Thought For Today One man everybody takes his hat off to is the VOL. 93 -- NO. 132 barber. Price Not Over | 10 Cents per Copy Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1964 Authorized-as Second: Class: Ma! Ottawa and for payment Weather Report Sunny with a few cloudy peviods, Warmer on Saturday, il Post Office Department of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGE RCs Ease Cremation Restriction VATICAN GITY (AP)--Pope;tions do not change the church's| Paul has approved a relaxation in Roman Catholic restrictions on cremation. A Vatican source said today the Holy Office, the church agency which oversees faith and morals, had transmitted te instructions to bishops throughout the world. The source said the instruc- Typhoid Disaster Warning ABPRDEEN (Reuters)--This typhoid-stricken Scottish port to- day reeled under the impact of a third epidemic wave which the chief health officer warned could become a national disaster. By Thursday night the num- ber of cases mounted to 334-- an increase of 33 on the previous night. There were other cases re- ported in Aberdeen County. Banffshire, hArbroath, Edi burgh, Dundee, Glasgow Stirl- ing, Inverness and in the Eng- lish towns of Tring in Hertford- shire and Walthamstow near London. | The Aberdeen medical health officer Dr. Iam MacQueen, said Thursday "I think that if this is not checked in Aberdeen, there is a possibility that it could be- come a national disaster." The Aberdeen figure has al- ready surpassed the 310 total in Britain's last major -typhoied epidemic at Croydon, southern England, in 1937. | | | & 'only»one death. has been re- ported in Aberdeen so far CAPITAL DEATH -- PUNISHMENT ? BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-- While selecting a panel for a murder trial,-assistant dis- trict attorney Thomas | | M. Daley of Erie County asked a prospective juror: 'Do you believe in capital punishment?" "Not by death," was the reply. The prospective juror was excused long opposition to cremation but broaden te conditions under which it may be. permitted. Under an 1886 Holy Office de-| cree, Catholics are forbidden to ask in their wills for crema- tion. Violation means no relig- ious funeral service. Catholics also are prohibited from seeing that cremation orders of an- other person are carried out. However, Catholic theologians long have held that cremation is not intrinsically wrong, and permission has been granted in such unusual cases a@ epidem- ic. The church object to crema- ton on the ground that the body should be kept intact be- cause it will be reunited with the soul in 'eternity. Cremation also was identified by the church in the 19th cen- tury with atheists and material- ists who the church felt used it to show disbelief'in immortal- ity. CITES REASONS The new instructions say that the anti-religious aspect of cre- mation has less emphasis to- day. The intructions also note that in many countries there are reasons of national policy of custom for cremation. For example, land for cemeteries may be restricted, or cremation may be a tradition among a people recently converted to Christianity. Welfare Problem | 1 | 500 Miners TROOPS ENFORCE PEACE IN SEOUL Student Riots Force Koreans Resignation SEOUL (AP) -- Kim Chong pil, a chief target of the mount- ing student demonstrations South Korea, resigned today as chairman of President Chung Hee Park's ruling Democratic Republican party Park accepted Kim's resigna- tion in an effort to quiet the swelling public discontent. He had rejected a resignation from Kim during the weekend Kim, 37, was Park's right- hand man, former head of the secret police and a key plotter Debate Continues HAMILTON (CP)--An argu-|rector of the Welfare Council,|object of student wrath. The Forty-three petsons died in| ment over the welfare needs ofjwho made the statement about|current wave of student unrest the 1937 Croydon epidemic but|C@nadians continued unabated|Professor Madden i Thursday as a Welfare Council director charged. that Professor) John Madden of the University of Western Ontario "may be an economist but he obviously can't add up a family budget." Professor Madden had told a| seminar at the Canadian con- ference on social work Tuesday that poverty in Canada was a "'myth" created by social work- ers to give themselves some- thing to do and by a sensational jpress seeking to increase circu-| jn lation. of His statement came the day after announcement of a mas- sive study of poverty which would cost $250,000 nouncement had been made by Reuben C. Baetz, executive di- Another Invas Of France Begins CAEN (Reuters) -- Another invasion of France began Thurs- day by men reliving D-Day-- the storming of Hitler's Europe} 20 years ago. Former servicemen from Can-| ada, the United States, Britain) and France poured into this) town Thursday in advance of the anniversary of the historic air-sea invasion of June 6, 1944. The soldier returning to Nor- mandy found little of the debris of war. Instead of 9,000 houses razed to the ground he found a 'proud new town of wide streets, with orchards and gar dens, There were only the cemeter-| ies and memorials to remind him Of the battle for the Nor- mandy coast which cost the in vading force 2,132 lives on D- Day. Some 200,000 men stormed ashore in this Normandy area Delegations from the wartime allies will remember the dead late today evening in a search- light parade on the sands at Hermanville-sur-Mer. Gen. Omar Bradley heads the U.S. delegation which today will attend a service at the British cemetery at Douvres-la-Deliv- rance. He will be accompanied by Deputy Defence Secretary Cyrus Vance Canada's representatives will be led by Veterans Affairs Min ister Roger Teillet, while the minister of defence for the navy, Ea Jellico, heads Britain's delegation. France will be rep- resented by Veteran Affairs Minister Jean Sainteny The cemeteny at Douvres Delivrance is on the eastern CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | n an inter- view. He said" he hoped 'Professor Madden was speaking with tongue in cheek to stimulate dis- {cussion when he criticized the|al law over the whole coun- poverty study. But in another interview, the ;professor said he did not have his tongue in his cheek, he meant every word and he still considered an average $2,000 annual income for a family of four the difference between be- & poor and being well enough Mr. Baetz.said Thursday that to leave the impression that lent society "is preposterous: He did not offer an alterna- |tive figure to professor Mad- " | in} -lin the 1961 military coup that| brought Park into power. Park also ordered all col- leges and universities in the country closed until July 4, a day before the start of the two- month summer vacation. Eighty-five schools with a total enrolment of 125,000 are. af- fected. Leading universities had been the breeding ground for the riotous demonstrations which this week have raised the gravest challenge so far to Park's regime. The government warned that it would take disciplinary meas- jures against any heads of} schools whose students partici-| pated in future demonstrations. HATED BY STUDENTS As a leader in recent negoti-) ations to restore' normal] rela- tions with Japan, Korea's old jenemy, Kim was a particular | | began last March to protest the italks with Japan. Seoul remained aquiét under! martial law. But .despite-a gov- ernment threat to extend mar- jtry, students demonstrated in five cities today. The worst out- break occurred in Pusan, South Korean's second largest city. | Police resorted to tear gas for) the first time in Pusan to break} up a gathering of students at {Donga University, Later, 1,000 rock - throwing students laid siege to a police station until reinforcements ar- rived. From the police station, some 500 students descended on The an-|poverty is a myth in an afflu-|!e Pusan city hall, stoning the |building. About 40 or 50 were) jarrested. A total of 2,500 high school ;Students staged anti ment demomstrations in Kim-| - govern-} In Taegu, 17 law students continued a hunger strike they began Thursday, demanding the end of military rule in Seoul and the release of students ar-! rested in earlier demonstra- tions, TROOPS ON DUTY Two divisions of forced martial law in and around Seoul. Troops concen- trated on roads leading to the presidential mansion and the capitol, where 30,000 rioted Wednesday. With Seoul quiet, Park short- ened a dusk-to-dawn curfew by three hours--from midnight . to 4 a.m.--and ordered primary schools reopened Monday. Although the student out- bursts initially were aimed at the negotiations with Japan, the basic cause of the unrest is South Korea's widespread pov- erty and inflation. troops en- Benefit By 'Uranium Job | OTTAWA (CP) Denison |Mines Limited has.won a $5,025,600 contract which is ex- pected to keep some 500 uran- jium miners on their jobs for janother year at Elliot Lake, | Ont. | | Trade Minister Sharp an- nounced Thursday night that Denison got the order to sup- ply 1,200,000 pounds of uranium oxide to the United Kingdom be- cause it was the company that promised to provide the most} working time by filling the or- der and by building up its own extra stockpile of uranium at its own expense, | The company will be filling out the undelivered part of an order that originally went to) Gunnar Mines. The government will pay $4.188 a pound, Since the contract has gone to only one firm, it means that possibly some 700 other miners will be laid off at other mines June 30, when the government's one - year, $25,000,000 subsidy ends for uranium' producers. They are in the Elliot Lake an Bancroft areas of Ontario-- where uranium producers have had mines facing closure when the government's stockpiling 'subsidy is ended, | | VIOLENT STRIKE 'Mediator Hopes Weekend Ending LANSING, Mich, (AP)--Mich-,Romney' for allowing Essex to|ity either say nothing at all or igan's mediation director today|operate with non-union empioy-|suggest a study of our own po- sounded hopeful that a weekend/ees, while using the National|sition before we talk with any- jsettlement could be reached in|Guard to keep peace. lthe violent Essex Wire Corpo-) } ration strike which brought the;}company of 'unfair labor prac-|three conversations had taken National Guard to Hillsdale. Malcolm R. Lovell Jr., chair-|98-day strike, and sought a le-|the United Church during the man of the state labor media- ful that we can finish this (bar gaining) up today or Satur- ON THE LLAM SOUTH HOLLAND, (AP)--Disaster Jloomed when Louie the llama took it on the lam. Louie lleaped from Jhis pen Wednesday at the home of Clarence Smit, 46, in Thorn- ton Township, lleaving behind the Smits, assofted poines and sheep, and two other llamas, including his llama mama. About 50 llama hunters took up the chase. They and the lama sueceeded only in tram- pling an onion patch and blocking traffic on the Calu- met Expressway. Milton Smit, 16, used a-| horse to chase Louie onto a liawn, There Clarence Smit smote Louie with a flying tac- kle and Haid him llow. Louie was lled back to 'his | pen to be reunited with Smit's | eight children, the' deer, the ponies, and his lama mama. | | | | | Presbyterian Church Union Talk Stopped OTTAWA (CP) -- The gov-/ ernment would be glad to dis-| play the proposed new national flag--with the maple leaf de- signa--on Parliament Hill for the je ification of MPs and the pub-/membe lic. Prime Minister Pearson said Thursday. But he gave no further de- jtails in answer to a Commons/|self had suggestion from Andrew Brewin (NDP--Toronto Greenwood). Aides outside the House said/ later they knew of no firm ar- rangement for such a display. In other developments Thurs- day in the continuing flag de- Ite: Opposition Leader Diefen- baker withdrew remarks made at a Wednesday night meeting in Toronto area at Speaker Alan Macnaughton's request. Mr. Diefenbaker's comments there were interpreted as accusing the three smaller Commons boost to $18,000 from $10,000 an- nuaily. : He was quoted as saying the lincrease had a "wonderful" ef-| lfect on Liberal support by the/re PEARSON OFFER DISPLAY OF FL tama ion | Dief Withdraws -- Ae ta . Money Remarks © The matter was raised onsa question of privilege by New Femocrat Leader T. C. Doug- las who said the remarks---if true--cast a reflection on all rs of Parliament. He said that included Conserva- tives, since all but a handful im- cluding Mr. Diefenbaker hin voted for the pay in- | New D emocrat Colin --- eron, Nanaimo - Cowichan: Islands, said on a question. f privilege: 'I do not prove jsit quietly under a slande jlie stated by an preposte |mountebank who will seize janything in his desperation. |that if a case of this kind ac- jcurs again outside the House.I |shall take the matter to courts myself.' és Robert Coates (PC -- Cumh- berland) told Mr. Pearson that | crease, [parties of supporting the new|threats have been made to the jmaple leaf flag in return' for|life of the wife and family jlest year's parliamentary Pay|Monday's organizer of a + jonstration favoring the Red n sign, bi | He also said only one tail outlet would sell the * \third parties and that votes by|Ensign and the rest appa: TORONTO (CP) -- The Pres-|some MPs would be cast on|feared retaliation. That one byterian Church in Canada has/principle "not that I love the/tailer was also threatened al decided to postpone further dis-/Red Ensign less, but $18,000;would Mr. Pearson guarantes cussions on inter-church union, Rev. G. D. Johnston of Brant- ford told the church's 90th gen- eral assembly Thursday. | Mr, Johnston, convenor of the! committee on inter-chunch rela-| tions, said the decision not to} enter negotiations with the United Church' of Canada is a result of a survey of thé 49 presbyteries in Canada in the| last few years. Church. more." ' protection against hoodlums? fe Stop-Goldwater _ Drive Faltering.. stietate WASHINGTON (AP) -- Two! The former vice - presi The survey had asked what) potential challengers of Senator|said such a move. "would church mémbers thought about| Barry Goldwater for the Repub-|badly split the party that vnity talks with the United/lican presidential nomination--/ever got the nomination |Richard M. Nixon and Gov-/find it wasn't worth anything i It revealed that "a few pres-/ernor William W. Scranton all." |byteries are in favor of imme-)of Pennsylvania --- have an-| jdiate discussions but the major-|mounced they'll have no part of Romney, in turn, accused the} tices and worse" in the bitter] |gal means to shut' down the} ition board, said he was "'hope-|firm's Hillsdale plant a second;ment, the talks did not touch | time. The governor called out the National Guard a week ago and| body,"' Mr. Johnston said. However, he reported that | place with representatives of last year. By common agree- on church union. Instead they dealt with areas of tension and opportunities of jhave a plebiscite. den's $2,000 but said this is one} of the reasons the Welfare! Council wishes to carry out the} study, | | chon, Chong Ju and Kwangjo. jday. a "We're meeting in an atmos- here that is cordial and con- structive," he said after com- pany and union negotiators emerged from 'a 10-hour ses- closed the plant as part of an/C0-operation in areas where a lemergency order issued in the|Joint approach can be made. |wake of a near-riot--part of a! Within eee ge nt series of violent incidents in the|Ston said, there could be closer series of vi cidents *| co-operation with the United strike. He allowed the plant to re-|Church. ion | Scarhoro Woman "We know there are poor but| we just want to find out where} any stop-Goldwater drive. Some Republican leaders who oppose Goldwater's candidacy have hoped that one or the other would leap into the Re- publican race, become the rallying point for a_ coalition and take the play from the Ari- zona conservative at the na- tional convention, But as Goldwater rested away from the political storm and strife and his bandwagon appeared to be taking' on more steam, Nixon, the party's stand- ard-bearer in 1960, said on Long Island Thursday night he would not take part in any stop-Gold- water movement, In Harrisburg, Pa., Scranton |said he would not be "part and 'parcel" of any movement to |stop Goldwater and that after winning the California primaty the senator appears to be the likely. nominee, SEES LITTLE DIFFERENCE Scranton said he does not know of "'any extremely basie difference" between his views and those of Goldwater, - In Cleveland, Governor Paul Fannin of Arizona, an early ar rival for 'the governors' confer- ence which opens Saturday, predicted that Goldwater will be nominated on the first bal- lot. jsion at 2:30 a.m, "Most of the minor |have been. cleared up. jdown to the major issues." Lovell did not disclose major issues, one of which has been the question of how many Strikers are to be rehired. nt to Charged, Murder the cutoff line is, who the poor are and where they are." : bia? NTO (CP) -- Mar- Paahonre, Wehlhela "la the He added that anybody who Scarbelitel co as West, where U.S, troops landed,|Considers $2,000 annual income/jo, . capital murder following to the Caen Canal area in the| adequate in this day, economistideath of her 27-year-old hus- east, where British and Cana-lor otherwise, can't be able to|band, Robert early today dian forces, with a group of|add up a family budget. Police said Clunes was F renc h commandoes, made) professor Madden had said in|stabbed im the living room of| There also were developments their onslaught. his speech that on the basis ofjhis home at about 1 a.m. fol-|outside the bargaining room. A| There also will be a ceremony |the $2,000 cutoff figure, only 13}lowing an argument' over his|union leader accused Governor]! * this evening at the Canadian per cent of Canadian families|accumulating debts. |George W. Romney of ruining In 1r Told _eweatage oP ag - sur - a are poor and this did not rate a| Today's stabbing was the/chances for a settlement soon. qu y where Canadian troops landed|mammoth national study proj-|sixth violent death in Metropol-j And a leader of a non-involved ZRCE ae s with British troops. ect. 'itan Toronto in the last 11 days.lunion added his criticism of ncden wee eiberonn Rook ing back a black cowlick told! | the Brossard royal commission| Thursday night 'he was drunk! when he made a statement in 1955 that went into Wilbert Cof- fin's appeal dossier. Regis Quirion, 40, testified that John Eagle, father-in-law }Of one of Coffin's sisters, took! him to a Gaspe hotel, bought democratic|cussion on grounds that a pleb- him six quarts of beer and paid our elected/iscite on five flags would allow| for a roorh. } mtatives pick a flag ofjonly 21 per cent of Canadians; Mr. Quirion said he had a our choice." jto impose a design on the|few. hours' sleep, then was '| CRY. IN PROTEST jothers; that a "rational vote'|awakened by Mr. Eagle, who ¢ of ., could never be ai scause| bought him breakfast and two flag in referendum, Man., outgoing CFMM presi-| Alderman B, H. Leger of Ed-|,, io peo piggy eter double shots of gin before tak- A resolution from North Bay,|dent, said: "Feelings were run-| montort brought cries of protest/ against a particular flag for the|ing him to a law office to make} Ont., suggesting that a referen-|ning pretty high. But I'm con.-| When he said: lsame reason; that a plebiscite the statement, dum be held on the flag ques-|vinced that each and every| "It would be out of order to could divide the nati if 1; "That's my signature but Ij, tion was overwhelmingly de-'man who went to the micro-|discuss this question. here If} prea voted fo ig el we design (don't remember anything else feated phone was sincere and spoke as|something wasn't going to be ; Sey doers eSi8N) about it," he told the commis- Mayor C. H, Hewitt of Northla Canadian." taken away--the Red Ensign, |While another area voted for an- sion. Bay kicked off the debate when! Mayor A. "A. Campbell of|Our regiments fought under this|°the: design; and that none of he told delegates: "It's just a\Pembroke, Ont., seconded|falg before Confederation. he delegates had been in- basic democratic procedure to|Mayor Hewitt's resolution and structed the people who We feel Ca-|said the CPMM was a democra- on how they whole issues| PEN Tuesday, however, Saying | We're) he had no choice once law and order was restored. the)" Report Made When Drunk; lank of the 50-mile assault area stretching from the foot of the MAYORS' FEELINGS RUN HIGH Vote On Flag Opposed REGINA (CP)--The annualjspeakers and Mayor Marcel d'-;government is convention of the Canadian Fed-| Amour of Hull, Que., tried with- government. Let eration of Mayors and Munici-|out success to move that dis-| represe palities wound up Thursday|cussion cease. with a hot debate on whether| When all was done, Mayor C Canadians should choose a new|N. Kushner of West Kildonan a | Granny Older 'Tf the choice of a flag is lett! oY, jto £2 government it is goin should'tie body with a perfect right to}be thought that this is an ap- discuss the flag question peasement to a certain lunatic Just before the final vote Than Countr "It is my considered opinion| fringe in Quebec who are talk- Mayor Campbell withdrew his y seconding of Mayor Hewitt's) prince G EORGE, B.C. of resolation but Alderman Leger | (CP)--Granny Seymour, about Pe gaat sueikdaats ' celebrates a birthday today, government changes." have fought and died for but eral zo Pz ae tel the Federal Justice Minister Guy| Most of her friends figure it's The resolution asked that five|is British. It is a take-off of the so-called separatist movement| Favreau told a press conference |her 112th. flags including the Red Ensign|Union Jack. It is not a symbol in Quebec. We do not come here|at the convention Thursday that) It appears to be of little con- be if tis be called separatists. We are| Municipal governments cannot|sequence to Granny, born Mar- 'ii pee : , refevendum at the next general! F be recognized as equal partners;garet Boucher to an Indian The gharred pages of this tion. Only three del 0° provincial and federal gov-|princess and a Hudson's Bay} bible leave no doubt in the ernments because, constitution-|Company- trader at Fort St.| mind of Rev, W. A. Reynolds speakers objected: tojally, municipalities are crea-James in the then colony of| that someone tried to burn "the federaljthe flag and the convention dis-'tions of the provinces. [British Columbia. down Sacred Heart Church in nadians choose th "The federal government js a minority government. If it|that the fleur de lis with three|ing about separatism." chooses: the we may have|Maple leaves on top of it would| Mayor Arthur Sequin an election soon. and have to|be a symbol of Canada. Poink connie gre on hes ca inte Claire, Que. , said: chance the flag again when the The Red Ensign is a flag we Q 4 ubmitted to the people in ajof Canada, jt is not a symbol of rench Canada." Alderman J. R Brault of Dor Gi vo val Que. said there was no During the debate, delegdtes|point in the CFMM discussing attempted to shut down two'the question since one people, one country." ates Other delegates applauded Other i &s BIBLE IS BURNED Edmonton. He told police there was no chance the fire began accidentally. A golden wedding observance was held Wednesday afternoon and } ] shortly afterward someone set fire to the bible. Damage was confined to the book and the pulpit. te --(@& Wirephotop 2.