Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Apr 1964, p. 2

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naga natinat are EO ESTE MR 2S Oe Ge GR ERR cigacas prepa igs Thought For Today Weather Report, Relatives are people whose shortcomings include long stay- ings. VOL. 93 -- NO. 96 Friday. he Oshawa Times Authorized @s Second Class Mail Post Ottawa and for payment of Postage Office Department Not Over : in Cash. Price 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1964 A few showers tonight with chance of thunderstorms. Cloudy TWENTY-FOUR PAGES CLC MONTREAL (CP)--The Cana- dian Labor Congress has been|puble censure, denial. of CLC|Ontario Federation of Labor, Alt of another union. They include| ers Rule n Dealing With nternal Fights David Archer, president of the given new powers to deal with|aid and services and CLC pro-|appealed to the 1,800 delegates jurisdictional conflicts between unions, The fifth constitutional con- vention of the 1,000,000 - mem- ber CLO agreed Wednesday to the new international disputes procedure by an overwhelming vote All but about 20 of the 1,600 delegates approved changes to the CLC constitution to permit mediation and impartial arbi- tration of inter-union rivairies. They also endorsed penaiiies that can be invoked against a union found guilty of attacking the membership or jurisdiction! tection if attacked by another union. | The sanctions give the CLC) more room in which to move! in punishing an affiliate guilty) of raiding -- without imposing the maximum penalty of expul- sion from the ranks of the cen-| tral labor body. | William Mahoney, a CLC | vice - president as well as Cana- ldian 'director of the United |Steelworkers Union, hailed the inew plan as a better way of |working out disputes without |'dismembering"' the labor movement NONG TRIAL Ignore Payoffs Hint, Jury Told to endorse the plan. "We can't go on expelling af- filiates from this congress be: cause of jurisdictional dis putes,"' he said. In recent years, the CLC has ; kicked out the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the) Seafarers' International Union of Canada and the Interna-| tional Union of Operating En- gineers--shoving more than 50,-| » 000 workers outside the main- stream of organized labor in the process, James Black, Toronto, a rep-| resentative of the AFL - CIO} building trades department, ex- pressed doubts about the wis- dom of the plan. He said it con-| tained the "seeds of dissolution if not decimation of the CLL."'| 4 SEES BETTER IMAGE | J, P. Loughran, representa- tive of the American Federa-| tion of Technical Engineers, | once expelled from the CIC! Thatcher ' REGINA (CP) -- The Liberal party won the Saskatchewan election Wednesday, on the ba- sis of the election-night count, bringing to an end 20 years of CCF government--the only so- cialist administration in North America. While the Liberal's narrow margin looked safe on_ initial . returns, both Liberal Leader Ross Thatcher and Premier Woodrow Lloyd said it will be up to six weeks before a victor is known with certainty. Some recounts are possible as margins are paper-thin. And an estimated 25,000 declared and jater readmitted, said the internal disputes plan will help| and advance ballots won't be counted until May 13, the date TORONTO (OP)--Mr. Justice the late United States Senator Dalton Wells cautioned the Su-|Joseph McCarhy and it had preme Court jury trying Ralphidone "incalculable damage." K. Farris on perjury charges| In the administration of Brit- today not to let any suggestions |ish justice, the judge said, there of municipal corruption influ-|was no room for any theory ence_its judgment. that wrongdoing of one kind He said much of the evidence |should lead to conviction on an- has been surrounded by a "fe-|other. The jury must confine it- tid atmosphere of municipal|self to determining whether corruption" but that had noth-|Farris committed perjury. ing to do with the specific) 'you will be doing a great| charges against the Vancouver) wrong otherwise." |correct labor's tarnished public| when all results must be filed officially. 'Final standing based on elec- tion-night tabulation: 1964 1960 22 «38 32.617 1 image because of jurisdictional) disputes. Main opposition developed among spokesmen for building trades unions. The convention also approved| pay raises for the four top of- ficers of the CLC, but turned down a proposal to increase the number of general vice - presi-| "THAT'S MY BOY" BEAMS MOTHER OF NEW SASK. LEADER dents to five from four. Ba % 4 59 «(55 The OCF held 34 seats and the' financier, president of Northern Ontario Natural Gas Company, | The all-male jury, now in the 'dicements against end of the presiding judge's ad- ir Justice Wells warned the) jury notte proceed on' the the-| ory that, because there might) have been wrongdoing of one kind, someone must be con- vieted of wrongdoing of another The two charges against Far- ris arise from statements he Lp lanthes had 21 when the legis- Man S Future hature wad dissolved five weeks ago. Redistribution increased made before Ontario govern- in 1958 and 1962 concerning the distribution of NONG stock, par-, ticularly blocks which went to municipal figures of four On- trio communities. dark grey suit and matching tie, sat leaning forward in the prisoner's dock with his arms folded as Mr. Justice Wells, a aia <ea* Turk-Cypriots Reject Makarios Peace (fer doin to $20,000 a year from $16,- 000; Secretary - Treasurer Don- ald MacDonald to $17,500 from $14,000 and executive vice-pres- idents William. Dodge and Jo-| Seph_ Morns .to $16,000 - from NICOSIA (AP) -- A TurkiSh-{be no doubt that it does notjany acts as suggested by Ma- Cypriot spokesman rejected|wish the island's pacification,|karios," President Makarios' offer of a/because it thinks it will be able| It was the first time Maka- general amnesty and other|to create partitionist conditions|rios had offered a general am-|placed him ina situation in peace proposals Wednes-|by the force of arms. In such ajnesty to the Turkish-Cypriot mi-|which fertility threatens his fu-/HAVE NARROW MARGINS |day night, saying acceptance|case we shall have to face the/nority since .the communal dis-/ture, Boston gynecologist Dr.) -Four Liberals and four CCF the size of the house by four members to 59. ote Three of the doubtful seats Fertili . MD were in Saskatoon which elects s five members. The other was " ' ;. ., \rural Canora in east - central TORONTO (CP) -- Man's in-|saskatchewan. One Liberal was creasing ability to control fact-|joading in Saskatoon, CCF can- |Ors which had acted as natural/qiqates had the edge in the }checks on over-population has! other undecided seats. Threatened By ment investigating committees The financier, dressed in a $13,000. A number of union delegates) expressed misgivings about in- creasing the pay_of the CLL of- ficers, arguing that if they are SASK. LIBERALS E 20-YEAR CCF REGI Wins Narrow Victory ~ |depression days of the early 1930s, was voted into power, | The Mast nip-and-tuck election |which resulted in a government change in Saskatchewan was in |1929 when Conservatives, Pro- gressives and Independents formed a coalition with 28 Lii- erals in the opposition. The house had' 63 members. ° This lasted until 1934 when the Lib- erals were returned. | Premier Lioyd said in hip home riding in Biggar the out- come would not be established until final vote counts are made in three weeks. * | He said the only reason that occurred to him for the close ness of the vote was the 'ex pensive and tremendously television campaign which have had greater attraction. thas we anticipated." This was a erence to the Liberal campaign, LLOYD WINS HANDILY . & This was Mr., Lioyd's general election as premier he won handily in Biggar. But four cabinet ministers lost te \Liberals. ne Mr. Thatcher, a former -OC# member of Parliament, said if Regina "As long as we have* majority of one, we intend form a government." * He said earlier in Moose J it could be a few weeks bef the Liberals knew whether they would form the government, However, in a speech here, hi referred to.a Liberal "victory. Our Program kind. veteran of 18 years on the/|"paid like bosses, they'll begin At times during the trial, he ; ' ; : rs igik: 1 Waa: nimbent ee bench, instructed the jurymen.'to think like bosses. |would be an admission of guilt.|situation by all means.' jpute erupted in street fighting)John Rock said Wednesday. |members were elected with Makarios told a press confer-| The Turkish-speaking commu-|last December. The professor emeritus from/margins under 100 votes. In this ence he wished to demonstrate |nity, outnumbered four to one| The Greek-Cypriot leader also|Harvard University told an in- catgory for the Liberals were Is Best, made to establish guilt by as- sociation. However, he absolved the Crown of any deliberate in- tent to do that. AFTER FRANCHISES Shares in NONG had been given in 1957 to current and former municipal officials in Ontario, but there was no evi- dence of why they had been given or whose idea it was to give them. None of the persons involved had admitted to any deal, and the transactions had taken place after NONG ob- tained franchises in the various communities. | "I want to be careful not to let the fetid atmosphere of municipal corruption that has surrounded much of the evi- dence in this case affect you," the judge said. The practice of guilt by sociation, he noted, was : that had become. largely as-|8¢" Presumably would take sociated some years ago with|Some time to complete, a Informed sources in Dar es : Salaam, the capital of Tangan- . PM, Vanier s * Birthdays and Zanzibar have signed "ar- ticles of union" under which the OTTAWA (CP) -- Governor-|two states would become 'one General Vanier and Prime Min-|Sovereign state," it was an- ister Pearson both celebrate nounced their birthdays today. The Goy-| President Julius Nyerere of ernor-General is 76; Mr. Pear-| Tanganyika paid a visit to Zan- Zanzibar CP from AP-Reuters | DAR ES SALAAM--The pres- idents of Tanganyika and the neighboring island of Zanzibar have agreed to merge their| countries to form a new nation,! the government of Tanganyika announced today. Diplomatic sources in London said they thought the merger would diminish Communist in- fluence in. East Africa, But they added it could open the door to more Red penetration via Zan- zibar. The as-| British Commonwealth run from here. Tanganyikan coast-in the Indian Ocean. The presidents of Tanganyika With Tanganyika a : c ae one| office in London said the mer-f yika, said the new nation would (# Zanzibar is 22 miles off the § te "not only by words by also by|by the 445,000 Greek - Cypriots,|repeated his offer to dismantle|ternational symposium on birth) Birose, Hanley, Last Mountain, er es jdeeds our good will and de-jhas demanded partition' of Cyp-jall Greek fortifications on the|control pills that man has over-/ Nipawin; for the CCF Kelsey, jsire for the island's pacifica-|rus to resolve the conflict. The) war-torn island if the Turks fol-/come natural checks on popula-|/Pelly, Turtleford and Watrous. ;tion."' But he added: Greek-Cypriots, many of whom|low suit and to help resettle|tion to such an extent 'that the! The jection was the 10th pro- "If the Turkish-Cypriot lead-|Want union with Greece, have|Turkish villagers forced out of|medical profession alone is in a vital vote in the last 18 ership does not show the neces- rejected this demand, |their homes by the violence. He/position to control the fate of months and the first wiiere a sery_understanding, there 8"/saIpD PROPAGANDA hg a agai. Oo audience of so ,|government was defeated. The | Defence Minister Osman Orek|""* 8h¢ Property. |500 United States and Canadian|/@st Change of a provincial gov- . | termed Makarios' proposals pro-| I physicians: "It is the vince ernment was in New Brunswick Couple Left (ee ee ee ee [responsibility of obstet-four years ago when the Liber- |not submit proposals like these risiana 'and ynecologists to|#/8 took over from the Progres- in the form of a press confer- | : 8) pee sive Conservatives. John Cassells and defence coun- sel Louis Assalay, he said there is 'nothing objectionable' about Mrs. Jensen. wanting to testify in French. He said a witness "can give evidence in his or her native tongue,'"' At this point, Mr, Justice Hughes ordered a trial within a trial to determine whether Bi- nette was mentally fit to stand The Governor-General his birthday at his Government} son 67. marks| LBJ WINS TOUGH zibar Wednesday and met Pres-| ger eae ident Abeid Karume and other} $27 856 i IS STRANGE UNION | hild ence, WHITK Ik Ow we cot 40 |bring about the control of con- , The uni T i ¢ 1 ren ems Page So ae ception." The Liberal. party has gov- ag mR yer sha Hive {hear of them. erned this big grain-growing est political marriages t sult R ] | }said, any form of life, includ- ics the wage of iedepenneaee Court u es jamnesty would amount to an| jing man could, if unchecked,|since Saskatchewan was estab- jadmission of guilt," Orek de- lished in 1905, the last time in I ; to spill off the earth. and Mrs. Carl Shearer of|to defend life and penuerty tea Awarded | Thorah Township, about eight|attacks and are not guilty of} | HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP)--A! TESTIFIES IN FRENCH on two-years suspended sen-| _\tence Wednesday for leaving jand costs have been awarded in {Ontario Supreme Court as an week-old baby, alone for a/ jweekend, Bound For Cyprus |just north of Stoney Creek, Ont | The court was told that po-| TRENTON, Ont. (CP) -- An|in which six persons were killed '|dren's Aid Society visited the ; | The awards were against i re | Fe d Shearer home last September| @nadian Army prsonnel ont ome Sellery of Sudbury. atfd nguda e u + | Officials said the children: were|base here today bound for Nic-/onto. Sellery was the driver of| OTTAWA (CP)--A 35-year-old had no other food to eat than a ce .1x|lision with a car in which Ro-| Wednesday to testify in French basket of rotten tomatoes. The plane, which left at 9:15 oe and Shirley Widdifield and|in the Ontario Supreme Court ' vega were in filthy condi-/hours in the air with only alyemert Widdifield were travel-|Sam Hughes oS * ing T . rs th lorderey er Sipe eC nmgiisn, land father, who are 28 and 32\to change aircrews. toe ee ener Ot We lyears old respectively, were) The arrival will bring to 1,088), ; Jay|Mrs. Agathe Jensen, a resident | eae go tevin ri Pass ld of Christ the King Church Rec- children. in Cyprus. ' ' petit Three awards were madel®$ 2 witness at the capital mur- Wednesday afternoon by Mr. der trial of 18-year-old Reginald ministers. Zanzibar is » of the s ic i : | Within two generations, . he iy oe P nane To accept his offer of an| Damages x province for a total of 3 4years that has swept over Africa. im reproduce in sufficient numbers Neh a ih hile BRECHIN, Ont. (CP) -- Mr.|Clared. "The Turks only fought} 1944 when the CCF, born in the #\miles south of here, were placed! total of $27,856.92 in. damages ence 130 Army Men five children, including a three-| Wi Ss e jaftermath to a two-car collision itne Ss 1n S lice and officials from the Chil-|RCAF Yukon' aircraft with 130/11 SePYember, 1962. and found the children alone,|board took off from the RCAF) Gorries Leasing Limited of Tor- gin various states of undress and osia, Cyprus, la leased car which was in col-/Crown witness won, the righ Police said the house and|4-m. was expected to spend 18 their grandparents Mr. and Mrs|after a clash with Mr. Justice Police said the mother|brief stop at Marville, France) Widdifield family, Mrs. Edna|_ The incident took place after laway with their other three the number of Canadian troops : |nelle of Sudbury were killed. jtory 'Apartment, was sworn in Justice Neil Fraser to occu.|Binette. He is changed with the pees trial. The jury ruled that he was TEST two psychiatrists and a psychol- shooting of. Paul Mercier, 22,)ogist. House residence in Ottawa. Mr.| Pearson's regular working schedule will be broken by four brief birthday tributes from cabinet, party and staff col- leagues. His cabinet ministers were to present Mr. Pearson with a gift. | The Civil Service Federation of Canada will give him a framed) picture of the new Lester B.| Pearson tulip developed Dutch bulb growers. He will receive a gift of fish-| ing gear from the National Lib-| eral. Women's Federation. His office staff has a small party planned. The prime quiet evening watching the hockey game. minister plans a at his home Stanley Cup) | CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE 'NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | WASHINGTON (AP)--A five-|bers financial gains in exchange'railroad industry" Johnson and-take agreement has ended'for letting the railways reduce said. py the threat of a United States|employment. Just' how many "railway strike, with President|jobs will be affected or how threat of a scheduled strike at|Classes of train: cre The agreement ended the Johnson a victor in the tough-|much money the railways may 12:01 a.m. Saturday. Johnson est domestic test of his admin-!save won't be known for some|had estimated a strike would|ment. ; agree-/have made A few hours after the agree-|ment is translated into contract|jcan workers' istration. ment was reached, two dissi-' dent union officials threatened ,|to strike part of the New York TWO OTHERS FAJLED Central Railroad east of Buf- falo But sources involved in negotiations in Washington dis- counted the possibility that the) threat would be carried out. Johnson went before televi- the) lsion cameras Wednesday night! to announce settlement of the long, highly complex dispute a little more than 48 hours before a scheduled strike threatened. to tie the U.S. economy in knots In effect, it gave union mem-' f years of bargaining had failed time after the general language. ide health conditions paralysed the economy 7,00,000 Amer- endangered and the virtually The unions won pay increases In herding union and. manage-|for railway yard employees, ex- ment negotiators White House talks, Johnson stamped his brand indelibly on U.S, labor history and achieved what two former presidents, Congress, the courts and five to accomplish mileage now required to man and successfully |pense-money-for: overnight lay- |through 13 days of emergency|overs, maintenance of present payments, paid holidays for hourly - paid employees The railways gained the right to cut the number of emplovees self-pro- elled track maintenance equip seven "This agreement prevents -- ment and limited use of train we hope for all time--a crippl-|crews for yard work under cer-|east of ing and disastrous strike in the'tain conditions. « | pants of the Sellery car or} their survivors, | Aime Grenon, suing for Doug-| las Grenon, was awarded $3,000|!@st_ Dec. e e Rail Strike Averted = ea oats : Mrs: Wilsie .|tice Hughes after persisting in general and $517.50 special da-| Brunelle was} granted a judgment of $1,500| her request to give evidence in neral and $4457.52 special da-| French. Union withdrawal of demands 8° ployees and the pay for all;mages to «compensate for the ployees and gght pay for all|death of her husband, Joseph. w also rep-! Raion ce non ea for manage-! resented gains Douglas Seeks | Labor Backin The only unresolved issue was the railways' proposals to com-| bine some divisional train runs,} thus lengthening number _ of miles -before crews must be res) MONTREAL (OP) A ae lieved Douglas appealed to organized This issue will be referred tojlabor Wednesday for continued} a national committee of labor|support of the New Democratic} and management and two pri-}Party. vate mediators. Govern- ment spokesmen said there is|there is no room for politics) in| no possibility of a strike threat over the issue of|that there is divisional runs In Syracuse, the two dissident|the NDP leader said in an ad- oniof the Canadian Labor 'gress. Buffalo would go Strike, one of four persons killed in a hy this court," Mr. Justice Hughes| Ss lyou will speak it." Hughes had conferred during a| recess with Crown Attorney Man Gets 30 Days | hs |Martin, 32, of the Six Nations To argue, as some do, that\{ndian «reserve here. was sen-|whether she spoke fi tenced Wednesday to 30 days in} renewed/th> labor movement isto argue|jail for beating his two-year-old no room for life|step-son with a maple stick be- itself in the labor movement,"|¢ jOn a second char unionists said the Central's line|dress to: the biennial conventionting his wife, Margaret, he was|sen Con-| sentenced |rent, Dr. Edward Houston, one of the psychiatrists, said that Bi- nette had symptoms of schizo- phrenia but "this does not af- fect his ability to instruct coun- sel." Dr. Claude McKnight said the accused had "a rich but morbid fantasy life." After Mrs. Jensen had been obbery attempt at the rectory 22. Mrs. Jensen was ordered out "You will speak English in aid. "You understand it and spoke and understood English jbut preferred to testify J ustice| French However, after Mr, | Mr. Justice Hughes said that nA get |Mrs. |to the grand jury atid had not Used Stick On Son that when a tried for one of the most serious jnot be turned into a theatre of BRANTFORD (CP) -- Rupert|any: kind. "I just prefer French," she re- jplied. "My privilege," proceedings are being con- ducted in English, If Mirs. Jen- did not understand and concur-|speak English an interpreter lwould be provided. ause he. would not: stop oryings 2 of assault- 10 to days Liberal Says REGINA (CP) -- Ross: That- cher, Saskatchewan Liberal: leader, told a cheering crowd of supporters in Regina's Trianon Ballroom Wednesday night that his party had won a victory ip the provincial general election "because of our program." | "Our program is business- like,' he said, 'It looks as if we have 31 or 34 seats. But as long as we have a majority of one, we intend to form a goy- jernment. "We're going to have a mid |dle-of-the-road reform govern jment. I feel a good campaign |has resulted in a good thing for |Saskatchewan. Mr. Thatcher was cheered jafter almost every phrase of his broadcast address. He said a campaign rally in Regina April 15 which attracted more than 6,000 persons was the "turning point" in the came paign for the Liberals. * fit after it heard evidence from § jsworn in, she told the court she § in § Jensen spoke in English 2 objected at that time. He said: # | person is being § of all-crimes the court should = Mrs, Jensen was asked ; Mr. Justice Hughes Said the = 4GATHE JENSEM

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