Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 May 1962, p. 2

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

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdoy, Moy 22, 1962 Freed French Troops | Spark Hopes For 200 PARIS (Reuters) -- Releasejian combatants who, under the by the Algerian National Liber--Evian agreements betwee ation Army last week of four| France and the Algerian nation French soldiers taken prisoner /alists, were to have been re- in the Algerian war has stirred, leased within 20 days of the hopes, admittedly forlorn, in)March. 19 cease-fire. nearly 200 French families. | Some 2,000 were freed from The men were released injinternment camps in Algeria Morocco, after unofficial re-|before an announcement by ports from Tunisia had quoted Premier Georges Pompidou on the Liberation Army command April 27 that rest would be held as saying they hold no morejuntil the Algerians account for prisoners, and the French goy-|French soldiers in their hands. ernment had stopped freeing FEW STILL PRISONERS Algerians captured in combat) It now is generally considered because the Algerian provi-a fact both by French officials sional government had. not pro-|and in Algerian circles in tunis vided a list of those they held. that few--possibly none at all-- France still holds 1,800 Alger-of the 193 French soldiers un- Leaders In AMA | accounted for are still prison- orso f war. Algerian officials have stated hat none remain in the hands of the large nationalist forces stationed in Tunisia but they cannot guarantee none are held) by armed bands in isolated) parts of Algeria. | Louis Joxe, Algerian Affairs! ; Minister, told the French Sen-| ate this month that the Alger- ians released 11 French pris- oners in 1958, 19 in 1959, three in 1961 and five since the cease- fire. This week's released bring; the number since the cease-fire) to nine. | The prisoners issue ts a del-| icate one but so far the French) government, while claiming) % that Algerians have not re-| ¥ spected the Evian agreements) on this question, has refused to treat the dispute as more than} a "small hitch'? in the peace! Assail Kennedy NEW YORK (AP)--Leaders|reception than he got at of the American Medical Asso-\same arena Saturday _ night ciation Monday denounced Pres-|when Democrats gave him a ident Kennedy's medical-care-|$1,000,000 "birthday salute.' for-the-aged plan as a "'cruel/They contributed that much hoax" aimed at establishing)money to the party coffers. The "welfare state medicine" for president will be 45 May 29. everyone Referring to a threat by a "England's nationalized medi- group of New Jersey doctors to cal program is the kind of thing refuse to treat patients under they have in mind-for us even-|the Kennedy plan if it is passed, tually.' an association official| Kennedy said: "I know: that not said in a paid, countr-wide|a single doctor, if the bill is television speech passed, is going to refuse to The plan would cover millions|treat any patient." who don't need it and ignore' However, the president said millions of others who do, saidjhe believed the doctors in New the medical group's spokesman,|Jersey '"'do not comprehend Dr. Edward R. Annis, of Miami, what I am trying to do." Fia., the main speaker. He ypges TO WRITE added : : Sacpived He urged that doctors through A. Our fees py cs i the country write to him, to ur practice of quailty meel-'Welfare Secretary Abraham Ri- cine is .Your health dl bicoff or to the bill's sponsors, The doctors reply to ig nes Representative Cecil R. King was filmed in Madison Square/ (nem Calif.) and Senator Clin- Garden, where the president ton Anderson (Dem. N.M) and addressed a Gog sd hth o get "a concise explanation" of more than 17, unday in alin, proposal. plea for support for his admin- Not all political experts are istration's proposals to provide'. _ P sf medical care for the aged through social security. SAYS WILL PASS President Kennedy said his session. program for medical care of the} Kennedy described what he aged under social security will| said was a typical case of illness pass Congress "this year, or, as|for an elderly couple, with their the tide comes in--next year.' 'savings wiped out, home lost, will become law. It has, been bottled up in the House ways and means committee since last gave Kennedy a more rousing for their aged parents. } the) as sure as Kennedy that the bill) - deal. CITES LETTERS In the Senate 10 days ago Sen- ator Bernard Lafay claimed that more than 200 French sol- diers had incontestably been captured alive by insurgent) | forces. He cited letters to rela- tives, the accounts of their mil- ~ itary comrades and information! 7 given by captured Moslems as ' evidence, and claimed to have evidence that the insurgents had massacred prisoners. On the part of the government there is a strong desire not to) : stress any issue which might perjudice other aspects of the Evian agreements, and on the| part of many Frenchmen there is the feeling that in the war, now seven years old, neither side can be sure it is blame ess. According to Algerian offi- cials many thousands of Alger- ians are also unaccounted for and the first instalment--con- taining several thousand names --of a list of those missing has been sent to the Algerian pro- visional executive. soldier carries weeping refugee boy after | youth, was caught in Hong Kong area Sunday. British authorities are forcing the return to Red China of ref- ugees who have tried to enter Hong Kong. Many Hong Kong | British PIONEER YARD The earliest Canadian ship- yard is believed to have been started on the St. Chalres River near Quebec in 1732. STURDY PLAYER On Victo A a | = \son advocated a balanced econ- D BACK Chinese residents are trying to obstruct the roundup of refugees and halt the forced repatriation of refugees to | Red China. --(AP Wirephoto via_ radio from Tokyo) Canada Relaxed 5 ria Day By THE CANADIAN PRESS jquarter Joaf of bread and half\that of other nations in the) : |Diefenbaker was at home in Ot By THE CANADIAN PRESS If differences between politi cal parties are becoming more difficult to find, it certainl wasn't the case Monday night. The main election campaigr pitches came from _ nationa) leaders of the left and right. without a point in common. T. C. Douglas of the New Democratic Party and Robert Thompson of Social Credit lair down opposing philosophies of government in pre-recorded TV appearances on the CBC na- tional network's free-time poli- tical series. Meanwhile, there was a_holi- day silence down the middle of the political road leading to the June 18 vote. Prime Minister tawa and Liberal Leader Pear- son flew to Toronto where he and Mr. Diefenbaker were due to resume action today. Federal handling of the econ- omy was the main theme of the TV speakers, who divided the prime 8-8:30 p.m. EDT period. WANTS IT PLANNED The socialist - minded Mr. Douglas called for a planned economy, planned by the gov- _\ernment "not for profits, but for people."" The NDP was inviting) voters to join its "crusade| against poverty, insecurity and| human wastage." The right-winging Mr. Thomp- Views Of Left, Right Given On TV Monday wresent crisis?"' he asked, an hen supplied his own answe: adership, as supplied by gov ammment through dem ocra! economic planning. Such planning was already a work in Sweden, Norway, Den mark, West Germany,: Israe and Great Britain. "Signifi- zantly, these are the countrie: whose economies are expand- ne. oe Paul Hellyer, Liberal candi- date in Toronto Trinity, set up camp in a mid-city park popu- lar with Italian immigrants and offered free pop, pizza, sand- wiches, pickles and cake. Then he read a five-minute speech in Italian to the 20 adults who gathered. At Cornwall, Associate De-| fence Minister Sevigny said the| Liberals have created a bad im-| pression abroad by their criti-| Nomination Day To 70 Candidates By THE CANADIAN PRESS , This is nomination day in 21 Newfoundland to the Yukon and) the names of more than 70) candidates will be entered offi- jcially in the June 18 Dominion Buyers Probe Canada Goods TORONTO (CP)--More than 100 buyers from New York, |Philadelphia and Chicago ar- rived in Toronto Monday night sms of the Canadian economy.'0 spend two days looking at They may have behaved as|Canadian manufactured »rod- ood politicians, they certainly ¥Cts. lid not behave as good Cana-| They are interested in items 'ians." |that can be sold in American Liberal Allan J. MacEachen|department and chain stores or id a Judique, N.S., audience|through mail order business. hat recent pegging of the Cana-| Trade Minister Hees greeted lian dollar at 92! cents inthe Chicago group, who arrived American funds wiped out the first, and H. Leslie Brown, as: 'ederal subsidy on U.S. corn for|/Sistant deputy minister, wel- Maritimes livestock. The/Comed the buyers from New cheaper dollar put U.S.-priced| York and Philadelphia. corn back at its original level, Today and Wednesday they even with the subsidy. |will see a long list of products, Northern Affairs Minister/S¢t UP in 118 booths at a special Dinsdale said in a CBC radio|Show in the Queen Elizabeth network speech that payment of Building at the Canadian Na- increased grants to the proy-/0nal Exhibition grounds, They ay efits of rosea years'! 'Teradioy Crmalibe | | Father With Son these grants had not been stepped up the treasury would have shown a surplus. ALVINSTON, Ont. (CP) -- A ee -- ~----"|Chatham_ man and his nine. year - old son were fatally crushed Monday when their tractor swerved into a ditch on a Lambton County sideroad. Dead are George Meinzinger, 48, and his son Fred. A second son, Frank, 11, was thrown clear. Party has 15 candidates, Social) Mr. Meinzinger was riding the Credit 12 and Communists two.|tractor, the boys 2? 've: 1 | | .|scattered constituencies from| Prospective candidates have|loaded with a cultivator. The until 2 p.m. local standard time|tractor rolled on the to file their forms and pay their when it crashed. The cultivator $200 deposits. \came loose and pinned 1 Members of the last House\against the front of the wagon. 4| 'has not been keeping pace with) omy--"not a planned economy) which means controlled people"| |--and an end to deficit financ-| ing and tax-supported welfare steps. lereeping into the Conservative) land Liberal parties, with the re-| lsult that 'we are backing into socialism as fast as the social-| lists themselves would walk into} it?' Mr. Thompson said Canadians) must reject the "'something for) nothing' myth of federal hand-| outs which was eating at the) lfoundations of free - enterprise democracy. | Social Credit had become the champion of small-c conserva-| tism and small-] liberalism. It} stood for pay-as-you-go govern-| ment and "'the basic principles) of free enterprise." Mr. Douglas said the economy} | no) He said a socialist trend iS} oy election contest. are seeking re-election in 19 of a These nominations are in rid-|the ridings. Perrault Larue, PC} ings where a full month is|member for Saguenay, is not) needed to deliver election sup-| Standing again, while in the Yu-, plies because of distances to be|kon Mrs. Isabel Hardie is bid-| covered and isolation of polls./ding for the seat held by her P is nomination day in|late husband, Liberal Mervyn Canada's 242 remaining consti-| Hardie. tuencies, two of which elect two| Eleven of the constituencies members apiece to the 265-seat| were represented by PCs in the Parliament. last Parliament, eight by Lib- A Canadian Press compliation;erals--five of them from New- indicates at least 71 candidates|foundland--and two by Co-oper- from five parties will seek seats|ative Commonwealth Federa- in the ridings nominating today.|tion members. The CCF seats Progressive Conservatives and|were held by Douglas Fisher in Liberals have a full entry of 21|Port Arthur and Frank Howard apeice; The New Democratic|in Skeena, both of whom seek So meer --|re-election as NDP members. Prime Minister Diefenbaker N 4¢7M [is a candidate in Prince Albert, ew Federation's: sts 2 Prince Aten, jings, and will be opposed by) Pl anned For |Liberal, NDP and Social Credit! Caribbean opponents. J. W. Pickersgill, |former Liberal cabinet minister, |has a PC opponent in Bonavista- Twillingate. BLACK'S YOU'LL FIND BOYS' WEAR GALORE ! AT A British firm in 1962 intro- The crowd at a rally held to'and their children financially|duced a battery - operated rec-'and fireworks for some Cana- support the Medicare proposal|crippled by paying medical billsjord player capable of playing)dians, relaxation in backyards at a 25-degree angle. ~ | wei Victoria Day meant parades|a pound of cheese on her birth- ay. The tradition has been car- or beaches for others and fine- ried on, although many other Pod praia genet for er meanings have been added to ousands of visitors toured oe Ba Ottawa in mild weather to ad she psa holiday. mire tulip blooms, Victoria staged a big parade as the namesake city of the 19th-cen- INTERPRETING THE NEWS western world and there is excuse for the slowdown. Can-| _LONDON (Reuters) -- Crea- ada had the manpower, the|tion of a new eight-island fed- skills, the raw materials and/eration in the eastern Caribbean lthe plant capacity for solid)has been agreed in principle be- |progress. jtween the British government | "What is it we lack in the|and the island governments at "APSE aS = --|a constitutional conference here delegates reported Monday. If. no hitches occur a "'little} tury queen, while St. John's, Nfid., chose to await the tra- ditional date for Victoria Day, May 24. Scattered showers swept the Prairies and Atlantic provinces, but the sun shone almost ev- erywhere for at least part of the day. Temperatures in Cen- tral Canada and on the Pacific, Canadian Press Staff Writer Coast ranged around 70 de-| The alarm and despondency grees, with the Prairies and aroused by French President Maritimes a bit cooler. de Gaulle's latest vision of Eu- In Victoria, an estimatedjfope may appear in retrospect 100,000 nersons made a.record to have been somewhat over-) By ALAN HARVEY | . Adenauer Fall Seen Possible eight" Federation will arise from the wreckage of the origi-| nal West Indies federation by! the end of the year. The West Indies federation of| 10 islands collapsed when its| two main supports -- Jamaica) and Trinidad--decided to pull out and seek separate independ- jence. Its formal dissolution is expected to be announced at the end of this month. | In its place will be established! an eight-island federation com- posed of Barbados and the| smaller Leeward and Windward | The theme of flexibility re- jcurs in much recent writing about West Germany. Aden- auer's single-track policies, it is widely felt, died with John Fos- ter Dulles, the former United States state secretary with | LIBERALS LEAD The candidates to be nomi- nated formally today are among 918 men and women who have indicated so far they will stand for election next month. There were 836 candidates in 1958. SPORT SHIRTS An excellent selection of short and long-sleeve sport shirts for boys from 6 to 18. All the newest stripes, checks and plain shades, Styled just like Dad's! Pop-over, button- down and tapered bodies. FROM 1.00 to 3.95 "'The House Of Style For Men & Boys" BLACK'S MEN'S WEAR LTD, 74 SIMCOE NORTH 723-3611 Liberals lead the entry with| 264 candidates and will com-| plete their slate tonight when a} convention at Bridgewater, | N.S., makes the party's choice for Queen's - Lunenburg Pro- gressive Conservatives have three seats to fill in Quebec to complete their list Social Credit follows with 191) candidates named, six more) than the NDP. Communists| have entered 14 and there are! two Independents. The record of 954 candidates, set in 1945 when 245 seats were at stake, should) almost certainly be passed. turn-out for the island city's an-| done. |whom the Chancellor got along) island group of seven islands. | We MAINLY WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, Warmer For Wednesday Forecasts issued by the Tor-;Southwestern regions there will onto weather office at 5 a.m.: (be partly cloudy skies and the Synopsis: A weather system |chance of a shower or two. approaching the Great Lakes' Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, region will spread cloud and)Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- showers to northern and central tario, Haliburton regions, Wind- Ontario Wednesday. In the sor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: | £ Observed Temperatures Low oVernight, High Monday Dawson pan ae |Victoria .... 49 | Edmonton 40 |Regina . 49 Winnipeg ... 51 Fort William. 38 White River... 'Kapuskasing .. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight High Wednesd: Windsor .... 55 St. Thomas....... London ... Kitchener .... Wingham .... Mount Forest...... Hamilton .... St. Catharines.. Toronto Peterborough Trenton . Killaloe .. Muskoka .... North Bay.. Sudbury ... Earlton .... Kapuskasing ...... White River.. Moosonee .... ay |S. S. Marie.... |Sudbury ....«.. see |Muskoka ... |Windsor .. |London . Toronto ... \Ottawa ... |Montreal .....++. . }QUEDEC cosesseees ' SUNYY WEATHER SEEN nual parade. Sailors from the \visiting Royal Navy cruiser " |\Belfast joined the parade, '|which took two hours to pass. Many Vancourverites went south to the Seattle World's Fair, where the dav was desig nated Vancouver Day. In Winnipeg, police took steps to enforce a ban on fire- : ckers i sity's China- Mainly sunny today Partly|crackers vaisietuout eet cloudy Wednesday with the out of hand two years ago and jchance of a shower, a littleliwg policemen suffered minor |warmer Wednesday. Winds injuries leasterly 15 today, southerly 15] i |DUKE ATTENDS Wednesday, In London, Ont., the Duke of Georgian Bay: Sunny today. Increasing cloudiness Wednes-|fdinburzh flew from Montreal jday with scattered showers in/tg attend the trooping-the-color the afternoon or evening, noticeremony of the Royal Cana- much change in temperature.idian Regiment, of which he is |Winds light today, easterly 15) colonel-in-chief, Wednesday. IR spare ; : in esort centres in Southern Algoma, Timagami, Cochrane | ontario reported crowds "like regions, North Bay, Sudbury:/, July weekend." The crowd on Sault Ste. Marie; Sunny today,|the peach at Grand Bend. a \cloudy with showers Wednes-|; a.. eed day, not much change in tem-| perature. Winds light today, easterly 1 to 20 Wednesday. White River region: Increas-\3etve near Brantford, ing cloudiness today. Cloudy pounds of cheese and 800 loaves pelea gy bo _ ie bread were distributed as nesday, not much change in... ag att temperature. Light winds, in- alge ' oe ce creasing to easterly 15 to 20 this 'Ne early years of Queen Vic- toria's reign, which started in afternoon. eeomnane 1837. Victoria ordered then that} jmated at 20,000. FAR NORTH The first housewives' society|tions band should receive a In suggesting a continental) third force based on Franco- West German solidarity, in which there would apparently be no place for Britain, de Gaulle may have firm assur- ances of support from West German Chancellor Adenauer. The question is whether Aden- auer's word now carries the weight it once did. His retire- ment is widely expected before the end of next year and al- ready there are signs that the old authority is slipping. New currents are at work in West Germany, new political patterns are taking shape; the struggle for the succession is already Fortified by his long holidays in Italy each spring, the 86- year - old chancellor seems physically and spiritually as in- destructible as ever, but the jpolitical climate has _ subtly changed. Willie Frishchauer, writing in uron resort, was esti-/the Evening Standard, a :Lon-|optimistic in the extreme. don Newspaper, speaks of a At the Six Nations Indian re |"violent and confusing clash of happened and in less than one 900|Personalities, ideas and ambi-|decade, thanks in large part to jtions" in Adenauer's federal republic. A British weekly, the New \Statesman, sees politicians seeking a more "'flexible mind" te. succeed Adenauer. The ar- ticle by Heinrich Fraenkel says the "stubborn old man (Aden-|that these leaders have built a|was feathered and the plane cir- each member of the Six Na-jauer) no longer fits into the|"decent, law-abiding, prosper-|cled to reduce fuel before land- 'shape of things to come." well. Many observers feel the time has come for West Germany to renounce the lost eastern ter- ritories, now harmoniousliy ab- sorbed into Poland. Comments another British weekly, the Ec-| onomist: "Many of the younger genera- tion of Germans would be be- lieved if the foreign minister stated. unequivocally that the existing eastern frontiers must be considered permanent." REPUBLIC PRAISED As these new attitudes grad- ually emerge, «a striking tribute to the federal republic comes from Constantine Fitzgibbon, an expert on Germany affairs. ' Fitzgibbon recalls that in 1945 Germany lay in spiritual and) | physical ruins. | "To think that Germany could} jbecome a decent, democratic {country in less than one gen- jeration was then regarded as | | | "Yet that is precisely what \the hard work and clear thought /of the men who have remained jthe intellectual and _ political NOTICE TO ALL EX.SERVICE MEN, Clay Sees Lower WOMEN AND DEPENDENTS! Berlin Pressure WASHINGTON (AP) -- Gen. Lucius Clay says Russian pres- sure on West Berlin should re- main low for at least another year while Communist forces atetmpt to build up the economy of East Germany. He says any new incidents will be aimed at the West Germans, not the other Western powers. Clay, retired army general and President Kennedy's per-) sonal representative in West Berlin for the last eight months, gave his views Sunday in a tele- vision interview. invited to take W. R. Assistant Secretary, Se Plane Down Safe After Troubles TORONTO (CP).-- A Trans- Canada Air Lines Vanguard air- liner with 82 persons aboard landed safely at Malton airport Sunday after circling the field for more than two hours. to give skilled advice on one with questions on wa leaders of Germany.' | All people who know contem- porary West Germany, Fitzgib- |bon says, generally recognize | lous society." 'in Greenland was formed by |Mrs. Kathrine Chemnitz at God- thaab in 1948. | HUGE FERNS f | Costa Rica specimens of tree jferns reach a height of more |than 25 feet, with: individual lleaves more than 10 feet long. | 8-Hour 230 KING STREET WEST ~PONTIAC Laurentian Sedan Automatic, custom radio. CLIFF MILLS MOTO Special 1957 A brond new, modern Oil Fu | i iI 1 | | to have it installed. A small terms spread over the next details, Spotless Let us $995 RS LTD. 725-6651 quote you PHONE 725-3581 Modernize and Improve your Home Now... with a new oil furnace rnace is @ real asset. to your home. It protects its value and assures you of better, more economical heating. Now is the time deposit and convenient 5 Coll us for years Choose from many well-known name furnaces. You name it -- we'll insto® it @t your tone venience, 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA ment or Hospital care is Flight 784, bound for Nassau MR. B. JACKLIN, Busi in the Bahamas ,took off at 9:15 a.m, EDT but encountered dif- ficulty in an oil line. One engine Oshawa, who will arrange All ex-service personnel and their dependents ore FREE LEGION SERVICE LEGION HALL, BRANCH NO. 43 Wednesday, May 23rd -- FROM 2:00 TO 5:00 P.M. Also from 7:00 p.m. to completion of business... Veteran's Allowance (Burn-Out Pension) ... Treat- Canadian Legion, Branch 43, 90 Centre Street, advantage of a BUCK rvice Bureau, Toronto, Veteran's Benefits. Any- r disability pension, War urged to call or write to ness Manager of Royal an appointment. WOOLWORTHS Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN ! ! WOOLWORTH'S FAMOUS SUMME GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE "BETTER VALUE" 7? SQUARE y | OPEN FACE SPECIAL THIS 5 € SPECIAL WEEK! each FRESH STRAWBERRY & BANANA PIE WHIPPED TOPPING THIS WEEK! R TIME TREAT! 33: SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK !! PHONE BAKERY ORDERS -- 725-3421

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy