Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Mar 1964, p. 1

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Weather Report Cloudy Sunday. with showers ending during the morning then gradually clearing and. turning colder. Thought For Today Life for a bachelor usually con- sists of one undarned thing after another. j Authorized as.Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. Be OSHAWA ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1964 TWENTY. PAGES TURKS BACK UN FORCE CYPRUS CRISIS EASES VOL. 93 -- NO. 63 } The Imperial tanker Corn- wall docks the Hiram Walker dock yesterday officially open- ing the 1964 Canadian ship- OPENS SEASON ping season with a load of 21,500 barrels of gasoline from Sarnia, The ship was unable to tie up after her arrival Thursday night because of | lack of dock space. | (AP Wirephoto) Revenue 'Minister Dies On CN Train OTTAWA (CP) -- Revenue Minister John R. Garland, 46, died suddenly here early today on a train in Union Station. Mr. Garland attended the spe- cial Friday sitting of the Com- mons which authorized the gov- ernment to send troops to Cy- prus and later boarded a CNR train which left Ottawa at 12:20 a.m, today for North Bay. He was found dead, appar- ently after suffering a heart at- tack, after the train had left Union Station, The train re- turned to the station and Mr. Garland's body~was removed." The body was taken to Hulse © and Playfair Funeral Directors. An official said funeral and other arrangements would be made over the weekend. Mr. Garland, Liberal mem- ber of the Commons for Nipis- sing since June 27, 1949, was one of the youngest members| in Prime Minister Pearson's cabinet. As minister of national rey-| was related to the late William) erm Ontario where at Sudbury enue, he was responsible for the| Garland who held Carleton rid-|he met the late J. J. double job of collecting the na-|ing for the Conservatives from| Who owned a string of northern tion's taxes and running the' Ruby Judge To Allow Jury Verdict On TV DALLAS (AP) -- Jack Ruby's fate--life or death--was placed in the hands of the jury in his trial for the murder of Lee Har- vey Oswald at 1:05 a.m. CST today and his lawyers said they expect a speedy verdict. Ruby sat through five hours ef arguments Friday, unmoving and with a face like a mask When Judge Joe B. Brown re- tired the jury, he said "'I pre- sume you will want to begin deliberations in the morning." Most of the jurors nodded in the affirmative. The judge in- structed the eight men and four women to elect a foreman, be- gin deliberations, and write your verdict on the forms provided for that purpose." The jury then retired for the night and Judge Brown said he did not expect deliberations to begin before 9 a.m. CST. In Texas, the jury not only determines guilt or but fixes the extent of the pen EX-DETECTIVE SUSPECTS MURDER LINK alty. Ruby faces death in the elec-| tric chair if the jurors decide on the maximum penalty | Four prosecution attorneys in} the long, grinding night session,} asked for the death penalty. The other possible sentences prisonment. A prison sentence,| if five years or less, could be/the 1953 slaying of three Penn-| suspended PERMITS. TV Judge Brown granted the net- works permission to televise the verdict live although he had barred cameras during the 22- day trial, There also will be live radio broadcasting of the decision, CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS | POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 "then" JOHN R. GARLAND federal government's housing policy, He was born on New Year's |Day, 1918, at Smiths Falls, 49/Decame too tough. miles southwest of Ottawa, and 1921 to 1935. Mr. Garland. was a political heavyweight in size as well as in experience. He stood six feet two inches and weighed more than 300 pounds. He was even heftier when he first arrived in Ottawa in 1949. Mr, Garland had plenty of background and experience for the national revenue. portfolio. Years in the manufacturing business had given him a broad knowledge of both the taxation and customs sections of the de- partment, In previous Parlia- ments his main interest wés in bousing. "tna After leaving schiul, Mi <iar-| land worked first for a bank but quit at the age of 21 to try his 'hand at publishing, He or- ganized a weekly, the Ottawa Shoppers' News, which was sup- ported by advertising and dis- | tributed free, It enjoyed a brief success before the competition In 1940 he headed for North- Doran, i breweries and soft drink plants. During the final five-hour ses- sion in a jam-packed courtroom --where all but a few spectators remained to the end--District Attorney Henry M. Wade and his three aides said "American justice is on trial." Chief Defence Counsel Melvin' Beili and his two assistants argued that. Ruby is "a sick man--a very sick man." They urged the jurors to '"'send him where he belongs."' Presumably, they meant a mental institution Ruby killed Oswald. in the Dallas police station Nov 24, Oswald was accused of assas- ating president _Kennedy. Ruby's defence is temporary in- sanity Belli said before the summations he did not believe the jury would take long to ar- rive at a verdict. He said he! final} |thought the verdict might come in today or Sunday at the latest. Texas law provides that a jury can deliberate on Sunday and come in with the verdict on Sunday. The protracted night session jbegan after an extraordinary day. 'Pipefitters Face 30 Court Charges KINCARDINE, Ont. (CP)-- Thirty members of the United) Association of Pipefitters (CLC)} will appear in court here March| 25 on charges of engaging 'n an unlawful strike during con- struction of Canada's first full- 'contain any Measures wW lised $2,000,000 toward the esti- UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The United Nations Cyprus force got off the ground Friday as Canada, acting urgently in the face of a threat of war in the eastern Mediterranean, de- cided to send a contingent of 1,150 men to embattled Cyprus. The Canadian Parliament ap- proved dispatch of the force while the UN Security Council met in emergency session on charges by Cyprus that a Turk- ish invasion was imminent. Turkey had warned that it would intervene unless the gov- ernment of Greek-Cypriot Pres- ident Makarios halted, a "mas- sacre" of the Turkish-Cypriots. But the Turkish delegate scoffed at Cypriot charges that the invasion might come within hours. The council meeting ended late Friday night with a unani- mous resolution calling on all parties in the dispute to refrain from any action that might worsen the situation. DIVERSE CONCLUSIONS, Cypriot delegate Zenon Res- sides. said this meant the coun- cil had warned Turkey not to invade. Turkish delegate Orhan Eralp said it meant the Greek- Cypriots had been ordered to halt violence directed against the Turkish-Cypriot community. Eralp denied that Turkey's warning amounted to an ultima- tum. There, was ne See limit set, he said, and " ach Commons OKs 1150 Men For UN Duty UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- The status of the United Nations peace mission for Cyprus Fri- day night: TROOPS The Canadian Parliament in a special Ottawa session ap- proved a government resolution asking approval for the sending of 1,150 soldiers and air force members to Cyprus. An ad- vance party of 11 Canadians was.on the way to Cyprus by air. Sweden announced it had be- gun recruiting a contingent of 800. Ireland offered 500 men with some 'apparently acceptable conditions. Finland and Austria were con- sidering requests for troops. Brazil turned down a UN re- quest for troops. Britain expects to provide 3,500 men for the proposed 7,000- man force. Turk Denies War Threat have to be put into effect im- mediately." Rossides told reporters after the meeting the invasion threat had. died down as soon as the emergency council session was called, at his request. Earlier in the day Eralp had handed a copy of the Turkish statement to Thant together with a note saying his govera- ment had decided "to take ap- propriate action" if the Cypriot overnment did not comply with urkey's de " The note added that '"'the force which will be sent to the island . . . will be entrusted with the exclusive task of put- ting an end to the massacre perpetrated by the Greek-Cyp- riot terrorist organizati + jon against the Turkish commun- ity." Rossides told the council Tur- key's premier had threatened an invasion Friday night. Eralp replied that this "'ru- mor" was "a figment of some- body's imagination" and added that the invasion couldn't o:cur Friday night since it already was Saturday in Turkey. He added that it was a great source of satisfaction for Tur- key that the peace force now was being sent. Greek Ambassador Dimitri S. Bitsios said a Turkish invasion would "automatically and im- mediately" result in Greek in- tervention. Earlier in the day, after re- ceiving a copy of Turkey's warning. Thant had appealed to the Turkish government to re- consider its position and allow time for the UN force to get to Cyprus -- "however much pa- tients this may require.' Thant had asked a half-dozen countries for troops -immedi- ately after the Cyprus force was authorized by the council March 4. Britain, already helping to keep peace in its former colony, had promised to supply half the personnel for a 7,000-man force. Swedes Build Up 700-Man UN Force STOCKHOLM (AP)--A Swed- ish battalion of 700 men will be ready to leave for Cyprus around April 10 to join the UN peacekeeping force there, the Swedish defence department said today. Swedish military authorities, who will have to act fast to get the battalion ready in time, are hoping to get as many soldiers as possible who have served in the UN forces in The Congo and the Gaza strip. JEAN CLAUDE Messier, 26, facing camera, and An- tonio Faschino, 37, appear in police van in New York City Friday night en route to jail following booking on charges of Sullivan Law violation and criminally receiving stolen NEW YORK (AP)--Two Ca- nadians, escapees from a Mont- real jail and suspected members of Montreal's Balaclava gang, were seized Friday on a Man- hattan street and linked with a Nassau County robbery netting in cash. Acting on a tip by Quebec au- thorities, police staked out a $275-a-month apartment on West 57th Street for 25 hours. Detec- tives seized the pair as they strolled along the street near the apartment house, and subdued them after a struggle. The men face arraignment to- day in criminal court. The men were not armed, but police said they found a loaded automatic pistol and _ three loaded revolvers in the apart- ment, The two, Jean Messier, 26, and Antonio Facchino, 37, were booked on charges of Sullivan law (anti- weapons) violations Anti-US. MONEY The United States has prom- mated $6,000,000 needed to fi- nance the force for three} months. | Britain has pledged $1,000,000, | Italy $250,000, Australia the equivalent of $112,000, and The) Netherlands $100,000. | Canada will pay the way of| her contribution of armed] scale nuclear power plant. forces. LIBREVILLE (AP)--A "U.S. go home'"' campaign is spread- ing among the French commu- nity in the thriving west African nation of Gabon, where 250 Am- ericans live. A grenade and shotgun attack] on the U.S. embassy last week Coffin's Brother Suspected atone QUEBEC (CP) -- Suggestions] the controversial case was ap-|both Wilbert Coffin and his run from two years to life im-\of bungling and drunkenness|pointed by the Quebec govern-|brother Donald were involved early in the investigation into sylvaia hunters were made Friday by a Crown prosecutor in a cross-examination of Henri Doyon, a former sergeant in the Quebec Provincia] Police Youthful' Crown Prosecutor Jean Bienvenue, acting as coun- sel to Chief Inspector J. A. Matte of the QPP and Deputy Attorney-General C. E. Cantin, | also suggested that Mr. Doyon| had given lawyers information |had broken his oath of discre-| about which he hadn't advised |tion while a detective and had/his superiors. withheld evidence in the Wilbert Coffin murder case. Coffin was convicted of the murder of the hunters and was hanged Feb. 10, 1956. A royal commission into the preparation | ment early this year. It followed publication of a |book by Montreal author Jacques Hebert called J'accuse les Assassins de-Coffin (I ac- jcuse Coffin's assassins) in |which it was contended Coffin | was railroaded to the gallows |. Mr. Bienvenue asked Friday jwhether Mr. Doyon hadn't of- ten talked to reporters during the trial and also whether he | Mr. Doyon said he "didn't be- lieve" he had ever described Coffin to Mr. Hebert as a gen- jerous, cheerful man who would |give a friend the shirt. off his back. in some way in the slayings and he at first suspected Donald, who never was charged. He admitted telling Noel Dor- ion, Crown prosecutor at the Coffin trial in 1954, only five months ago that he believed both men had been involved. Donald 'Coffin is expected to testify before the commission moves to Montreal April 7. Mr. Bierivenue asked whether Mr. Doyon, in charge of .the | QPP Gaspe detachment in 1953, |hadn't been told by Mr. Cantin ja few days after the hunters |were missed to get cracking on \the case. | Mr. Doyon denied that after the first of the animal-torn bod- ies had -been found, he went to and returned later to find it had been moved. "There was no question of murder at that time," he said. He thought the men might have died of food poisoning, then been eaten by animals. Myr. Doyon admitted that at times in the investigation he had drunk in the morning, af- ternoon and night, but Capt. Matte and Capt. Raoul Sirois. replaced him as chief investi- gators, He denied animosity about this, Mr, Bienvenue asked if he hadn't mentioned, in front of other officers, getting rid of "the smart guys from Quebec'"' and cleaning up the case. Mr. Doyon didn't deny this. He said Capt. Matte had called him names and treated him like a subaltern. in hi¢ own Drive Grows In Gabon to get out. No culprits have been found. French embassy officials say more attacks are possible by angry Frenchmen. Rumors alleging American backing of a recent abortive coup d'etat against President Leon Mba shave given rise to the tension among Gabon's 6,000 French residents. Many Frenchmen charge that the United States wants to upset France's favored position in Gabon, which 'supplies uranium \to the French atomic industry. They accuse the United States Qf trying to meddle in a coun- try langely directed by French experts and closely co-operating with France. U.S. DENIES The U.S. embassy has _for- Mally denied the accusations. 'I always praise France's role here and the' efforts of French residents,"' said U.S.~Ambassa- dor Charles' Darlington. The French embassy agrees there has been no American in- terference. , Nevertheless, the French community generally has disregarded all explana- tions, Thus' fat, no American 'has been injured and no evacua- tion hag taken .place, although a plane' stood by. at Libreville $750,000 in securities and $85,000; was meant to-warm Americans property, Police said the men are alleged to be members of a Canadian robbery ring call- ed 'The Hoodman," of which nine members are in Cana- dian police custody. ; (AP Wirephoto) Hooded Gang Suspects Nabbed By N.Y. Police and criminally receiving stolen property. In the apartment building po- lice recovered $500,000 in nego- tiable securities missing in the robbery last Feb. 16 of Mrs. |Marie Rushmore of Westbury, on Long Island. : Messier and Facchino broke out of jail Feb. 5 while awaiting trial for armed robbery and other' charges with 10 other men of the alleged gang. A_ third man who escaped is still at large. Also in the flat police found two women, They were identi- fied as Monique. Carraer, 22, of Montreal, and Jacqueline Bou- cher, 21, of Montreal. The women were booked on |charges of harboring criminals. Hurt By NICOSIA--The tense situation over troubled Cyprus appeared to ease from the brink of- war today following a Turkish state- ment welcoming urgent moves to set up a United Nations peacekeeping force for the is- land. The Turkish statement, issued after a cabinet meeting late Friday, superseded an earlier warning to Cyprus of Turkish unilateral intervention if sweep- ing measures were not taken to restore peace and normality to the island. Reports that 10,000 Turkish troops had embarked in ships at Iskenderun, a seaport on Turkey's southern coast facing Cyprus, had backed the Turkish warning and heightened the al- ready sizzling tension in the three-month crisis. In Athens, a Greek govern- ment spokesman expressed sat- isfaction with the Turkish state- ment. Following a_ two-hour emergency cabinet meeting, a government source said the Greek armed forces would be in a state of preparedness until the UN force arrived in Cyprus and guaranteed the integrity of the island. A small reconnaissance party of Canadia soldiers and air- men was expected to arrive in Cyprus later in the day to ar- range for the landing of about 1,150 Canadian troops tenta- rho earmarked for the peace 'orce, WANTS ONE OTHER Canadian participation in the peace force is contingent on at least one other country besid Turk-Cypriots Move talks in Athens, where he had attended the funeral of King Paul, said if the Turks landed in- Cyprus the Greeks would come too, He saiq the Turkish warning constituted "further untenable" interference in the internal af- fairs of Cyprus. In Paris, the NATO perma- nent council met at the request of Greece to discuss the situa- tion which, due to Greece and Turkey's membership in the Western defence alliance, has been regard. I as a potential se- rious NATO problem, PEOPLE RELAX On Cyprus itself, people re- laxed as the threat of a possible Turkish invasion receded. But there still were rumblings, Several shots were heard in Nicosia suburbs this morning, They were thought to be acci- dental. Turkish- Cypriots appeared disappoinged th: ' Turkish troops had not landed. Greek-Cypriots who had been standing by ready to repel the threatened 'invasion went to bed as news reached Nicosia of the impending arrival of the ad- vance party of the UN peace- keeping force. Acting Foreign Affairs Minis- ter Mrs. Stella Soulioti said announcement of the departure of the Canadian r for Cyprus has ' ended om threa its of interven- ion," TOMMIES IN MIDDLE British Tommies in positions between the warring factions Britain, which aiready is on tha; island, joining the UN group. At the United Nations;-the Se- curity Council Friday unani- mously passed a resolution for all members to refrain from any action that might worsen the situation in Cyprus, Meeting in an emergency ses- sion to consider Cypriot charges that a Turkish invasion was im- minent, the council called on Secretary-General U Thant to continue his efforts to set up the peace force. Earlier Greek-Cypriot Presi- dent Makarios had rejected the joked, sunbathed or cleaned weapons, : What. did they think of UN troops arriving to help keep the peace? "The best of luck to them," answered one British private. The British have been spat on, stoned, cursed and even shot rat on several occasions. They returned the fire a few times. British troops were called to the island in December when fierce fighting between Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots broke out after Greek-Cypriot made pro- posals for changes in the Cy- Turkish warning and following prus constitution. De Gaulle Sees '64 As Year For Trade Gains PARIS (Reuters) Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle leaves Sunday on a state visit to Mex- ico to begin an ambitious dip- lomatic plan for reviving French relations with Latin America, | France now can be said to have recovered from. the wounds of the two world wars tani the long, costly struggle in | Algeria, "The economy is flourishing, its armament being modern- ized, foreign trade expanding and the French voice listened to with respect by many of the uncommitted nations. De Gaulle sees this year as ripe for invigorating the links between France and the Latin nations of the American hemis- phere, The French Jeader was "most warmly" encouraged to do this by the late president Kennedy during his visit here in "May, 1961, a close aide of de Gaulle recalled here this week 'Liberals To Meet Flag Issue Date' HALIFAX (CP)--State Secre- | tary Lamontagne says the fed- eral government is committed |to present a proposal on a na- tional flag for Canada before April 22, 1965, and "I think the commitment will be met." | In answer to a question at a }public meeting here Friday | about what was being done to }provide Canada with a national \flag, he said he could go no Virginia Martin, 16, St. John's, Nfld. high school girl, was named outdoors girl of Canada for 1964 at the open- | ing of the Canadian National Sportsman's Show in Toronto Fsigay night. Miss Martin won MISS OUTDOORS coast to coast for the $500 cash award. The competition is sponsored by the Canadian Wildlife. Federation, The win- ner is five feet 1-2 inches tall, weighs 120 and measures 37- 26-38, HOSPITAL 723-2211 . |and presentation of evidence in| He also testified he thought|look at it, left it in the woodsl office. over seven other finalists from (CP Wirephoto) 'einport. ast Sunday. . |funther than that. ra 4

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