Te HT hae Sac TE pemee Be "She Oshaton Simes Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited ®t _ 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario T. L. Wilson, Publisher TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 -- PAGE 6 'K Priest Before God... Friend Of All Nations Christians of all denominations, and many people of other religions prayed for Pope John XXIII during his agonizing days of illness, and they expressed genuine sorrow. at his death. Their utterances were not the formal courtesies of such fan occasion, but the expression of genuine affection and respect for a great spiritual leader; one wno, fully aware of the sweep of events in the world about him, was able to look beyond the confines of creed and dogma to the aspirations, hopes, fears and suffering of all humanity. He was, in the finest sense, a liberal Pontiff. Some of his more conservative followers might even say he was a radical. However that may be, he injected new vigor into his Church, gave new insights to Christians of all churches and was an inspiration to men of peace everywhere. i His concern for the state of the world and its people was expressed _ sometimes with wit, sometimes with sorrow but always with clarity and compassion. In his great encyclical, Pacem in Terris, he said: 'Universal peace is a good that interests all men without distinction. To all men, therefore, we have opened our soul." Last year he told a diplomatic audience: "Let them (the world's leaders) give ear to the anguished cry of 'peace, peace' which rises up to heaven from every part of the world, from innocent children and those grown old, from individuals and countries." Of disarmament he said in Pacem in Terris: "Justice, then right, reason and humanity urgently de- mand that the arms race should cease; that the stockpiles which exist in various countries should be reduced equally and simultane- ously by the parties concerned ; that nuclear weapons should be banned; and that a general agreement should eventually be reached about. pro- gressive disarmament and an effec- ' Chronicle (establishec tive method of control." He spoke of the great things and 'the little things, of timeless ideals and the event of the day. 'The tongue," he reminded, 'is an organ between nose and' chin which some- times is used disproportionately. Hold it." About automation, he said: "Its negative effects should not. be borne exclusively by the workers or by certain groups of workers ... but rather should weigh equally, or even more heavily, upon the investors of capital and, when opportune, even upon all mem- bers of the political community, since all in the final analysis benefit by such changes." He gently chided those who would interpret the Bible too lite- rally: "The last judgment will be in the valley of Josaphat. I have been there myself, and I don't see how everyone will fit." He did not shrink from the pro- gress of science: "Whether it be question of the investigations of the scientist or the skill of the technician or the courage of the operator, the Church applauds this growing mastery over the forces of nature. She rejoices at all progress, present and to come, which enables man to perceive more clearly the infinite grandeur of the Creator." On his 81st birthday he said: "Any day is a good day to be born and any day is a good day to die... I always think of that other shore and submit to the will #f the Lord, whether He decides to keep me here or call me to Him." Death, when it came, did not come easily, but it was a trial of the flesh, not of the spirit. And men remembered how he had word- ed his concept of the Papacy: "We ask no more than that you may always and on every occasion be able to write down as our single and true title of honor: He was a priest before God and before the people, a true and sincere friend of all the nations." How richly he deserved that title of honor! Time-Wasting Queries The nation's business is being handled more expeditiously by this Parliament than by the last one, at least so far. But the habit of time- wasting by speech-makers who have nothing to say and questioners with © purposeless queries is too deeply in- grained in Ottawa, it seems, for the people of Canada to expect their affairs to be handled with thought- ful dispatch. ; Typical of the sort of irrelevancy which consumes the expensive time of the House was the question asked a few days ago by Social Credit leader Robert Thomson. He thought that Max Ferguson, a CBC radio performer with a slight talent for sophomoric satire, was broad- casting skits that 'are undermining our national morals." He asked what "the government intended to do about programs "obviously harmful to the security and well-being of our na- tion." State Secretary Pickersgill, who answers in the House for the CBC, gave the obvious answer: The gov- ernment did not propose to do a thing, because in any free society nothing is more undesirable than to have the government directing She Oshawa Times T. L. WILSON, Publisher Cc. GWYN KINSEY, Editor The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gozette and 1863, is published daily (Sundays ond statutory holidays excepted). bers ot C Doily per Publish- ers Association, The Canadian Press, Audit Bureau of Circulation and the Ontario Provincial Dallies Association. Canadian Press is exclusively entitied to the use of republication of all news itched in the paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, ond also the tocol mews published therein. All rights of special des- patches are also reserved. Offices: Building, 425 University Avenue, Ontario; 640 Cothcort Street, Montreal, Thomson Toronto, PQ. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carriers in Oshawa; Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, u i, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Ofono, Leskard, Breughom, Burketon, Claremont, Columbus, Greenwood, Kinsale, Raglan, Blackstock, Manchester, Pontypool and Newcastle not over 45c per week. By mail (in Province of Ontario) outside carriers delivery areas 12.00 per yeor. Other Provinces ond Commonwealth tries 15.00, USA and fersien 24.00, broadcasting, the press, or any other medium of public information. It seems that one skit objected to by Mr. Thomson dealt with_a-meet- ing between President Kennedy and a Canadian official, in which Mr. Kennedy kept urging that Canada take extra nuclear weapons. The other skit was based on the anniver- sary of the "great fight at Stoney _Creek of 1812 or 1813" -- as Mr. Thompson described it -- and had Mr. Pearson and the U.S. ambassa- dor looking on. Such skits, said Mr. Thomson, endanger Canadian- American relations. If Canada's security is in such a delicate condition that it can be menaced by a second-rate satirist with a limited audience, we are in a truly parlous condition and should seek immediate annexation by the United States or Cuba or someone 'with a little muscle, That is nonsense, of course, and Mr. Thompson should have not have wasted the House's time with such a complaint. » o Other Editors' Views BBG IMPARTIAL ? (Vancouver Sun) Our Board of Broadcast Govern- ors, which sometimes appears to make up its rules as it goes along, has announced that it will hold public hearings into relationships between wired television and broad- casting. We hope its hearings will be more impartial than its announ- cement, A BBG press release declares the board is concerned lest piped televi- sion gain unfair advantage over the broadcasting stations. It seems a strange attitude for a judge to adopt. Particularly a judge without jurisdiction in the case, ap pn 9 eg CR A ONO SLM: AL rs a ee CHESHAM ORE ; " * WHIL® THE CHOICE OF A CANADIAN FLAG IS NOT EXCLUSIVELY AN ARTISTIC MATTER, WEYARE CERTAINLY MISSING THe BOAT IF WE DON'T SEE WHAT OUR ARTISTS CAN DO, : ---- MANAGING 6OITER OF CANADIAN ART OM THEIR FLAG DESIGN COMPETITION ys tail The Abstract geormnce f Design Along the lines of Henry Moore (complete with holes) Design Submitted bya Primitive Artist THE ARTISTS TAKE OVER Tools For Astronauts Keep Scientists Busy J By JOHN WOODFIELD BALTIMORE (AP)--The U.S race for the stars has space scientists scrambling like a pit crew at Indianapolis speedway. Not only must the vehicle it- self be flawless, it must con- tain the tools with which the astronauts can keep it that way, For after blast-off, there are no more pit stops. The bugaboo is weightless. ness. With no gravity to contain him, the astronaut-mechanic is likely to find himself turning in- stead of the bolt he is trying to remove. He would be propelled YOUR HEALTH backward with the first blow of a conventional hammer. Though ludicrous in one sense, the problems are real ones. For if an emergency situ- ation occurs, the capability to perform maintenance might constitute the only means of survival. M. B. Goldman, manager of the advanced logistics division at the Martin Company, which is working on the problems, says the solution probably will be a self-contained, multi-pur- pose, minimum reaction power tool dubbed "mert." His department has developed Patient's Anxiety Difficult To Cure By JOSEPH G, MOLNER, M.D. Here's an example, I think, of the second hardest job that a doctor faces, day in and day out. Dear Doctor: I'm very much worried. I'm 48 and in the last year have had trouble with my throat hurting. It never hurts when I swallow, but afterward I feel like it is still full of air or food. I've been to throat specialists and have had X-rays. They say no ulcer, cancer or gall stones. They can't find a thing. I've even taken nerve pills, but noth- ing stops it. I'm so nervous and upset as a result of thinking the doctors don't tell me what is really wrong. Could you please try to tell me?--MRS, E, H. : The doctor's 'hardest job is when the chips are down, When you have to tell a patient that something is desperately bad, and you have to weigh the right or wrong of doing this, or of not doing that--trying to calculate what is best when there is no way of foretelling what the fut- ure holds, That's when the doc- tor resorts to diplomacy but still tries to keep his patient's cour- age up in the face of undeniable dangers. The second hardest job is tov "cure" a patient whose real problem is being scared. Call it nerves, or anxiety, but 'it's the same thing. The throat, stomach, head, back, neck, shoulders are com- mon places for sheer nerves to evidence themselves. You can turbance or an emotional upset. When the cause is physical and you identify it, then you can go ahead and treat it. But when it is a manifestation of tension--well, that's different. You can't tell a patient, "It's all in your head, so forget it." But there isn't any medicine to take worry out of the mind. Oh, sedatives and tranquiliz- ers will relax some patients enough. Others will accept your assurance that if they'll stop worrying, the symptoms will disappear. But not all. Some can't force themselves to relax, and wén't trust what you say. Instead of being glad that nothing physi- cal is wrong, they then start suspecting that you are keeping the truth: from them. The next step is to go from doctor to doc- tor. Some, like Mrs. E. H., are lucky enough to find a succes- sion of doctors who have told her the truth, or the same story. ; But others finally get into the hands of some glib quack who tells them they have "obfusca- tion of the coogle,"' or "sublux- ation of the whatzis," and prom- ises to 'cure' them with a se- ries of 48 treatments. several tools that may help but the job is just beginning. Goldman first designed a weightlessness simulator on which prospective space tools can be tested. Constructed of aluminum, it consists of a U-shaped platform from which extends a horseshoe device resembling a large mag- net. The platform is on three air bearings, while the magnet- like projection can rotate hori- zontally or vertically on roller bearings. A person strapped in the simulator has only slightly more control than an astronaut experiencing weightlessness. Probably the most impressive step forward so far has been the development of an adhesive that will stick to any surface in. stantly, support from 300 to 3,000 pounds a square inch and be adaptable to the vacuum and temperature extremes of outer space. : It will, Goldman hopes, en- able astronauts to crawl outside their capsules for emergency repairs. LIKE STICKING PLASTER The adhesive would be at- tached to small, metal discs resembling rivets. The astro- nauts need only strip the plas- tic backing from the adhesive as he would from a plastic ban- dage and apply it to the sur- face of the spacecraft. A hol. low stem projecting from the centre of the disc would permit insertion of a self-locking han- dle to which the astronaut could cling. By attaching a series of these projections, the astronaut could reach any part of the space- craft, Attaching a belt such as win- dow washers use, the astronaut could safely repair meteoroid damage to the skin of the cap- sule. Hopefully, the adhesive . de- vice will be tried on the Gem. ini flight designed to put two men into earth orbit sometime within the next two years. A space wrench to overcome weightlessness and spring ham- mer also have been developed, PLAN POWER TOOLS Goldman says the final solu. tions to space - maintenance problems will be self-contained power tools. Although these still would create a reaction on the operator, this could be off-set by having the astronaut hold on with one hand while operating the tool with the other. An earth-based maintenance contro] centre also will be nec. essary, Goldman says. BY-GONE DAYS 20 YEARS AGO J. H. Connor of Oshawa was have headaches, upset stomach,@among 40 Bell Telephone em- all softs of aches, cough, tight- ness in the throat, palpitation and so on, just from nervous tension. The symptoms, the pains are real enough, no matter whether the cause is some physical dis- TODAY IN HISTORY By The Canadian Press June 4, 1968... The United States 5th Army entered Rome 19 years ago today--in 1944-- after heavy fighting in the outskirts, The retreating Germans did little damage to the city partly because their retreat was too precip- itate and partly because German commander Kessel- ring accepted proposals by the Vatican to declare Rome an open city. 1946--Juan Peron was in- augurated as president of Argentina. ° 1949--The Canadian air- craft carrier Magnificent struck rocks off Nova Scotia, Causing $275,000 damage, ployees in Central and West- ern Ontario who received the Ontario Safety League award for more than 10 years of sa driving, : Oshawa "Colts," 1942 Provin- cial softball champions, were feted at a banquet'when city officials made a presentation of jackets to the players. Lionel Barks was awarded $750 in War Savings Certificates under the General Motors Sug- gestion plan, Students of OCVI passed the War Savings Stamp objective of $10,000. John G. Geikie was inducted as a new member of the Osh- awa Rotary Club. General Motors Choir the direction of Reginald G. Geen presented a concert in support of the British War Vic- tims' Fund in Simcoe Street United Church, under The May Music Festival of North Oshawa School under the direction of Mrs. Alex Fisher was an outstanding event, atten D. Conant tendered his"vesignation as member for South Ontario, having. accept- ed an appointment as Master of the Supreme Court of Ontario. A newly-organized group of local Christian business men held its first meeting at Knox Presbyterian Church, The chairman, A. R. Alloway, intro- duced the guest speaker, Dr. Isaac Page. Lebanon, Cedar and Temple lodges participated in the an- nual church parade in King Street United Church, The offi- cers of Lebanon lodge, headed by Wor. Bro. W .Sargant, offi- ciated, Rev. J. V. McNeely de- livered the .sermon. Miss Dorothy L. Hill, gradu- ate of the 1940 class School of Nursing, Oshawa General Hos- pital, was successful candidate in final examinations by the School of Nursing, University of Toronto. The Dunbarton general store and two trucks were completely destroyed by fire. The loss was estimated at $35,000. OTTAWA REPORT Churchill Exhumes A Very Dead Duck By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA -- Former veterans affairs ntinister Gordon Church- ill has exhumed a veteran and very dead duck in Parliame) This was the forged 'etter /al- leged to have been writte! ly this year by W. W. Butterworth, U.S. ambassador to Canada, to, Lester Pearson, leader of the Liberal Party in Canada. Photographie copies of this document were posted from Kil- burn, a run-down section of Lon- don, England, late in. March and addressed to several journalists in Canada. The envelopes were stamped insufficiently for car- riage by airmail, and arrived by surface mail just before the April 8 election. Each was ac- companied by an explanatory letter, with an illegible signa- ture and no address,é Mr. Churchill read this letter into the parliamentary record last week. External Affairs Min- ister Paul Martin promptly al- leged that Mr. Churchill knew it "to be an absolute forgery," an assertion which Deputy Speaker Lucien Lamoureux of Cornwall, Ont. ruled to be un- parliamentary so that Mr. Mar- tin had to withdraw' them. WSA IT FORGED? . The letter, which I have seen, reads as follows: Embassy Fe United States of America. January 14, 1963 Dear Mr. Pearson: Please accept my sincere con- gratulations on the excellent and logical speech you made at the Liberal party conference on nuclear weapons on. January 12th. We appreciated your state- ment which indicated that the points of view expressed by the Liberal party and my govern- ment are identical. As a result of your address, no other Cana- dian politician on record has gained as many devoted friends in my country as you have. I.was delighted with the tim- ing, which I considered perfect, announcing the stand taken by the party. The Conservatives READERS' VIEWS NONQUON ROAD Dear Sir: I have read your editorial on Page 6 of May 28, "63 issue of The Times concern- ing the 401 bypass at Toronto. I find myself totally in agree- ment with your thinking. I wonder if this back page item has been. brought to the atten- tion of other members of the electorate by their respective newspapers, Perhaps it might be to the advantage of the tax- payers to run this as a front page item throughout the prov- ince. I also wonder if in criticising others we are overlooking the mote in our own eye. Here' I refer to recent improvements on Nonquon road.' I wonder if those chaps to whom we refer as a "planning department" have had the common sense to remember 'he accidents that have occurred at both ends of this little road. Have they taken the necessary precautions in the redevelopment of this area to overcome this situa- tion? To widen and improve Non- quon would only make for big- ger and uglier accidents in the years to come and also waste valuable land. Present acute angled lots are of little value for construction. The original.purpose of Non- quon was, in all probability, to bypass the swampy section of Taunton road between Rit- son and Simcoe. This situation has now been largely correct- ed although Taunton road is still poorly surfaced. Traffic could flow just as eas- ily over a well surfaced Taun- ton_road and have less trouble at both Ritson and Simcoe in- tersections. The triangular lots © at Ritson would be avoided and we. would not have a repetition of the wasteful practices follow- - ed in the Dean avenue exten- sion and Park road north ex- tension -- the waste of good building lots. While I am sure the people of Oshawa appreciate your bringing the truth about the Toronto bypass to their atten- tion I think they would also ap- preciate more frank and hon- est criticism of the wasteful practices of the local govern- ment, I. recall no criticism in your paper when Dean avenue and Park road north were ex- tended, While the cit some aptitude | development in the past i fegj there is much room for impr ent. Oshawa B. BARNETT PARAGRAPHICAL WISDOM One difference between marrying for money and work- ing for it is that the worker is bossed only part of the time. has shown In' spite of claims made in television commercials, many believe the day of miracles is over. e A person can get more value for his money these days by paying off debts, but there isn't much fun in that. : "A man has the legal right to criticize his wife," says a judge. Yes, of course. And he has the legal right to butt his head into a hornets' nest. will be forced to repeat what you have already stated. It will be quite evident to the elector- ate that the policy of the Con- atives is a narrow-minded and that they are unfit to con- tinue governing the country. At the first opportune mo- ment, I would like to discuss with you how we can be use- ful to you in the future. You can always count on our support. Sincerely yours, W. W. Butterworth Honourable L. B. Pearson, 541 Acacia Avenue, Rockliffe Park. QUESTIONS NEED ANSWERS 'Mr. Pearson learned of this document at the end of the elec- tion campaign, and denounced it 'a barefaced forgery." Ambassador Butterworth tele- phoned the secretary of the cab- QUEEN'S PARK inet to assert that he did not write the letter; he has sinc repeated this denial. There are certain points about the letter which make it false. Ambassador Butterworth was stationed at the U.S, embassy here 'nearly 30 years ago; then and since he has been a per- sonal friend of Mr. Pearson, He would have written 'Dear Mike" and ended the letter "Yours, Walt." Having lived in Rockcliffe Park himself, he would not have mis-spelled that word as "'Rockliffe' in the ad- dress. As a U.S.-educated per- son, he would spell "Honour-. able" without the "u", As an ambassador, he would not have used the pronoun "we" in that context. Where did the letier origin- ate? It certainly appeared to carry a copy of a genuine But- terworth signature, but that is not difficult with photographic reproduction, Most intriguing question: how did information reach the news- papers that ambassador Butter- worth made a private call to cabinet secretary Bob Bryce be- fore polling day to deny the au- thenticity of this letter? But deny it he did, so this duck is long dead. Ontario Unlikely To License Boats By DON RN TORONTO -- Thfre won't be any licensing of stall boat op- erators in Ontario this year, and perhaps for many years' to come. With the fantastic growth in the number of pleasure boats on Ontario lakes, there has been great demand for such licens- ing. But authorities here say there : no practical way of handling t. With the thousands of lakes in Ontario, to make sure that the boats on any important number of them were licensed would be a huge project. If the government introduced licensing it would have to go into full-scale enforcement of boating laws. This would require a force of men running into hundreds and probably into thousands and needed for only a few months @ year. There is some enforcement now, but it is only cursory. And under the circumstances it is hard to see where there can or will be much more, WOMEN'S WAGES Women in this life are appar- ently expected to do work that is too lowly for men. This can be the only logical explanation for the govern- ment's unusual legislation on minimum wages. The legislation, which goes into effect in the Toronto-Ham- ilton area in July, sets a min- imum of $1.25 an hour for men and 85 cents an hour for women. Ontario human rights legisla- tion specifically provides that women shall get equal pay for equal work. So the only conclusion one can take is that there are certain jobs women will do but which men won't do. The 'legislation has been sharply criticized by both the Liberals and the NDP and with apparent good reason. It certainly looks as though it was conceived in haste, by a government facing an early trip to the country. MEN TOO? There are, of course, low-paid occupations fot women. Many waitresses apparently are being paid less than the 8 cents -- and restaurants are fighting the legislation by put ting up the price of coffee. Some of the canners also ap- parently haven't been paying up to this scale. But then there are some men's jobs in which the rewards are not munificent. The man over the sink in the restaurant kitchen, for instance. But now it seems he is worth more than his sister under the tray. CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS OSHAWA ~ PORT HOPE WHITBY ~ COBOURG: BOWMANVILLE - SCARBORO Curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MILL ¢ THEY RE-GREW HAIR! IN 12 MONTHS IN 3 MONTHS Hair Specialist Here Wednesday Will Show Men and Women How to Save Hair and Prevent Baldness OTTAWA, Ont. New home treatment methods for saving hair and improving its growth will be demonstrated in Oshawa Wednesday, Jun at the Genosha Hotel, Specialist J. D. Alberti will be in charge, representing the Dynamic Roberts Hair \and Scalp Specialists organization. He will personally examine hair-worried men and women from 12.00 to 8.00 p.m, This new treatment is neither "mail order" nor "cure-all." It is adapted to the individual after a personal examination and progress is cheeked at reg- ular intervals by a_ Roberts Specialist. Who Can Be Helped? Will the new Roberts treat- ment cure baldness? "No!"' For we cannot help men and women who are slick-bald after years of gradual hair loss. But if you still have fuzz and your scalp is still creating hair, you can at least save and thicken what you have. Some condi- tions, such as "'spot baldness" usually have complete cover- age if caught in time! Other conditions that usually bring on excessive hair-loss-- dandruff, itching, over-oiliness [ee dryness, follicle clogged with sebum or seborrhea -- can be corrected by the Roberts home \treatment if caught in time. | "DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT'S TOO LATE" | Baldness won't wait for doubt- ers to be convinced, you're go- ing to keep right on losing hair 'til you're bald -- unless you get your scalp in healthy, hair- \growing candition again. | Examine You Free We want to make it clear that you incur absolutely no charge or obligation by coming in for an examination. Your only obligation is to yourself. We do not accept |cases that will not respond. Guarantee Satisfaction The Roberts Specialists will give you a wrilten guarantee that you must be satisfied with- in 30 days or it will cost you nothing. For a free examination and discussion of your hair prob- lems ask the desk clerk for Mr. Alberti's room number. He does not make appointments, so come in at your convenience. Examinations are given \private,