na-|Iberville-Napierville. tional Trade Unions; newspaper} Mr. Beaulieu, 63, was com- man Gerard Pelletier, 46, andjmerce minister for 16 years in Three Quebec newcomers to|January and now awaiting trial | \Liberal ranks were elected, sur-|on influence-peddling charges, Jean|was beaten soundly by Conserv- |Marchand 47, former president |ative Paul Beaulieu in St. Jean- Elliott |the Duplessis provincial govern- ies with Free Emerge Careful, courteous was nullified by the loss of two 'Seger 4 one ... 'new look" Liberals in the rar in FEL. four. Gate province and_potential_cabinet | rg itol : " | material. > sporbag Prog prone Some comments alter the re- lthe Liberals in Newfoundland, ne ie ee ee alt unk fee people decided they | ; sar ; guess eo and British Colum- were right and those who Conservatives improved their wanted a majority government HEAT WITH-OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. "ry ws 1963 standing in four provinces. "°° wrong. | : In addition to the two seats in Health Minister. Judy La P.E.L., they gained four in Nova | Marsh: The voters 'have again) a . spoken with an unclear voice." Scotia, one in Quebec and one) "wir wees: "I can hardly wait| Suchen jated oc ot Toe er unl Paviament opens again." |perts who had looked for a de- ae ae We} ee hack our losses at the next election. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 43 KING STREET 725- {Cline of Conservative strength eee there. | The NDP collected three ex- ing service in town! uate Quality guaranteed Fuel Oil from our own storage tanks. Reliable; automatic deliver- ncy Service all winter, drivers. No wonder people say Lander-Stark has the best heat- Dial" 725-3581 and be a happy Lander customer. ae Oe Ce, WEST, OSHAWA 3581 tra in Ontario and one more in |Manitoba. Social Credit was cut to five) 'seats nationally: winning only two in Alberta and three in |British Columbia, and the Que- bec-centred Creditistes fell to nine. In 1963 these two groups won 24 seats under the Social Credit label. Shortly after, Mr. Ca-/ ouette and 12 others broke| jaway to form the Creditistes| 'and two other Quebec members defected to the Conservatives, Notice To Real Estate Salesmen WE INVITE aggressive Real Estate salesmen for a confidential interview with the sales manager, to join the most progressive Real Estate office and to make more money by taking advantage of the many listings and sales and all the advertising of a large office, at 16 Simcoe St. South. 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