Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Mar 1964, p. 1

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| Thought For Today You may not admire the Beat- Jes' hair-dos, but they do cover & multitude of dins, Ihe Osan Time Weather Report Mainly cloudy and cooler to+ night 'and Wednesday. Winds light. VOL. 93 -- NO. 53 fig Pong tas OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1964 Cita eect ter Soyer Net ccags ke oak TWENTY-SIX PAGES | . ~-- Mohawk Indian: Princess Kahn - Tineta Horn holds Indian Princess dolls fashion- ed after her likeness which LIVE MODEL are. on display at the Cana- dian Toy Fair'in Montreal, A fur company model, she de- signed the costumes of the dolls herself and will introduce them to the New York Inter- national 'Toy Fair starting | March 8. Expect Cyprus To OK UN Peace Force Bid UNITED NATIONS (AP)--| Acceptance by Cyprus was re- key and Greece the right to in- MAY STIFFEN LICENCES FOR USED-CAR DEALERS McDermott, Feeley Deny Cheating Mine . TORONTO (CP)--Joseph Mc-jon the property, much of it! McDermott claimed that be- \Dermott told County Court to-|after the Keevil option had been |sides the Keevil group. Denison iday that he had averaged gold! dropped. assays from' two assayers to ar- which rive at the figures samples to Keevil Mining. McDermott and his partner,| Vincent with Feeley, are He said he and Feeley spent he|$50,000 on diamond drilling and|Gold- Mines had shown interest| |showed in a log of test holejhired one of Keevil's top men tolin the property. supervise drilling. KRNO Mines Limited stock to/erty. the Keevil company. McDermott and -his Vincent. Feeley are partner charged} (CP Wirephoto) |with 'defrauding KRNO Mines OPP To Double Additionally they spent $52,-/"hot to buy. the property." But charged|000 on a helicopter to bring -in) when Keevil heard about this he selling almost worthless|men and supplies to the prop-|quickly closed the deal. ----~| Limited of $25,000. The Crown is trying to prove! that Feeley and McDermott con. | trolled KRNO Mines and rigged . the logs of test hole samples to} Traffic Patrol show a higher gold yield. | hee The pair was brought from a|_ TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial Kingston prison where they are Police Commissioner Erié Silk Area Highway | serving 18 months for conspir-|Said Monday a 500-man increase|-- infor-|in the force and new equipment fraud|will permit 24-hour trAffic pa- trols on highway 401 and the esident Queen. Elizabeth Way for the jing to obtain secret police | mation, to face the \charges. Norman B. Keevil, pr Cyprus was expected to give its)garded as the key to the plan's tervene to preserve the consti-\y¢ Keeyi] Mining, had testified| frst time this summer, ~ | approval today to a new small-/success. It faced a possible So- tution, which grants the Turk- nation proposal authorizing UN/)viet veto unless it met the ap- ish-Cypriot minority veto rights to|proval of Archbishop Makarios,| that Makarios wants to do away peace|the Greék-Cypriot president of with. Cyprus wanted all refer-/ Secretary-General U Thant send an international force to the Mediterranean is-| Cyprus. | land. |PREDICT ACCEPTANCE | 'y Council, the li-nation council Monday by Brazfian delegate Carlos Al-arios would go along. | fredd Bernardes. The resolution also called for|prazi!, Norway, Ivory Coast,|"the positions taken by The resolution was drafted by) Thant to name a mediator to|Morocco and Bolivia. | help solve the constitutional) The main obstacle had not But|Public .as- protection against in- to|sources.close.to the Greek-Cyp-|V@sion by Turkey. jriots said they~ believed Mak The five - nation resolution) ence to this treaty omitted. In-| Steagl it insisted on a Securiy| dropped when The compromise formula, Neither the Cypriot nor the|Council guarantee for the terri-| He said the motorcycle patrol! Mines, Hollinger Gold Mines, Patino of Canada and Leitch He said Denison Mines was He also produced as evidence} jof the amount of money that had been spent on the property a Huntingdon Survey which as- sesses and values all the work done on the property. ¢ "Huntingdon," he said, "is a company which does this kind of work and is one of the largest in the world in mining." | "There was no hocus pokus with this property in any way, shape or form',' he said. Volcano earlier that he paid $25,000 to! jexplore the KRNO property at Big Duck Lake near Port Ar- thur, Ont. He said the _ option |\CLAIMS SPENT CASH McDermott said that he and| cruising si Feeley spent upward of $85,000! fic beats. was the property spc IB a rants s \failed to prove up in drilling. worked out by five of the six'soyiet delegation would com-|torial integrity of the island re-) i of the UN Se-|ment on the resolution. traffic begins, cars will will be increased to 80 machines} from 40 by late May or early! |June when the heavy summer) 20 000 | ' | Patrolling strength will get a} |boost with the addition of 60 or 70 new cruisers, he said, andjyoleano was reported today to begin a system of|have erupted and triggered ava- x- or eight-mile traf-lanches that destroyed the little Threatens SANTIAGO (AP)--An Andean jtown of Conaripe and threat- tried to meet both positions part) way. Its preamble referred to} the} parties in relation to the treat-| ies" and it quoted from the UN} crisis that has brought Greek-|peen the proposed international|charer which says all members and Turkish-Cypriots nearly to|force, but finding a way to meet \conflicting-demands of Cyprus civil war. Diplomatic sources expressed) Belief that the resolution wouldja 1960 treaty guaranteeing the be accepted by Cyprus, Turkey,| Greece and Britain. and Turkey on how to refer to} Cypriot constitution. The treaty gave Britain, Tur-| Greek PM Visits Ailing Monarch e ATHENS--King Paul's--. doc- tors announced today that the ailing Greek monarch has, been| hit by another medical cbmpli-| cation. | A medical bulletin said the} king, suffering from a blood clot} in fis right lég and another in} his left Jung, was having in-| creasing difficulty urinating. | "Otherwise his condition. re- bulletin said: A bulletin Monday night said the blood clots showed "a slight improvement under, the _ influ- ence of treatment' but added: shall refrain from the threat or| use of force against the terri- torial integrity of any state. | WORK OUT MAKE-UP | tional force is similar to that sought by Britain and The secreary - general would work out with the parties con- force. He would. appoint its nosed as thrombo-phlebitis, sent him back to bed Sunday. | On Monday, he suffered an embolism in the left lung. The latest announcement deepened fears for the king's life. Queen Frederika, 23-year-old Crown Prince Constantine, who is serving as regent for his father, and other members. of vigils at the palace. SISTER ARRIVES One of the king's Princess Irene, flew to Athens "The worsening condition . . . from London to be with her provaked by the clots, is con-|Prother. pas : tinuing."" | The Monday night bulletin ' also said King Paul was re- HAD ULCER The 62-year-old monarch was operated on for a stomach ulcer two weeks ago. He had been reported improving steadily un- til the clot in his leg, diag- GE Seunlovocs Stage Protest Work Stoppage GUELPH (CP) -- Eighty night-shift workers at the Ca- nadian General Electric Com-! pany Limited transformer plant here refused to work Monday night following the suspension| of the entire 280-man day shift.) The day workers were sus- pended by company. officials! over a dispute arising out of/ job classification pay methods.) All are members of the Inter- national Union of Electrical,\day demanded the admission of|jor international body h Workers Communist China to the United'a challenge to the N Radio and Machine (CLL). Two day-shift workmen: had refused a particular job unless sponding to treatment for "'lo- calized pneumonia." Prime. Minister George Pa- pandreou--devoting long hours to the Cyprus crisis--was sum- moned to the palace Monday to ~~|confer with Prince Constantine. Papandreou spent 30 minutes with the prince. He said follow. ing the meeting the king was in great pain but not in any imme- diate danger. However, the fact that Papan- dreou was called to the palace caused considerable worry in Athens. der would report to him. Thant jwould report to the Security Council but the council would) Thus, in the name of forming tinuing to oppose the findings of/act fate has been." a truly national transport pol-jthe royal commission's not control the force. Farm Union Urges Public-owned CPR OTTAWA (CP) -- Nationali-jicy, the CPR should be handed The formula for the interna-\2ation of the Canadian Pacific . Railway was recommended to) the| the federal cabinet tody in the tional Farmers' Union. The CPR was built with public/sets in other industries." the organization. cerned the composition of the funds and public funds and land! The brief dealt in some de-/stroyed. were used to guarantee inves-|tail with the shipping, commu-| commander and the comman-jtors in the company of a return|nications, hotel, mining, petro-\northwest of the volcano, said| on their money, said a brief by|leum and other businesses of|'many people are missing. and| the huge CPR operation in con- report Probe Baker Link To Resort Casinos 'mains unchanged," a medical/the royal family were keeping WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- ators investigating the Bobby resort casinos. jthat has priority in the current session of Parliament. The NFU opposes the com- mission opinion that non-rail as- |sets and operations of the CPR should not be used in assessing its income since this would dis- tort its competitive position in rail operations. He also protested that while| SAY 'RIDICULOUS' he sat in the Senate faucus| Raker case seek additional in-| room waiting to testify, an In-|diculous proposition," said the| sisters Yormation today about gambl- ternal Revenue Service agent|brief, arguing that by the same} : ,./ing concessions in Caribbean| had handed him a subpoena to|token a farmer would be un-| | appear in Las Vegas on March able to use his hog operations! "We submit that this is a ri- Called as witnesses by the|16 for a hearing on Baker's|to help with grain or hay. Senate rules committee were) "tax liability" for the years 1958, former finance} Diego Bordas, and industry minister in the Do- minican Republic, and Gary E. Mazza, Bordas' secretary. At a hearing Monday Edward Levinson, Las Vegas, Nev., hotel and gambling casino op-| erator, declined to say. whether he has had any dealings with Wordas or to answer other ques- tions. | ciate of Baker's for whom the} committee had conducted al widespread search, Levinson in-| voked his Fifth Amendment pro- tection against possible self-in-| Senate payroll at a salary of crimination about 75 times Give Red Chin UN Health Group Told GENEVA (AP) -- France to- Nations World Health Organiza- tion The French announcement on It was the first time Chinese delegation since France recognized Red China Jan. 28. Every W.H.O. assembly they were paid on a system ad-|the opening day of the. annual|since the Communists took over yocated by the union. W.H.0O. assembly indicated France' will. take a similar po-jhas opened with a demand by} sition in the UN General As- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS sembly and in all organizations laffiliated with the UN. French delegate Eugene Auja- leu made the announcement as POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 MOSPITAL 7238-2211 the assembly debated a Soviet proposal 'to recognize the ePe- king regime as the rightful rep- jresentative of China in the 110- member health organization, i the Chinese mainland in 1949 the Soviet bioc and neutralist African. - Asian countries that Red China replace Nationalist |China in the orgs on. The proposaf invariably has been rejectag@ by a majority which accepMathe Western ar- gument thay = inated take no, suchggiaifion independently 'of the @éMeral Assembly, | $19,600-a-year. through 1962. Transportation was a. main feature of the submission by the Baker, who resigned last Oct.) NFO, which claims membership committee las ing his Fifth 17 as secretary to the Senate's in the four western provinces Democratic majority, told the 24 Ontario. It seeks a national! week in invok-|tTansport policy based on pro-| dment pri | tection that he was being inve o-\Viding service rather than .;.|merely stressing economy and tigated by the internal revenue efficiency. service, The committee's at finding out. how Baker farmers to get started, It acqui red over $2,000,000 in for investigation of farm |claimed. wealth while. on the Chinery credit sales to check on! a Seat any-ma-| France previously supported|tand China," it said. as faced/this Western position. The) Yationalist| French switch was expected. to not defeat: opposi- weaken but tion to Red China. U.S. delegate Nathaniel conflict-o A friend and business asso-| interest investigation is directed But it also pressed for revi- f., sions to farm credit--some of these are planned--to make it easier for one thing for young rE how many have government- guaranteed loans and_ what farmers actually are paying in | interest. It Iso sought federal back- stopping for provincial crop in- surance plans in cases of disas- ter--this also may be in the | works--and retention of existing dairy subsidies. a . It no longer apnears reasonable that Canada desist indefinitely from giving recogni- tion to the government of main- 'Bomb Discovered jover to the CNR and the scale of compensation to shareholders jshould bear in mind that 'the United States from the start,|@nnual subrhission of the Na-\CPR has been able to use its! and water where the town was." favored position to acquire as-| ned the crash of a Paradise Airlines wc- In Quebec City view of ; : - QUEBEC (CP)--KEight _ sticks of dynamite wrapped in two Un- lion. Jacks, wefe found Monday at the foot of-a flagpole on the re ies ; Plains of Abraham. One of the litical alignments to the United : Nations as it would be for the flags had been taken down from UN General Assembly' to "tell the pole. oe jthis assembly how to eradicate The dynamite Sticks were (led smallpox." : together with a wick which po- H : 6 } 'hing 3, lee said had been lighted but e said Nationalist China is| went out before it burned to the irightfully repkesented in W.H.O. lend. Kitterick expressed the the Western majority. He said it would be as pre- sumptuous for "an assembly of doctors" to prescribe new . po- (oes a 60-mile area of southern | Chile containing 20,000 persons. | News reports from the area jsaid at least 25 persons had/ jbeen killed after the fiery erup- jtion of 9,325-foot Villarrica vol- jcano early Monday but police \gaid only seven deaths had been |eonfirmed. , | | | | EX-NAZI CAUGHT Dr. Gerhard Bohne,' above, charged with murder in con- nection with Nazi "mercy killings", has been arrested in Buenos Aires, the state prosecutor's office announced Monday in Frankfurt, Ger- many. Bohne, who had been scheduled for trial at the cur- rent mercy killing trial in Limburg, fled West Germany last summer, (AP Wirephoto) 'Actor Cleared Of Ekberg Blackmail ROME (Reuters)--A man ac- cused of trying to extort $20,- 000 from actress Anita Ekberg, was acquitted here today. The..court acquitted for lack of evidence Italian actor Franco Silva, a former friend of the actress. The court also ruled a charge of forgery should not be pro- ceeded with and that it fell un- ow i; wa PS FRR ERR Rules Would Aim At Fly-By-Night Owners _ TORONTO: (CP)--A licensing} erators in the lending field, who authority to require evidence of|had been charging rates from financial stability and good! 37 to 87 per cent. This resulted character before granting of licenses to used-car dealers was recommended to |the Ontario Legislature Tuesdgy by a select committee on cgfsumer credit. Continuance of the licence should depend on proper con- A duct of business, the c . in an investigation by the at- torney - general's department and the revoking of licences of two mortgage brokers. The committee asked for ré- appointment so it could continue investigations, turning to insut- door - to - door tee said in an interim report which also recommended filing of mortgage forms with a gov- ernment agency and closer in- spections of mortgage transac- tions. "We have heard evidence which suggests that there are palpable abuses in financing of used cars," said the committee, which last fall was. told in a brief from the Federation of Autimobile Independent Dealers that anyone with a $25 registra- tion fee is allowed to sell cars. ance ¢ salesmen and retailers. should... tion of granting a licence evi- dence of financial stability an good reputation and 6s! The committee states: "The licensing authori require as a condi- make the continuance of the li- cence dependent on proper con- duct of business." 7 The report finds that intensive ~ advertising campaigns almed at consumers lead use of credit, to imprudent This resulted in fly-by-night operators bilking the public, the federation said. The report--tabled by chair- man Harry Price (PC--Toronto St.. David) said it had failed' to find a way to state a true rate of interest. Most lenders fav- ored full disclosure in princi- ple but cogent arguments had been made that it is virtually impossible to find a way to cal- culate interest to suit all types of transactions, ~ The committee also suggested some. limitations or restraint might be put on advertising by money lenders. It said the necessity and use of advertising is not in question but intensive advertising pro- grams aimed at the consumer have been a contributing factor} der an amnesty declared last year. The committee said it had un- | "Nothing is left of Conaripe," ja civilian pilot said after flying jover the mountain valley about 500 miles south of Santiago |Monday. "There is only mud Other reports said 80 per cent jof the town's buildings were de-| Police at Temuco, 60 miles} we do not know what their ex- A radio report said a group of about 150 persons were hud- dled on a patch of high ground jnear the site of. the destroyed jtown. They were believed safe for the time being but in urgent ineed of help. Police patrols were dis- jpatched but were delayed be- jcause heavy rains since Friday have washed out roads and bridges. ' Victims Sought At Nevada 'Kir Crash Site MINDEN, Nev. (AP)--Work- jers began the grim task today \of recovering and identifying 85 |Lake Tahoe plane crash vic- jtims as this tiny western Ne- \vada town opened its doors to |relatives.of the dead, _- | The 81° passengers and four crew members died Sunday in | constellation against a snow- covered peak on a flight sched- juled from San Jose, Calif., to the gambling and winter sports centre on the south shore. of |Lake Tahoe. | | Their bodies, guarded through; the night by two deputy sheriffs, | were to be brought to an impro- vised morgue at this commun- lity of 550 residents. The path for recovery opera- tions was cleared by a bulldozer and crew which followed an old logging road, then pushed through rocks and snow to the crash site. | Relatives and friends of the jvictims, who will help in iden- \tifying the bodies, thronged into |Minden, six miles east of the crash site, The victims, all Californians, were headed for a day at Ne- vada gambling casinos when the} plane was -caught in a snow-) storm. The pilot radioed .at. 11:29 a.m, Sunday that he had spotted the lake through a break in the storm and was over the last ap-| proach marker to the airport. Two minutes later he began a| much about a patient-in a psy- Ses | gence seizure. You will read message: "Flight 901. iNothing more was heard. DALLAS (AP)--Judge Joe B. Brown, presiding at the murder trial of Jack Ruby, became ill and was' sent home today by his doctor. However, another judge took 'his place. ; Judge Brown. said from his home: "'I've got-an awfully bad cold and the doctor told me to Ruby Trial Judge Sent Home By MD covered some undesirable op- all kinds of dramatization, spced - up 'stories about what psychomotor epileptics do: Mur- ders, criminal activities, ete. . +. That is nonsense." ; When he read this, Belli ran down the corridor toward the judge's chambers. in the imprudent use of credit. j employee the. Whitb: returned look for Wayne. the swollen waters Creek -- about one-quarter of @ mile from the Crawford home -- Mr. Crawford returned home. Brooklin Boy Takes 5 Mile Whitby Walk BROOKLIN (Staff) -- A hor rified Brooklin father of frantically searching eight-year-old son here ot a cos his home. ' 4 The inh tiie, Lorne, a GM OPP that after Gra e alone he went to After fi tracks leading 4 er finding be Police said some 100 people formed a search party to look for the boy, Mrs, Ray Holman, whose hus- band was in the search party, said "'the whole village was very concerned because the Crawford family is very well known here." Stay in bed.' The judge said Judge J. Frank Wilson, another judge of a court dealing in criminal cases, probably would take Brown's place. Theze was no indication how long Judge Brown, 55, would be away from the case, which to- day was still in the jury selec- tion stage after two weeks and); two days. A roaring dispute over a "fact sheet on epilepsy" and charges of efforts to "contam- inate' prospective jurors de- layed jury selection Monday. Eight men and two women have been accepted, leaving two jurors to be found; - Ruby is on trial for the Nov. 24 shooting of Lee Harvey Os- wald, accused assassin of pres- ident Kennedy, in Dallas. Dis- trict Attorney Henry M. Wade says he will. demand death in the electric chair for Ruby. Ruby's lawyers will plead that he suffers from psychomotor epilepsy and was temporarily insane when he killed Oswald. Thus, a pamphlet issued by the National Epilepsy League and distributed Monday outside the courtroom, brought cries of "grossest conspiracy to obstruct justice" and "trying to contam- inate prospective jurors" from in fy chief counsel, Melvin alli. ASKED MISTRIAL He demanded a mistrial and said he would use "all my in- genuity" to get three persons jailed today. : The uproar began when the) pamphlets with a covering let- ter appeared in the courtroom.| # They had been given to report- rs,: e Belli insisted the pamphlets] § were meant not for reporters! § primarily, but for prospective jurors, Police said no copies of the literature reached any jury candidates, : One paragraph in the pamph- let read: "You don't have to worry too novels and see in the movies DEMONSTRATOR Charles Barnes, Jr., white shirt, prepares to' throw a sit- in demonstrator out of res- taurant owned by his father, in- checked shirt, immediately behing him, AR other men help. Barnes *¢tfused service THROWN OUT ° to this and 27 other demons strators in Annapolis, Md, Police arrested 16 of the inte- grationists when they wouldn't move from the sidewa«. GAP Witfphoto) |

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