2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, July 7, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN | Cities Not Ruled Out As Targets By PETER DUNN Market Sessions ' Dull This Week © trend, slipping to a 1962 low of Then McNamara added: WASHINGTON (AP) -- De-! "I emphasize the words 'per- fence Secretary McNamara has Canadian Press Staff Writer ($39.12 before recovering to FATE OF CNR TRACKS MAY BE KNOWN SOON The fate of Oshawa's cumbersome, 68-year-old King street railway tracks -- a subject of bitter municipal con- troversy since the early 1930's -- was still undecided to- night, but this much was certain: An amicable solution to the knotty problem was never so near at hand, regardless of what may happen in the next few hours to upset the applecart. The question of whether the tracks will be moved has not been settled but the situation has changed dras- tically for the better, thanks to an unprecedented Thurs- day night meeting at City Hall between two of the parties concerned City: Council and the three user- firms. The Thursday night meet- ing was unprecedented .be- cause both parties concern- ed left their shooting irons at home and approached the negotiation table in a spirit of reasonable com- promise -- the results ob- tained were most encour- aging for those who want let it be known the event of a nuclear war. Informed sources said today) this was the import of words McNamara used Thursday in answering questions about his strategy that aims at confining any nuclear weapons to military targets, as much as possible. In a speech three weeks ago) at Ann Arbor, Mich., McNa- mara said the United States has concluded that as far as is fea- sible, principal military objec- tives in event of nuclear war United | States has not locked itself into! a commitment to spare Russian} |cities from destruction in the |United States is not ruling out)" lies--if such an attack is to the "should be destruction of the eremy's military forces, not of his civilian population." a possible opponent the strong-| est imaginable incentive to re-| frain from striking our own cit- ies." STRESSES FLEXIBILITY * At a press conference Friday, McNamara stressed the flexibil- ity of U.S. nuclear strategy and said: "We have a force so large that we can be certain that it He said then "we are giving} mit us' however, rathern than stating that it would be neces- sarily planned. to be used in that fashion." This sentence raised ques- tions as to whether McNamara was broadening the terms of his spare-the-cities-strategy. Sources familiar with McNa-)) -- mara's thinking said the de-|~ fence secretary was saying the)" a possible strike at Russian cit- advantage of the United States --even if the Russians avoid hit- ting U.S. cities in a surprise nu- clear assault. | The sources suggested the} United States is leaving itself)" free to strike at Soviet cities if, for example, the Russians should start their massive ground forces in motion to over- run Europe, On other major. points, Mc. Namara said: 1. The effectiveness of the Communist guerillas in South) / Viet Nam has declined, but cau-| tioned it will be years before that war is won. 2. He has no evidence that); 10,000 North Vietnamese troops, The stock market this week crawled through four totally volumes dwindled to near their lowest of the year. In Toronto all sections milled about in rather aimless fashion, finishing close to where they began. Not once did daily trading totals top 1,500,000 shares. On the week, ind ust ria Is dipped almost two points. Golds showed the best index advance. more than two points, while western oils inched ahead a tionally. Banks, after last strong performance, hit rough going again. All five listed issues--Montreal, Nova Scotia. Toronto - Dominion, Royal and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce--dropped in a $2.00 to $3.25 range. Utilities were also weak. Con- sumers' Gas and Power Corpo- ration paced the decline, each falling $1.00. Fractional losses went to Bell Telephone, CPR, Union Gas and B.C. Power. Steels were mixed to higher on average, although several| uninspiring sessions, as daily) point. Base metals eased frac- week's| | $39.75, down almost $1.00. | Base metals and western oils were featureless as trading in these sections slackened con- Dome, MclIntyre - Porcupine, Campbell Red Lake and Giant Yellowknife all gained slightly. Total volume at Toronto was. 5,364,000 shares compared with 10,370,638 last week, Dollar value was $20,794,401 compared with $44,220,993. On index at Toronto, indus- trials fell 1.94 to 531.33 and base metals .18 at 18410. Golds: gained 2.08 to 98.30 and western' oils 1,02 at 95,56. trials, 416,797 shares compared with 841,676 last week; mines, gta compared with 1,902,- On index at Montreal: Banks rose 0.25 to 58.82, papers 0.3 at 471.0 and golds 2.49 at 76.58; industrials slipped 4.6 to 293.8 jand combined 3.0 at 239,2;: jutilities remained unchanged at | 130.0. | US. Renwide Volume at Montreal: Indus-° VEEN AT WIMBLEDON Travel Curbs : day. Laver beat his fellow | 6-2, 6-2, 6-1. can absorb a full first strike by jany potential enemy and sur- | vive with sufficient power to de- Q » Queen Elizabeth presents key issues in the group took} setbacks. Algoma Steel as) hardest hit, declining slightly who. backed pro-Communist re- fo see the tracks removed. bels in Laos, have moved or One spokesman described GILBERT MURDOCH the meeting as "the most friendly, constructive talks age-old subject." The press was not present, but it was learned that Council met for more than one hour following its pow-wow with the three user firms to study the question further, City Solicitor E. J. McNeely was present -- the firms were repre- sented by Gilbert Murdoch, Russell Humphreys and Joseph Mangan. As an indication of City Council's desire to expedite the matter, it will hold a special meeting Monday night to con- sider the problem further, but the firms won't be repre- sented, No statement ment proposals ever held officially on this was issued regarding the firms' settle- COUNCIL BACKS NEW ARENA PLAN | City Council took a big step forward Tuesday ina pro- posed plan that could place it in the arena and community centre business before too many months have passed. Council gave its blessing unanimously to the proposed $1,000,000 fund-raising campaign being organized by the Osh- awa Memorial Centre executive committee. Council feels reasonably sure that there can be no legal involvement in the deal, at least until the proposed centre is built and handed over debt-free to the City -- this would be especially so, said Mayor Thomas, if the fund-drive failed to meet its objective. | The committee has assured the City that no building contracts will be let unless it has sufficient money to finish the job -- Alderman John Brady noted that the committee will be incorporated and that the City "definitely" will not be financially involved in any construction project. The financial involvement would come if and when the centre was completed (when the taxpayers of the City of Oshawa would be responsible for any annual deficit.) PLAZA PLAN GETS GREEN LIGHT i The City will re-zone 10.5 acres of valley land between King and John streets (adjacent to Oshawa creek) to start the ball rolling on a plan that may lead to a. midtown plaza containing a Dominion Stores supermarket, a department store, 11 smaller retail stores and a new brewer's retail store. The decision was made Tuesday but only after a spirited 9 to 4 vote in which some strong opposition was voiced to the. plan, which is to cost the taxpayers an estimated $127,500. Lawyer . Russell representing the United », Principal Properties Ltd., ; owners of the 2l-acre Osh- ' awa Shopping Centre, op- posed the re-zoning pro- posal because his clients felt that there are already adequate commercial outlet areas here. ('It would spread out the business too thin"), Alderman Norman Down said Council had no right to take the public's money "to gamble' while Alder- man E. F, Bastedo opposed the re-zoning on a number of grounds. He said the plan. represented a traffic men- ace. He said the John street extension was slated for 1969 in the traffic report but that the City now wanted it in 1963, What was to get priority, he asked, and what was the City going to drop from capital works? ("Where is the money for all of this coming from"; he added). Said Alderman John Brady: "I'm not afraid of a $125,000 debenture -- no particular shopping centre should have a monopoly", but Alderman John Dyer asked if the citizens would shoulder a debenture debt "to accommodate private enterprise'. ' Mr. Dyer explained after Council why he voted for re- zoning in planning board and opposed it in Council Tuesday. "I don't object to this re-zoning until it is going to cost the taxpayers big money in the form of new debentures, which they can ill afford to carry," he said. 'Our citizens should not be assessed with such debentures merely for the con- venience of new jndustry. Furthermore, I am firmly con- vinced that most of our aldermen have placed too optimistic a picture on this transaction, financially speaking, and that it will cost the city far more than the $125,000 debenture promised." Murphy, JOHN DYER OSHAWA WOMAN iS LENINGRAD VISITOR Mrs. Walter Branch, the wife of the alderman, was a recent visitor in Leningrad, Russia, She found the hospitality "superb", and the accommodation excellent, She is due home next week from her European tour. . . . Oshawa and District Community Recreation Association had a total rev- enue in 1961 of $66,761 (the City Auditor's Report says) -- this was made of a grant from the Community Chest of $18,- 000; a second grant from the City of $45,000; membership fees $244 and sundry items, $3,517. REGIMENTAL BAND HAS BUSY SEASON The Band of the Ontario Regiment is to be congratulated for promoting City musical groups at their concerts in the McLaughlin Bandshell. Their guests next Thursday, July 12, will be the Sea Cadet Corps (with a trumpet band under Sub-Lt. William Askew;) the Sea Rangers; and the Sons of Ulster Flute Band (with 28 performers under Jack Shearer), ..Oshawa's Shirley Harmer got off to a good start re- cently -in her weekly television musical show . (CBC-TV- Changel 6 at 9 p.m. each Friday). It is cailed 'A Summer Nigh? With Shirley Harmer", and will,run &jl summer. stroy the military capabilities of |W!!! move into South Viet Nam. that enemy. "This permits us, should we choose to do so, to apply... a strategy that would direct the surviving force . . . against the military targets of that po- tential enemy." winner's cup to Rod Laver of Australia at Wimbledon Fri- Special Probe see Dcoctors ? : Of Enumerator 233 Jamaicans Qualify For Immigration OTTAWA (CP) -- A total of 233 trained Jamaicans have qualified for admission to Can- ada as immigrants under the federal government's new im- TORONTO (CP. -- The re- oon turning Officer for Trinity rid- By RON LEBEL ing testified Friday he was sur-- OTTAWA (CP) -- A court ac- prised to learn an enumeratorjtion against S ask atchewan's he hired for the recent federal) controversial medical care leg- election had served a jail sen-jislation points up a definite tence. trend in Canada's constitutional Be development--a shift from fed- H. L, McKinstry told the spe-|oray cabinets to the courts in| cial enquiry into alleged enum-|exercising power to disallow eration irregularities in the Tor-| provincial laws. onto riding he fired George Ew- : The powers differ. The Brit- migration regulations, it wasing, whom he had known for|ish North America Act | gives learned Friday. several years, after a newspa-| {ie cre wide powers . ae. Immigration department offi- iid Swinote prim. |cuoW any new provincial sta-| cials said they expect that the|P&T account of Ewing's crim-'tute within one year of receipt| Jamaicans will start arriving in of a certified copy. The Su- Canada from Kingston within kwing was arrested following,Preme Court of Canada and) the next few weeks, jand lower courts may overrule} Movement of the Jamaicans| ade invemennyn int Toronto) g provincial law. only if they| to Canada represents the first|5t- Paul's riding and indicated) tind it to be outside provincial concrete reflection of new im-|on 12 charges of perjury, utter-| jurisdiction. migration regulations whichling and breaches of the Can-| The Saskatchewan action was went into effect Feb. 1. Under ada Elections Act | shed Tuesd in Ge Of the regulations, persons from 4 : : aunc ie uesday in ourt 0} any part of the world with suit-| Although Ewing lived outside | Queen s Bench at Saskatoon by able educations and skills re-jthe riding he was an enumer-|two doctors--W. J. Cranley of quired in Canada now may ap-| ator in-two Trinity subdivisions|Prince Albert and M. H. Mac- ply to enter as immigrants re- Sah ; ;: oes gardless of race, color or creed, | Mr. McKinstry said. He said donald of Saskatoon. Prior to the enactment of the| he had not asked the chief elec-- They asked the court to de- new regulations, persons from|tion officer if one person could) clare the province's Medical | Care Insurance Act, effective inal record was published. The West Indies and other non-|enymerate two subdivisions. Inegularities Canada Court Trend countryman, Martin Mulligan, | (AP Wirephoto via cable from in all-England tennis final, | London) ' Move Shows more than $1.00, _ Dominion Foundries and Steel announced in mid-week that |operating profits for the first |half of 1962 climbed to a record. It moved vp on the news to sell |as high as $52.50, but by week's end most of the rise had been |clipped. The stock closed at |$50.75 for a gain of less than $1.00. Since 1938, federal govern-| In the last 10 years the Su-, Refining oils and pipelines ment practice has been to let,preme Court has wiped out at|84ve the best performance as a disputed provincial statutes|least four provincial statutes on|S'OUP- Gains, however, were stand and leave it to individuals|the grounds they infringed on|limited mostly to fractions. Im- Income Tax Cut Clamor Grows Loud By JACK LEFLER NEW YORK (AP) -- Clamor 1955--The Montreal holy - day;over the question of an imme- na- closing bylaw and the Quebec! diate income tax cut to aid U.S. statute under which it was| business grew louder this week. A constitutional complication|Passed. The bylaw ordered! President Kennedy told his arose last year in Saskat-|stores to close on six Romanipress conference Thursday tha chewan, Lieutenant - Governor | Catholic holy' days and was|his administration is seriously Frank Bastedo refused to give|found to be an infringement on/ considering requests by the U.S. royal assent to a bill that would/¢riminal law. |Chamber of Commerce and the have reopened some 2,000 min-) 1955--The Saskatchewan Mor-| AFL-CIO for a- reduction now. eral contracts for negotiation. |atorium Act, which empowered| But for the time being Ken- The federal cabinet repudi-|the province to postone for two|nedy stood pat on his previously- ated Mr. Bastedo's action alyears payment of debts by any|announced intention of asking month later and gave the bill|person. It was ruled invalid on|Congress to reduce taxes, effec- royal assent through an order-|the grounds it dealt with bank-|tive next January. Several. other acts were up-| Technically, the cabinet has|held. The four quashed were: | until Dec. 6, 1962, to act on its; 1960 -- Th Alberta Orderly| powers to disallow the Saskat- Payment of Debts Act, which chewan legislation. Informants|dealt with bankruptcy and in- here consider such action un- solvency. likely. 1957 -- The Quebec Padlock Copy of the act was received) Law, which was aimed at stop- by the secretary of state's de-|ping the dissemination of Com-| partment last Dec, 7. It was|munist propaganda. It was sent to justice department law- ruled invalid on the grounds it yers who study all new provine-|encroached federal jurisidction ial legislation to de rermine/over criminal law, whether it appears to be un. constitutional or against tional interest or policy. in court. white countries could come to Canada only if they were spon- sored by a close relative or|Wright,. of London, Ont., was! province's powers. were admitted by-order-in-coun-| ordered early cil. N ; Prospective immigrants were/date Thomas Paton complained interviewed in Jamaica by a/of irregularities. It continues in three - member Canadian team.| 0, The team now is in Trinidad and also will visit other islands in The. West Indies group. The department' also that applications received fromjfied enumerators and Hong Kong show that the cl Crown colony will be a source false oaths. of trained, educated immi- grants in the professional and|by the commission but will be|to establish provincial business fields in WEATHER FORECAST said| negligently appointed unquali- : Ec July 1, unconstitutional On the)! 5 The inquiry, under Ernest _J.| grounds that it goes beyond the|in-council. -- in May after ew Democratic Party candi-| WAS COMMON PRACTICE In the country's formative ! ruptcy and insolvency. INTERPRETING THE NEWS years, the federal veto ay a fairly common practice. It has ngeete ae : |been used 112 times since Con- Tragedy The inquiry is to determine {f| federation but only rarely after McKinstry knowlingly or|1920 and not at all since 1938 jwhen the Liberal cabinet of| the| Mackenzie King disallowed] made|banking and mortgage laws} passed by the Alberta Social' Mr, Ewing was subpoenaed) Credit government which co anks if erk or enumerators By DAVID OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer Europe until July 13. and issue currency. drenched iand of Algeria in the wake of declared peace. AA tat nee enlas Teartha tues TOA 4lindependence resulting from Sunday's referendum is dying. "\In its place has emerged the * ugly reality of a Nationalist gov- s'ernment driven by dissension and threatened by the armed : , |forces whose actions helped put Slit into power. The _ conclusion observers draw from developments in re- | ers are finding it more difficult j\to be men of peace than men of 4|war. i| The Evian agreements be- 4|tween France and the Moslem 4|Nationalists brought the pros- {| pects of peace and an independ- jent Algeria. ; ~|AMITY ENDS Until last week Nationalist leaders managed to maintain a united front. Not even the coldly premedi- tated campaign of murder an violence waged by the illegal European Secret Army Organi- zation could provoke a breach of discipline. But victory, in the form of an overwhelming "yes"' vote for independence last Sun- day, did. Mohammed Ben Bella, Na- | Observed temperatures: Min Max Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather office at 5 a.m.; Synopsis:. Northwestern On- tario is being threatened by an invasion of cloud and scattered showers or thundershowers. Sunday will eontinue fair and warm in southern and central regions. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- |tario, Haliburton, Georgian Bay regions, Windsor, London, Ham- ilton, Toronto, Sudbury, North Bay: Mainly clear today and Sunday, little change in tem- perature, winds light. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Timagami regions: Mainly clear today. Mainly cloudy with scattered thundershowers to- night and Sunday, little change in-temperature. Winds light, be- coming south 15. Sunday. White River, Cochrane re- gions: Mainly cloudy with a few Iscattered thundershowers today t I I N Ss Si Fair Weather During Sunday and Sunday, BS Forecast temperatures: Windsor S Kitchener Wingham... Hamilton Toronto . ' Peterborough . Trenton . Killaloe Muskoka . . North Bay Earlton .. oie Kapuskasing... . White River . Moosonee . Timmins . +e + + » .60 59 f2 8 80 72 87 85 81 84 82 83 85 76 80 72 69 65 62 FOR YOUR HEALTH FAMOUS SWISS HERBAL REMEDIES NATURAL MINERAL WATERS FROM YUGOSLAVIA MINERAL SUPPLEMENTS Free Literature The best Juice extractor in Canada NUTRA HEALTH SUPPLIES Victoria Edmonton Regina . Winnipeg . . Lakehead . | White River Kapuskasing . North Bay. . Sudbury . Muskoka Windsor London . Toronto Killaloe Ottawa Montreal Quebec Halifax fionalist deputy leader, openly broke with Premier Ben Yous- sef Ben Khedda, He appears to be backed by many of the com- manders of the Algerian Na- tional Liberation Army. The feeling is that the breach cannot be viewed in terms of the East - West clash or inter- Arab conflicts. The conflict springs, rather, from fundamen- tally differing views on what should be done after independ- ence. HOPED TO LEAD Ben Bella, 43, is a dedicated revolutionary who hoped to as- ee ee ee, ti owe be- little change emperature. Winds light, oming south 15 Sunday ow tonight High Sunday t t. Thomas . JONGON « soe os 5 . fount Forest... . t, Catharines wVoasaunz udbury 60 Stalks Algerian Rule five years in jail. "He is much like a man who, The tumult that greeted the having been bedridden, finds the! use of his limbs and indulges | in too violent exercise," says the London Economist. "But Mr. Ben Khedda's revo- lutionary spirit has been disci- plined in the hard school of car- He said he was watching the {economic indicators and that if lthey seem to reflect the need for a quicker cut he will recom- mend it. The stock market continued its recovery. A survey by the University of Michigan research centre indi- cated that the consumer will continue the high level of spend- ing that prevailed in the spring. Total inventories of manufac. turers, wholesalers and retailers sume command of the National-|in May showed the smallest! ist government when the French|increase-in nine months, the| Tragedy still haunts the sun- released him last March afterieom merce department, an-|. A Spokesman for the Motor nounced. Inventories were esti- mated at $97,400,000,000 up $170,- 000,000 from April. SALES UP SLIGHTLY |. The department said total sales of manufacturers, whole- | salers and retailers in May jwere estimated at $66,400,000,- | 000, a gian of less than one per | cent days is that Algerian lead-) d national battle. rying responsibility and having to come to terms, not merely | with France but with the world turned out 3,620,996 passenger as it is lived in. cars in the first six months of Much will depénd on -the at-| this year, a gain of 32.3 per jtitude in the future of Belkacem|cent over the 2,736,804 built in |Krim, interior minister in Benj the 1961 first half. |Khedda's government, He was} Production of 570,000 cars was jone of the original conspirators| scheduled for July, up 43 per jbehind the armed uprising of|cent from a year ago and the Nov. 1, 1954, and won the re-|highest for July since 1955. spect of the troops he led. Steel production was expected If he backs his premier. to|to fall to another 17-month low the hilt, there may be some/this week. Last week the mills |cent from April. The auto industry reported it For Russians - WASHINGTON (AP) -- The |United States has notified Rus- | Sia that it is eliminating travel \restrictions on all Soviet visi-- tors to the United States. It | called on the Soviet government |Friday to remove restrictions jon American visitors to Russia.' | Travel restrictions are being. {continued on Soviet diplomats and officials stationed in the |U.S. as well as on Soviet cor- | respondents. Travel of such persons out- jor groups to test their validity |fields reserved for Parliament,|Perial Oil went against the) side New York and Washington jis authorized according to the |amount of travel about the So- |viet Union which is permitted to U.S. diplomats and corres- pondents stationed in Moscow. The United States acted on its jown in lifting restrictions on the journeys of Soviet tourists and special delegations which come here by agreement with jtue Soviet government. About 1,500 Soviet citizens come in delegations each year and an- other 500 as tourists for a total of around 2,000. The number of Americans go- ing to the Soviet Union now to*# tals between 11,000 and 12,000 of whom an estimated 10,000 aré tourists and around 1,500 are members of exchange delega- tions. 'Police Probing Violence In Trick Strike _LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Po- lice say. they are itvestigating three separate incidents of vio- lence against non-striking mem- bers of the International Broth- erhood of Teamsters (Ind.) | Thursday night. Two houses and several cars were damaged in the incidents --two at St. Mary's and the third at Uniondale, both about 20 miles north of here. | Transport Industrial Relations Bureau said Friday the violence was directed against employees jof Hutton Transport Limited who have continued working de- | Spite the Ontario-wide strike by | Teamsters. At St. Mary's, about 10 men }surrounded a car occupied by Tony Fragnoli and his wife, A lighted cigarette was thrown through a window and a rear tire slashed, : Later, about five men threw |stones through two windows of driver Ken Cole's home and smashed the windscreen of his car. At Uniondale, a group of men | smashed windows of a home o¢- }cupied by three transport work- jers and their families and slashed the tires of cars parked outside. h hope that the army will support) poured 1,501,000 tons of. steel, the government, thus lessening}down four per cent from the lthe danger from violent inter-|previous week. Slow demand |was causing mills to close down for longer periods for vacations. Employment rose by 1,336,000 | Police Say Bullet |i June to « record 0.539.000. Didn't Make Hole teen-agers to the labor force, SARNIA (CP) -- It wasn't a h unemployment increased by 744,000 to 4,463,000, compared jbullet that punched a_ hole} jthrough lawyer John Logan's! with 5,580,000 a year ago. window, says Police Chief James Torrance. It was a pel- CEMENT let from a child's air rifle, Police were called to the Lo- gan home Friday when Mrs. Patios our Specialty © WALKS = @ STEPS Logan reported someone was) shooting at it. Mr. Logan is le-| gal counsel for the Canadian) Maritime Union, involved in a e CURBS Free Estimates--Work Gueranteed Recommendations Supplied CALL bitter jurisdictional dispute with| the Seafarers' Internatonal Un-) BERT McLEAN 723-2867 | Chief Torrance said: "We; have three witnesses that it] was a juvenile with an air rifle." Clean Rugs & | Are beautiful rugs. Cleaning rugs is our business and has been for 15 years: Let us restore the beauty of your rugs. co. NU-WAY RUG 5. 174 MARY STREET PHONE 728-4681 ion (CLC), 60 328 SIMCOE ST. S. 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