Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Nov 1961, p. 2

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

A a A A in 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, November 7, 1961 \ ¥ cd "\election 'will be based on a|POW "| Pearson's :lcampaign in Quebec province} an audience of 600. % \erates who want more sover- ' |eabinet Liberal Campaign Describes On National Unity tial As The Liberal leader, speaking] Conspiracy a new approach to fed- | eralism, said if his party gained| ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP) --| er in Ottawa the new gov-|Cross-examination continues to- y in the case of Jean-Marie} Beriault, former Union Na-) By JAMES NELSON QUEBEC (CP)--The Liberal) of for the mext federal general! ! broad appeal for national unity|ernment would make equaliza- and promises of legislative and|tion payments to the provinces|tiqnaie party organizer, who de-| fiscal decentralization. to bring their per capita in-|<cribes his trial as "an ignoble| "We are inseparable," Opposi-|comes up to the level of the | Holitical conspiracy." tion Leader Lester Pearson told| richest province--Ontario, The Crown alleges he planted His speech, aimed in part at)now brings provincial incomes); jnera) candidate's car. the Quebec move-|yp to the level of the two rich- ment and appealing to the méd-|est provinces. The new plan, in-\ The 45-year-old Montreal law-| itiated by the present govern-\)°'* NOW Suspended, is specilic- ment, to go into effect next|Slly charged with fabricating ev- March 3t, uses the national av-|dence against Ald. Edouard erage of provincial incomes as a base, with adjustments for na- separatist eignty for the province without severing ties with the rest of Canada, was the keynote ad- dress of the first nominating convention in Quebec. i tural resources. Maurice Lamontagne, 44, Mr.) wr, Pearson also said any gov- personal economic) é' jernment he heads would gradu- adviser and a member of the|ajjy drop out of Dominion-pro- secretariat of the for-|yincial joint projects, turning mer Liberal government, WaS| over to the provinces the respon- nominated in the riding of Que- hac ast, which oreviously sent sibility and the tax fields neces- ec East, whic viously s F ; fac Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Rt. Hon. Er- any. te Sens auch prec a local hotel at the time of the nest Lapointe and Rt. Hon.|GIVES RESPONSIBILITY bottle planting because, at the Louis St. Laurent to the House| This would give the provinces time, they knew only the time he of Commons. Mr. Lamontagne/greater legislative and fiscal re- had reached the hotel. narrowly lost the election in|sponsibility, and leave the fed- He also referred to the testi- 1958. jeral government to enter new/mony of Marcel Labarre, who Mr. Pearson, speaking mainly fields of joint endeavor. He did has admitted planting the bot-| in French, said Canada may/not spel! out which fields he tles in Fortier's car, and Pro- feel frustrated by an invasion of|thought the federal government|vincial Policeman Lucien Pin- day June, 22, 1960. jail after provincial police ar- rested him, has since been hon- orably acquitted of the liquor charge. Beriault said Monday he had waited two months to produce two witnesses to his presence at The equalization plan in effect|two bottles of illicit alcohol in al > Fortier on provincial election) ¢ Fortier, who spent the day in| " 'Reason Cited | For Senaratism MONTREAL (CP) -- Misun- jderstanding in the rest of Can- jada has strengthened the separ- jatist movement im Quebec, Un- ion Nationale Leader Daniel |Johnson said Monday Mr. Johnson, speaking to the Montreal Canadian Club, said it is the attitude of his party that |French Canadians must be \"masters of the institutions to which they are so deeply at- jtached and free to determine |their own de~"-'es within the framewo! ie eonstitution." He said "separatism is nour- jished by some incomprehension |On the part of the rest of Canada toward Quebec." It was also fed by the "'twist- ing of the British North Amer- B jica Act"--one of the worst of- WATERFOWL EXHIBIT | Dr. L. S. Russell, (right) Director of the National Mu- seum in Ottawa, gives Prime | , Minister Diefenbaker a close ; the museum Monday night to life-like stuffed officiate at the opening of a # prairie waterfowl exhibit. duck. Mr. Diefenbaker was at --(CP Wirephoto) | look at a NHA Rate Change Cross-Walks Part Of Drive OTTAWA (CP)--The interest rate on National Housing Act mortgages for new home-buyers was reduced Monday to 614 per cent from 6%. The change, the first in nearly two years, was labelled by Works Minister Walker as being a re- sult of the government drive to lower interest rates generally. Only new mortgages will carry the lower rate. It will mean a drop of 2.2 per cent in monthly payments -- for exam- ple, to $67 from $68.50 on a 25 year $10,000 NHA loan. Mortgages written before Monday will not be affected. NHA -mortgages on unsold houses still will bear interest at) 6% per cent. At Sept. 30 there were nearly 4,000 unsold houses in Canada, though some were} financed on other than NHA| terms | There will be' no change,) either, in the interest rate on NHA home improvement loans which are made by the chart- ered banks. These carry a max- tmum charge of six per cent. RATE DECLINES Coupled with the drop in the prime NHA rate for house mort- gages was a decline to 5% per cent from 5% in the rate for other NHA projects financed di- rectly by the government through Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation. This rate is applied to CMHC loans for municipal sewage treatment projects, university War Into 'New Skirmish Ottawa's share of federal-pro-; HAMILTON (CP) -- Another vincial rental housing and land-|skirmish may be developing in assembly projects has been low-/the Hamilton - Toronto cross- ered to 5% per cent from 514. |walks war. The declines flow from a re-| Ald, Fred Whitehouse, chair- cent drop in the interest rate on;man of a city council cross- long - term government bonds.| walks subcommittee, said Mon- That rate was at a peak of 514/day night he will call a meet- per cent in December, 1959, but/ing to discuss a new approach since has levelled off below five to Queen's Park. in the light of per cent and now stands at 4.86.\a recent rash of accidents at NHA charges are linked by Metropolitan Toronto's pedes- statute to the bond rate. The/trian crosswalks. NHA homeowner rate cannot be) City council last year backed more than 2!4-per-cent greater|a recommendation by traffic di- than the bond rate and the/rector W. E. Ewens that Ham- spread on NHA loans for suchiilton seek provincial approya projects as low-rental housing is'for a bylaw that would give limited to 44 per cent. pedestrians the right of way at ft all city intersections. ed po' righ : : Mr. Ewens says the Toronto Mr. Walker told a press Con-|.vstem of marked and lighted ference that the lowering of the crosswalks, at which all traf- NHA rate shows "the govern-|fic must stop for crossing pe- ment's confidence that from|destrians, is both costly and now on the rates of interest are dangerous. going to get lower." Council sent a delegation to He said that as soon as thefe|ask Provincial Secretary Yar- jis an opportunity--he did not/emko, then transpor} minister, |\say when that might be -- the|to withdraw the proyince's pro- NHA rate will be dropped fur-|visional support of 'the Metro ther, Toronto system. The NHA rate cutting follows} The question arose anew Mon- signs of weakening this fall in\day at a meeting of city coun- public demand for housing'cil's traffic committee, when loans Ald. Whitehouse supported a In the first nine months of|suggestion by committee chair- this year NHA loan approvals)man Ald. John Munro that a were up nearly 128 per cent to|new approach be made to the 49,585 compared with 21,757 in| province. |the same period last year. OS matte eR ce | However, in September alone, PRACTICAL TRAINING jabprovals fell 14 per cent to|) THETFORD MINES, Que. 4,435 as against 5,173 in Septem-|(CP)--An Indonesian graduate American culture, and Quebec faces "'double jeopardy" by a cultural invasion not only|to Sydney, N.S. to begin a three- rjault urged him to perjure him- added| should ease itself out of now The Liberal leader flies today from the United States but fromiday tour in Nova Scotia. the rest of Canada. CAN'T STAND APART "All French Canadians know, however, that even with politi- Mr. Pearson promised a dis- tinctive Canadian flag, adoption|Beriault ask at QPP headquar- of O Canada as a national an-.ters where he could get some them, encouragement of biling-|empty bottles. lcal independance they cannot|Ualism in the federal civil serv- stand isolated from the rest of|ice, , : > Mr. Pearson| tension of present radio and| points. North America,' said. "They will not sacrifice] their standard of living to an) absurd isolationism." bilingual cheques, and ex- television networks to give all Canadians access to both cul- tures. INTERPRETING THE NEWS U.S. Criticizes 'Indian Attitude By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer at a time when critical of India's position in the cold war. While most of this criticism centres on V. K. Krishna Me- non, India's controversial United Nations delegate who, in the American view, seems more often to berate the United States than Russia, some American of- ficials wonder whether Nehru's jown neutralism tends to favor] ithe Communists more than the est. Four months ago, Pakistani President Ayub Khan told the United States Congress that if it came to a military showdown, the only Asian country on which the U.S. could depend would be Pakistan. sions, moratorium though would only give Russia another hoped Nehru would strongly at-jians that members of their fam tack Russia for resuming nu-ljilies have been missing since Prime Minister Nehru of India|clear testing in the atmosphere|the riots of Oct. 17 or from Al- confers with President Kennedy but the Nehru criticism that did) gerians the Unitediemerge was 1 States has become increasingly Americans as relatively mild. 'at that time MORATORIUM URGED considered by As for ending nuclear explo- India feels both Russia and .the U.S. should resume the on tests even the U.S. argues this unfair advantage. Experience had shown Russia would break the moratorium whenever it suited her. Thus the meeting between Nehru and Kennedy is not likely to produce any overwhelming display of cohesion and _ har- mony in American-Indian views. What Kennedy's associates hope is that this first discussion be- tween the. two leaders would onneaull, Labarre has testified that Be-| Actress Kim Novak uses a | garden hose to wet-down the roof of her Bel-Air home to- | day as flames from a raging brush fire swept to within 100 yards of the mansion. She had removed some of self at the Fortier trial. Pinson- neault told the court he heard um" Hunters Ate Probe Into Deaths R aw Me at | Both men were later acquitted of perjury charges on these her furniture and belongings from the home earlier. The home was saved -- at least temporarily. Homes of many | other celebrities were burned to the ground. time for the rendezvous with a pickup plane two days later. They built a lean-to for shel-| ter and used the skin from the} jdeer they shot as a blanket. --AP Wirephoto) |fenders was the former Liberal |St. Laurent government--"and jcertain attitudes of the present premicr (Jean Lesage) and his |ministe Wig | The idea had spread that pub- ilic opinion in Quebec was grow- jing opposed to confederation. It was his conviction, howeyer, that co - operation and under- \standing on English -Canada's ipart would be reciprocated by |French-Canada. 'BACKACHE ay be Warning Backache is often caused by lazy kidney action, When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the system. Then backache, dis- turbed rest or that tired-out and heavy- headed feeling may soon follow. That's the time to take 's Ki Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then you feel better--sleep better--work better. Get Dodd's | Kidney Pills now. id | Of 60 Algerians : To Survive | PARIS (AP)--A Paris court |Monday opened inquiries into |the deaths of about 60 Algerians} nrypeNn (CP)--T ae | : | EI --Two missing vniase odie tave Peer agama hunters found, Monday, In the ikea wees daca O00 4 ape Ontario bush near ee ; Scant ere ate raw meat to survive, jcourt told police to determine re ' |the cause of death in each case. Heatiggae Rae ee ae An additional 21 complaints whe h ; |. Myron Myers, father of Elwyn ave been received from Alger ni vers, 26, of Pentwater, Mich., jsaid his son and his Indian jguide, Thomas Strong, 23, of 'McIntosh, Ont., shot and killed! a rabbit and a deer. He said in a telephone inter- On Oct. 17 Algerians demon-|View that the men' could not strated in Paris and suburbs to|light a fire to cook the meat. protest against a police curfew|Matches carried by Mr. Myers on them. Official reports said|had become wet and useless. that six persons were killed and| The elder Myers spoke to his morc than 14,000 were arrested,|S0n after he and Strong were a ---- --~|rescued following a week in the whe 'complained that they were mistreated by police 50 miles northwest of here. The missing men were found by an Indian search party Mon-| Second Blaze Hits Carrier ss,294 town to satety, they WASHINGTON (AP) -- The (al. The: younger Myers, an ex- new U.S. aircraft carrier Con-|maruic, is suffering from expos-| stellation was hit by its second ure Sharp branches tore fire Monday when flames/Strong's leg as they walked flashed through a imachinery|through the dense bush. room while the craft was at sea.| The elder Myers, who flew Three men were killed and into the area after his son was| Ayub Khan urged Kennedy to lead to greater personal trustitour were injured in the blaze. reported missing, said his son| restrain his economic aid to Nehru and to press the Indian leader to resume negotiations with Pakistan on a settlement of the disputed territory -- of Kashmir, housing projects, and housing|ber last year. The drop was due|in geology from McGill Uni-| TICKLISH JOB for clderly or low - income groups. Mr i j tongs bx x NN 1 15-83 | / ' a bh xb WEATHER FORECAST SiN, REGINA versity, Kendarsi. Notoamidjojo, jto fewer direct loans made by he returned to Indonesia after |'CMHC. NHA loans made by bestos mines here . $t MH § ad 55-0 5 Bis CHANGEABLE CONDITIONS Forecast Temperatures Possible Snow On Wednesday Low tonight, High Wedne 5 : 42 LONGON wecccsseses 32 40 | Kitchener .ssscesss 3 Wingham . Hamilton St. Catharines . Toronto .....+. Peterborough . 40 42 42 sees 40 ther ae issued by the wea-, Algoma, Timagami regions, Trenton ..... rT of 4:30 a.m Synopsis: c| . > Clo Ost places uty 'lce in Toronto at/North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. akies saved| Marie: Cloudy today and Wed- in Southern Ontario |Killaloe . |Muskoka .. |Norh Bay .. nesday; a few showers or wet|Sudbury .... ™ frost last night and held|snowflurries this afternoon and|Earlton ........ peratures nea Wednesday a : y Weather flow "from the Outhe Late \St. Chae r ntario. Lake Bitron, Niagara, Lak t a ' 3) e ario, Georgian Bay, Halitey gions: Cloudy today and Wed-| White River .. indsor, London,|nesday. Occasional periods of|S.S. Marie ... Wt el Cloudy thisisnow today possibly changing|Kapuskasing . 18 partly this\briefly to rain during the after-|North Bay ... "@ over again|noon. Snowflurries tonight and| Sudbury .. ton regiots, w: Hamilton, Boro morning, sin se" cloud: Wednesday with a or snowflurrie ne! showe change in temperature light increasing to southw thissafternoon shifting to west 20 to 30 Wednesday. Win the mid-30s. evening; _fresh blast of 18 expected to horthwest and snowflurries Wednes-| Kapuskasing . day. Winds south to southwest poe bolgad 20 to 30 shifting to northwest 30!5.'s Marie ........ 27 this evening Not much change Clair, Lake Qrie,|in temperature. White River, Cochrane re- Ts| Wednesday. A little milder to-| Windsor .. not muchiday put turning colder again /London ... ds|this eyening Winds south to|Toronto .. est 20)souttiwest 20 to 30 shifting this) Ottawa north-| afternoon al. r evening to north-| Montre west 20. 4 Quebec -- house detention Stepping into a referee role between India and Pakistan is Walker also announced|private lenders showed virtually| working all summer in the as-/a ticklish job in itself, but Ken- that the rate to be charged on no decline. nedy now finds himself--in re-| lationship to India -- facing a) gulf of differences that range from Red China to a nuclear test moratorium. | Kennedy's aides say the presi-| dent will raise the Kashmir is-| sue but is not hopeful of ob- jtaining Nehru's agreement to) jresume negotiations with Pak- istan, Kennedy may also seek to modify the Indian position that |Red China be admitted to the |UN, but again there is. little likelihood of a meeting of minds. Even on Berlin Kennedy's at- titude seems stronger than that of Nehru. And Kennedy had [Kenyatta Voices 'Leadership Hopes LONDON (AP) -- Jomo Ken- lyatta told reporters Monday that Kenya, the country he hopes to lead, has been ready for independence for a_ long time. The bearded Negro national- ist leader made the statement jafter stepping out of a plane on to British soil for the first time jin 16 years. | British officials had kept Ken- yatta in jail and then under in Kenya for nine years on the ground he organized the Mau Mau terror- list uprising. The last restric-| jtions against him were lifted) Aug. 21, : | Kenyatta, known to his Kenya followers as Burning Spear, {wants an immediate constitu- tional conference in London to \fix a date for complete inde- pendence for Kenya, an East 'African territory. and friendship. GIRLS WILL BE BOYS IN UK. LONDON (AP)--Two Brit- ish gir] athletes began experi- encing a sex change at the peak of their track and field careers, says a leading Brit- ish gynecologist. 'Thomas Jeffcoate, a profes- sor of gynecology and obstet- rics at Liverpool University, makes his disclosure in the current issue of the Proceed- ings sf the Royal Society of Medicine. The two athletes were not named, The article set off a discus- sion in British athletic circles. Crump, secretary of the itish Amateur Athletic Boara, suggested that an in- ternaiional medical panel make sure that girls are girls bcfore every meet. Jeffcoate's article followed controversy during the Olym- pic Games in Rome last year over the sex of one of Brit- ain's competitors, It was rum- ored at that time that one of the British girl athletes had male characteristics. Jcifeoate, who is also a sur- geon ai the Liverpool Matern- ity Hospital, said one of the sex-change girls was a sprin- ter of 16 who could run 100 yards in 1) seconds and her "sex interest was towards boys.' She was an outstand- ing woman athlete, Then she had an operation, lost inter- | est ir, her boy friend, and her time for: the 100 yards slumped to 12.8 seconds. Crum said he did not an- | ticipate the athletics board taking any action on the ar- ticle. "The board will not discuss | this," he said. "It is a med- | ical problem which should be raised by the medical side of athletics," day there have been no indica- Both navy men and civilians was on a moose-hunting trip] were among the dead and in- prior to entering dentistry jured. One civilian was reported sehaol, y missing. ee The younger Myers told res- The navy said the flames|cyers that they became lost broke out wher a fuel oil line|atter they were flown into Por- ruptured in a machinery room)ta] Lake Oct, 28. They had no and sprayed oil on hot steam) ompass and were unable to find j}bush in the Portal Lake area, | BUEHLER"S Save You Money Finest Meats at Lowest Prices! Specials! On Sale WED. ONLY (2 Ib.) Sliced Side Pork (5 Ib.) Pork Hocks See What 17. (2 Ib.) Shoulder Pork Chops (3 Ib.) Skinless Wieners (4 tb.) Bologna (By Piece) Any of the Above Only . 00 Will Buy! TENDER CLUB STEAKS RIB STEAKS Fender EAT'N TRUE-TRIM BEEF pipes. veaty 'i wr The Constellation, largest ves- their way back sad the lake in sel in the U.S. fleet, was com- missioned only i0 days ago The ship was delivered) months behind schedule because) of a fire that swept the 77,000- ton craft while it was under construction at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York. Fifty jworkmen were killed and 150 injured in the Dec. 19, 1960 fire which raged for 12 hours. At the time the Constellation was 85-per-cent complete. The blaze set construction behind and added an estimated $47,000,- 000 to the original $275,000,000 cost. No Crime Rings In West: Bingham EDMONTON (CP) -- RCMP Assistant - Commissioner Lloyd Bingham, officer commanding |K Division in Alberta, said Mon- AUTOMATIC DELIVERIES @ tions of organized crime in Western Canada. He was commenting on a re- port from Toronto in which RCMP Commissioner C. W. |Harvison said United States jcrime syndicates are moving PHONE 725-3581 CARE & COURTESY Legionnaires . Congratulations Welcome To Oshawa on . the sary . of The Royal Canadian Legion. e 43 KING ST. JDIAUIS YNOH- PT LdWOUd @ .35th . Anniver- WEST, OSHAWA jinto Canada. %. by popular demand MOR TO COMP E DISNEYKINS LETE YOUR SET OSHAWA AND DISTRICT REAL ESTATE BOARD Ist WALTER FRANKS McQUAY & KIDD, BOWMANVILLE a 2nd STEVE ZURBA JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD a. PHOTO CO-OP'S - 3 -- "STAR SALESMEN" FOR THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 3rd BOB JOHNSON HOWE & PETERS ey

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy