Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Feb 1966, p. 2

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By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Staff Writer Evidence at hand and past ex- perience indicate that if the Tinited States dealt with the Viet Cong's political front, it would be negotiating witn whai amounts to a shadow govern- ment prepared to take over in South Viet Nam. The Mat-tran Dan-toc Giai- phong is organized as if it were the government of a sovereign nation with president, cabinet sentatives abroad and even reg- ular army and police. In Eng'ish it is called the Na- tional Liberation Front for South Viet Nam. In propaganda it is known by its initials: NLFSV. It has its own flag--red and blue as distinguished from the red flag of North Viet Nam. The manner of organization recalls classic lines devised by Communists for forces whose ul- timate purpose is to develop a nation. Guerrilla and under- ground organizations have been Viet Government army" in addition to regional armed units, militia (police) and guerrilla forces. | The front has set up "'people's} colf . administration . cammit-| tees" in areas held by the"Viet Cong. These iorm the basis for provincial and village - level government. The front also claims to have distributed to peasanis in those areas about 4,000,000 acres of ricefields and other lands. The front's central committee chairman is the equivalent of a chief sf government. Vice-chair- men are potential deputy pre- miers. The head of the commis- sion 'cr foreign relations would become a foreign minister. The members representing "libera- tion trade unions" would be a labor minister, and so forth. WIDE COVERAGE The front encompasses, at least nominally, all manner of groups: The People's Revolu- tionary Party, the socialists, the A giant TU11 -- Soviet airliner, of this type, crash- ed at a Moscow airport to- GIANT SOVIET AIRLINER -- ONE CRASHED THURSDAY day as it took off for a flight to Africa. Soviet 70 persons aboard were kill- 'ed. A Soviet trade delega- tion and Africans were among those aboard. (AP) Speculation's Rife sources reported 48 of the Woman Draws 45-Days Term CAYUGA, Ont. (CP) -- Mrs.! |Every collided. with a stalled vehicle, killing two women. ' The women were Mrs. Luella Marlese Hill, 23 and Mrs, Lor-. jetta Hill, 25, both of Oshweken. Magistrate Norman Young re- 'PLEASED TO MEETCHA, resident gorilla at the Zoo for the past year, was mar- Honeymooners--Hercules, garbed in his travel sweater is shown hugging Sylvia ried last Monday. Hercules, de- by proxy to Hercules HONEY!" Holland finally greeted his bride today. Both are from the Congo oddly . enough, in Africa, but, had never upon his arrival at the Bal- timore Zoo, Sylvia, 2, the met. layed by bad weather in (AP) } Redistribution Debate May | Be Held Off For Cooling' By MICHAEL GILLAN | | OTTAWA (CP)--A Commons | the negotiators are working on/|obligation to change their orig-| debate on MP's protests over|a method to postpone the redis-|inal recommendations and their recommended changes in fed-| tribution debate. decisions are final. eralelectoral boundaries--| Informants say it is expected) failure to postpone the redis- scheduled by law to begin Mon-|--providing the parties agree |tribution debate would_embar- day--may be postponed for a/with their house leaders--that/rass the government because few weeks if inter-party nego-|the redistribution debate will be|there is a question of the pro- tiations work to the govern- delayed and the estimates de-|priety of government going ment's satisfaction, informants'bate will continue until the through more than 11 months say. |spending for ail government de- of a fiscal year without parlia-| Postponement of the debate|partments is approved. mentary approval for its spend-| would lift the government from} If the estimates debate is con- ing programs | the embarrassment of nearing|cluded on a Friday, the Com-) The government has been| the March 31 end of the fiscal/mons on the following Monday| sien money on account to the| year without having parliamen-| would open a tw-day supply de|onq of this month through in-| tary approval for its 1965-66 bate that provides opportunities terim supply bills Although it| spending estimates. A redistri-/to move non-confidence motions|js yncertain whether any Jaw bution debate could run 15 days /against the government. |prohibits a government running or 50. | Since Commons rules 5aY to the end of a fiscal year on Party house leaders met late|that a supply debate may start linterim supply, it hasn't been into Thursday evening and are/only on a Monday, a debate On| done before. -- : : | to meet again today after re-|whether to abolish capital pun-| 4 Ithough the opposition | porting back to their parties this |ishment would open if the esti- parties could blame the bottle-| morning. ; |mates were passed before a Fri-|neck onthe government's call- The Redistribution Act passe day. ing of an election last year, in- in 1964 gave MPs 30 days after) Three more objections against /tormants said the discussions the tabling Jan. 19, 1966, in the|the redistribution reports were|paye been amicable and with- Commons to file objections to|filed with the Speaker Thursday, | out the heat of 'pre-election ne- the recommendations of the 10|bringing the total to 18. More | gotiations. land education. set up elsewhere the same way for years. CLAIMS VOICE The front and Hanoi insist that South Viet Nam's affairs must |be settled "in accordance with the program" of the front, |which claims a decisive voice as ithe south's '"'only genuine repre-|are sentative." That program was written at the time the front was formed, probably in September, 1960. Its existence was announced in De- cember, 1960. The program promises practi- cally everything the ordinary people of such areas might yearn: for. The program calls for unity against the foreigner, in this case "the colonial regime of American imperialism." It pledges a liberal, democratic, regime. It promises an inde- pendent economy improved liv- ing standards, land reform and reduced jJand rent, distribution. of land to peasants who work it and displacement of all land- lords. The program promises culture It promises a national army -- but abolition of unpopular conscription. It would abolish all 'foreign mili-| tary bases" and offer clemency to lesser collaborators with the Americans such as 'simple sol- diers"' or lesser officers. A lawyer, Nguyen Huu Tho, 55, is chairman of the front's central committee presidium. HAS PIAIN ARMY Tho made it clear this week that the front is set up along lines of a government which is prepared to take over. It has, he reported, its own '"'main force it commissi in the|are expected today, the final| \day for filing protests. | Objections have been filed} against. the boundaries recom- provinces. A vaguely-worded section of | WEATHER FORECAST doubt over when debate on their/mended for ridings in all prov- objections was to start. Inform-|inces except Newfoundland. ants said the parties have been| After the MPs state their told the debate must start Mon-|cases in the Commons, the re- ports are sent back to the com- missions for reconsideration. the act had put the parties a day. Since this would cut into the! | 5:30 a.m.: | Synopsis: A disturbance will | move across the lower lakes to-} day. Snow associated with this Strikers, Says Tory MLA psrz. 'nce TORONTO (CP)--Harold P.! The plant has continued to op-| only-smallaccumulations peer sed --o of three Abiianehd erate. lexpected. Skies will clear this of a sitike-boand Peterborough Mr. Pammett met here Wed- |evening but another weak dis- plastics plant, refused to meet : 4 ' nesday with Thomas Eberlee,|turbance with light snow is with union representatives |forecast to move south of the Thursday, the. city's PA@gres-|Ontario's deputy labor minister, lak Shas sive Conservative member of|A. C. Dennis, chief of concitia-|" 9 tomorrow. : - - the legislature said. tion services, and Mr. Brown. : Northern Ontario will remain Keith Brown said "Mr, Pam-| The owner produced photo-|in the grip of the bitterly cold mett refused to meet with union |graphs at the meeting showing|#/T mass for several days. How- representatives and he would|what he said were pickets|ever, winds will decrease and not budge from this position. He|massed at one of the plant's, Skies will remain sunny. is simply not interested in talks | entrances. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, with the union." On Dec. 20 both union and| Windsor, London: Intermittent About 35 members of the Tex-|company agreed to a court in-|light snow ending this evening. tile Workers of America (CLC) |junction that set a limit of 12 on | Mainly clear and very cold to- and are Mostly Cloudy And Cold | Today: Clearing Tonight pepe an THERE Plant's Owner Won't Mee ED. ears ome night. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Windsor .. St. Thomas.. London Kitcherier Mount Forest..... Wingham .... Hamilton Hamilton St. Catharines. Toronto Peterborouh Kingston ...... Trenton ... Killaloe . Muskoka ., North Bay. Sudbury .. Earlton Sault Ste. Marie.. Saturday: ° 5 15 15 12 12 10 10 10 153 18 18 10 12 12 went on strike Dec. 14 against|the number of pickets. Just be-| night. Saturday sunny becoming Tilco Plastics Ltd. They are fore the strike started, the com-| secking hicher weges Setiang mgner wages ion security. Top hourly wages|verge of were $1.12 and the union is agreement. ilton, Toronto: Variable cloudi- seeking a 10-to-12-cent-an-hour; Mr. Pammett was not availa-| ness and a few snowflurries to- increase. 'ble for comment. |day. Mainly clear and cold to- night. Saturday sunny becoming signing their first) Niagara, Lake Ontario, Ham- Nace penta Ri | Paes acvas: 1 to 5 year G.1.C.'s 4% * Investment Funds | * Estate Planning * Executors & Trustees Open Friday Nights and All Day Saturday Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe Street North 23 King Street West a e Dominica Boss Lays Law 'i: Haliburton Killaloe Geor- [olan Bay, North Bay, Sudbury: ey 2 |Variable cloudiness today. To Extremists Left Ri ht | Clear and cold tonight and Sat- ' |urday. Winds northwest 15. Timagami, Cochrane, White SANTO DOMINGO (AP) --|crowd of demonstrators Feb. 9; River, Algoma,. Sault Ste. President Hector Garcia-Godoy| and touched off the wave of vio-;Marie: Mainly clear and cold warned Thursday night that he|lence. \today. and Saturday. Winds will deport extremists--both left a RE -- >: ----__--_---- and right--if necessary to end SEES terrorism in the sorely beset | Dominican Republic. | ' The. president, whose provi-| % sional government was pushed ? close to collapse by eight days of violence and general strike, said he also plans a thorough Savings accounts governmental shakeup to coun-; Paid and compounded ter his critics' charges of polit-| eases ical partiality. | b y He emphasized in an inter- view that he considers persua- sion an ineffective weapon against disorder and that mus- cle will be applied hereafter against all persons 'regardless of who they are." With the end of the general strike Thursday, terrorism be- gan subsiding in the battered Dominican capital. Two bombs exploded . Thursday, and one killed a child. It was the 21st death since police fired on a Good Names To Remem When 8B uying or REAL ESTAT Reg. Aker--President Bill McFeetersVice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd. . | 723-2265 ber Selling 723-3221 623-2527 Osthewe Bowmanville \cloudy in the afternoon. -- Kapuskasing ..... |Moosonee . \Timmins .. "South Viet Nam Democratic party," the National Minorities, the Buddhists, the Hao Hao and} LONDON (Reuters) -- Re - union wage demands will be Cao Hx hp ngeael ecg om | newed speculation that Prime} published next week, member of the central commit-| Minister Wilson is preparing for) Political observers said this tee, Joseph Maria Ho Hue Bang,/a general election in March) will have the twin éffect of dem- is described in propaganda as a/ swept Britain today. | onstrating to international econ- son of devout and patriotic) Pye view held in politicaljomists that the government is Catholics." Also represented) | oters is that ill. settle! d i d "liberation associations" of| quarters is hat he will set letermined to tackle the coun- On A U.K. Election Grace VanEvery, 40, of Hagers- ville was sentenced to 45 days in jail and had her driver's li- cence suspended for three years when she was found guilty in| |magistrate's court here Thurs-| day. of dangerous driving. A charge of criminal negli- gence was originally laid follow- duced the charge when the Crown was unable to establish that Mrs. VanEvery had wanton disregard for the lives of others. She pleaded not guilty. Cayuga is about 28 miles south of Hamilton. MOHAMMED IS FOLLOWED women, peasants, youth and others whose organizations are jlinked with Communist - con- \trolled federations abroad. | The front has--missions in| \Moscow, Peking and all Com-| |munist countries, and in a num-| ber of non - Communist nations. These missions would become the front's diplomatic corps. The front claims legitimacy on grounds that it was organized in South Viet Nam's Cochin China. Its propaganda does not say when or exactly where. But the evidence points to at least in- spiration from North Viet Nam. GREW SUSPICIOUS Authoritative witnesses insist that the Communist movement in South Viet Nam got its big- gest boost about 1957. Ngo Dinh Diem--heavily supported by the Americans -- had accomplished what some U.S. sources de- scribed as a miracle by stamp- for March 31. Conservative|try's basic economic problems) jn Leader Edward Heath Thurs-|--and aking advantage of a) day night warned his supporters | to be prepared for an election|ion" mood among voters, on that date. Political observers felt Wilson was likely to name the day as soon as he returns next Thurs- day from a brief visit to Mos- cow. Several British newspapers to- day saw another strong election in Thursday's announce- ;ment by Herbert Bowden, the | ruling Labor party leader in the House of Commons, government will stage a debate on social services next week. Bowden also said a bill aimed| 2in's current £2,100,000,000 ($6,-| | at enforcing advance warning of| 30,000,000) defence budget, will] clue 5 Million ing out dissident armed sects and pulling the country to- gether. The Diem regime grew} | Publicize '67| TORONTO (CP)--The federal g a rear-end collision Dec. 4 current "'get tough with the un-) d There are about 5,000 Arabs | when a car driven by Mrs. Van-\in Canada, mostly Moslems. Other new pointers that the Labor government soon will seek an election after struggling for 17 months with only a tiny| Parliamentary voting margin in the House of Commons, are: 1. Announcement today of de-| jtails of potential vote-winning |legislation by the government} aimed at easing conditions for) people who own houses but not the land they stand on, 2. The annual defence review, expected to reveal cuts to Brit-| HUM that the --._---| be published. Tuesday. | Political observers view the sudden decisions to include de-| 0 bates on social services and| leasehold reform in an already-| crowded parliamentary sched-) ule as moves to show the gov-| ernment in a favorable light. Dry air in your home? you need a Call 725-3581 ond tolk Kh ever with Londer's air-conditioning experts, Instal- lation's eosy, cost is surprisingly low, 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA 725-3581 seen IDIFIER Wee, suspicious of any opposition of /Sovernment will spend $5,000] whatever political color. |000 advertising Canada's 100th | Historian Philippe Devillers, a|birthday party at home and| i\French expert on Viet Nam, abroad, State Secretary Judy lwrote in 1962 that Diem's poli-/LaMarsh said Thursday. icies played directly into Com-| Miss LaMarsh said in a munist hands. Calm had been|speech to the Ontario Provincial | established in South Viet Nam,|Dailies Association that the ad- | but Diem began to stage wide-|yertising and promotional pro-| spread manhunts, arresting|/gram for the 1967 celebrations Democrats, Liberals, Socialists,| would get under way some time | adherents .of sects and suS-|this year. | pected Communists alike with) An aide to the minister ex- little discrimination, Devillers|plained later that the money wrote. would be used by Expo 67, gov- | The Communists began to Or-|ernment travel offices overseas |ganize the ernest in the villages. |and in the U.S., and the centen- {In 1959 the new phase of the war /nial commission. lin South Viet Nam began, and) Later in an interview, Miss in 1960 the NFLSV was formed.|/TaMarsh said the governments' centennial commission has se-| lected three advertising agen-| cies to implement the major |part of the program. She said the agencies--which jreceived their appointments Thursday--are Vickers and Ben- json Ltd., of Toronto; Canadian | | Advertising Co. Ltd. of Mont- jreal and MacLaren Advertis-| ling Co. Ltd. of Toronto. Miss LaMarsh said the cen- | answered two routine house |tennial advertising program | calls. |will involve about $4,000,000 in | domestic promotion to be:super- | The appointment of Thomas | vised by the centennial commis- i | | Henry McCarthy Jermyn, an)sion and $1,000,000 to be used Oshawa barrister, as a notary |0n advertising outside of the public, was announced this country supervised by the Cana- week by the lieutenant goy- |dian travel bureau, a branch of ernor the trade and commerce de- partment. Vickers and Benson will han- dle all English - language do- mestic advertising, Canadian Advertising Agency will pre-| pare French - language centen- | nial advertising and MacLaren | lwill work on snecial projects 2 |she said. i for the said dog. Stephen Fiess, of Oshawa, won third place in the class for piano soloists under nine years at the Kiwanis Music Festival this week in Toronto. the Chey of Gchaie oe da? | Oshawa Fire Department made only one minor fire call last night. City ambulance | dog. may be sold or destroyed. | ® The granting of letters pate | ent of incorporation to two Oshawa district companies was announced this week in the Ontario Gazette. They are: Canada Yearbook Serv- CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO ALL DOG OWNERS No person shall keep or maintain any dog in the City of Oshawa unless such dog has been licensed and registered under By-law No, 3418 of The Corpora- tion of the City of Oshawa, as amended, and, subject to the provisions of Section 4 (4) of the Dog Tax and The Cattle, Sheep and Poultry Protection Act, has on a collar to which is affixed a dog tag issued for the current year The 1966 dog licences are now available and may be purchased at the City Clerk's Office, 3rd floor, City Hall, and the Dog Control Department, Dean Avenue (east off Ritson Road South). 1966 LICENCES MUST BE PURCHASED BY FEBRUARY Ist. No dog shall run at large and no person shall permit « dog owned by him te run et large in time, A dog shall be deemed to be et large when it is off the property of the owner end is not under the control of a competent person either by means of @ leash not more then #0 feet in length or by virtue of being found not more than 10 feet from the person supervising the Every dog found running et large contrary to the provisions of the by-lews ef the Corporetion shell be taken up by the Dog Control Officer and impounded in the City Dog Pound and. held for @ period of not less than 48 hours end, if not i d d ot the of 48 hours, P The owner of an impounded dog shall. be entitled, on proof of ownership, to regain possession of the dog on application te the Dog Pound and payment of the following pound fees: first day or port of day each additional day or port of day--$2.00 All licensed dogs are recorded and indexed and every effort is made to notify the owners immediately after dogs are picked up by the Dog Control Deportment. L. R. BARRAND, City Clerk | Tampa castle. . One of Canada's 3 Great Whiskies NTRIE Which Commencing MONDAY, Ald. J. G. Brady, Chairmen, METERS in the City of Oshawa will be in operation between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Monday to Saturday inclusive. Motorists ere requested te meke note of these new hours of operction. When it comes to whisky, the Jones' can afford to please themselves. Yet they don't let price dictate their taste. They have taste of their own, Which is why it's not surprising that so many of the Jones' drink Bonded Stock. This is a smooth, mellow whisky Feb. 21st, ALL PARKING whisky. Treffie & Public Safety Committee, City of Oshaws, do the Jones' with a flavour you don't have to disguise. The sensible price is an extra you get for having good taste in the first place. One other thing; you don't have to be one of the Jones' to appreciate Bonded Stock. All you need is a taste for good Gooderham's have been distilling fine whisky since 1832. ink?

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