Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Oct 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, October 9, 1964 U.K. ELECTION FRACAS Hogg, Home Insulted, Mobbed, Jeered, Heckled By ALAN WALKER | LONDON (CP) -- Hecklers shouted down Prime Minister Douglas - Home in one city Thursday night while an angry crowd in another city mobbed Tory Science Minister Quintin Hogg. Labor Leader Harold feats had an. easier time of Sir Alec tried to tell an aud- fence in Birmingham. that Brit- ain must preserve her inde- pendent nuclear deterrent to make her voice heard in world affairs. Most of the 8,000 per- sons in the hall seemed willing to listen but about 500, who ap- peared to be teen-age students, kept up a constant barrage of|erers on the front bench of the insults. Labor party," had most of his "What do the socialists) Speech drowned out by similar want?" Sir Alec was heard to crowds of students. As he left say in an aside during some of|the rally nearly 1,000 persons the loudest jeering. 'Don't they|swatmed around him and_his want better relations with the Wife. Twelve police officers Soviet Union?" |formed a protective ring and He seemed to refer to recent| hurried him into the car as he Tory accusations that hecklers | shouted: at Conservative meetings are being encouraged by the Labor party. J ult, as he looked at the young- sters, "nothing will induce me (to believe) that they stand for peace." POLICE ESCORT PM" Police had to escort Sir Alec from the rally. 'After this exhibition here," the prime minigter said, 'I pend on this kind of suport are fit to govern Britain." At a rally in London, Hogg, in hot water this week after an off-the-cuff reference to 'adult- where is she?" es Finally both the minister and "T"ve lost my wife, # "Tf these are socialists," he ~ said scornfully above the tum- 7 OEE doubt whether people who de- g & {his wife gained safety in the ? car. As they drove away many people kicked the pushed the vehicle. ' AUDIENCE QUIET Egg Deficiency Payment Planned | Wilson spoke to a quiet aud- OTTAWA (CP)--A deficiency] jence in Southampton. He at- payment of two cents a dozen| tacked the government's Jan? will be paid on eggs marketed! nolicy, saying profiteers will during the price support year| which ended Sept. 30, 1964, Agriculture Minister Hays an- nounced Thursday in the Com-| "More building means land mons. searcity, and those who have He said payments to egg pro-|bought up the land will make ducets are expected to amount| Millions at the expense of the to $1,500,000, rest of us," he said. The Agricultural Stabilization|jict of 16 British industries Board had established that the = nye. nena prec ibe weighted national average price treatment of foreign competi- received by producers £0 T/ tion. Leader Jo Grimond said: Grade A lange eggs in the 12-|«We could reduce some tariffs months period was 32 cents 4/to force some industries to face} dozen, two cents below the 34-| immediate competition." cent support price. He also predicted his party, Payments will begin this; which had only seven seats in week to producers on Grade Ajthe last Parliament, will hold extra large, Grade A large and|the balance of power in the Grade A medium sizes to a/next one with a "solid block maximum of 4,000 dozen. |of MPs." proceed as planned in. attempts to develop southeast England. WEATHER FORECAST Turning Cooler With Showers TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|and northerly 35 to.50 knots issued by the weather office at eastern half, decreasing gradu- 5:30 a.m.: ally throughout today to north- Synopsis: A slow moving dis- erly 15 westernn half and north- turbance centred over northern|erly 20 to 25 eastern half; Lake Huron is causing an ex-\cloudy; snowsqualls eastern tremely variable weather pat-|half, gradually diminishing this pss Md Ontario. Communites | evening. north an east of Lake Super-) 'on, Georgian Bay: toe "are 'experiencing an early| winds veers 20 to 25. knots taste of winter with cold north-| becoming westerly 30 to 40 The Liberal party produced al" | Communist vs freed 800 West German politi- cal prisoners in return for '"'sev- posal for the exchange eral million marks" & make £500,000/000 if the Tor.es © SCIENCE MINISTER "BYKES Red s Swap 800 OTTAWA (CP) -- Appeals were made in the Commons Thursday on behalf of a Jamai- can girl in danger of being de- ported over her application to ' bring two illegitimate children to this country. New Democratic Leader T, C. : Douglas suggested to Immigra- ;|tion Minister Tremblay that it smacks of injustice to think of deporting the girl simply be- cause her children were born out of wedlock. He urged the minister to permit her to re- main. Mr, Tremblay said he has in- vestigated the circumstances and found that in applying to enter Canada Miss Daisy Henry made no mention of the two children on her immigration pa- pers. She was disqualified from re- maining in Canada because she made a false statement on her papers. The decision of the im- migration officials an migration Aneal Board was in {no way discrimination because lof her race or color. | | He noted that the Toronto |Globe and Mail quotes one jsource as saying the immigra- jtion officer uttered discrimina- tory statements. He planned. to find out whether the official New Peer Not © Nervous About For Butter, Food "We hope this is not the last BONN (AP) -- East German} worth of| IT"? AROUND | Lords Debut LONDON (CP)--Laord Thom- son, the Canadian - born pu- lisher created a baron in the |Queen's New Year's honors list } authorities havejaction of this kind," he said. The spokesman said the pro- from the East Some months ago German there had pect came side. -------- |this year, will make his maiden speech in the House of Lords early in November. He will be among a number of peers who have asked to speak in reply to the speech from the throne read by the Queen at the opening of the new Parliament. "I haven't decided yet what subject I wiht talk on," said Thomson, first Canadian - born peer in a genemation. Is he nervous about the pros- of addressing the upper the Im-| had, in fact, done so. If he had, the official would have to suf- fer the consequences of his ac- tion. WILL MAKE RULING Mr. Tremblay said the immi- gration appeal board's decision on the case -- Miss Henry ap- pealed a deportation order -- now is before him. He had dis- cretionary powers under the im- migration act to set aside the deportation order: | He said he will have to de- | termine whether the matter |simply involves the technical-| lity of making a false declara- tion or whether there are other factors such as Miss Henry's apparent intention to marry | which would require humanitar- |ian considerations. Mr. Douglas suggested to Prime Minister Pearson that it Unjust To Deport Unwed Mother Of 2 Says NDP-er tends to table it in the Com- mons, wiew, said the officials told him|Mr, Blackwood's changes. Mr. Canada aa not Py an Stirling said all statements kind .of people and_threatene: y to throw him out of the Tor-| ould have to come from Ob onto immigration centre when! tawa. he argued Miss Henry's case., Mr. pas are Dy poe aad r }the Aug. 2 ecis er wi vedo and Tan aaded 'down, an appeal was R. Stirling, superin endent 0 f taunched. But when he was the central region for the de-/to|1d_ unofficially the appeal partment of citizenship and im-| would fail, a public appeal was migration, declined to answer} started, he said. ' eccrine stctcennsintarietvins ae In Toronto Ronald Black- wood, a Jamaican-born clergy- 'man of the British Episcopal Church said Immigration In-! quiry Officer Clifford Desorm- eau told him Canada has a right to select its citizens and) that Jamaicans habitually live) jtogether without getting mar-| ried, Mr. Blackwood, in an inter- NEED Mortgage Money? "McGILL Day or Night - 7 Real Estote at Esato | 26°4285 | Fall Fashion Show SPONSORED BY UNIT 9, U.C.W! OF ST. ANDREW'S UNITED CHURCH. SIMCOE STREET SOUTH, OSHAWA FASHIONS BY Montgomery's Ladies' Wear OCTOBER 14th, 1964 - 8:30 P.M. REFRESHMENTS ADMISSION $1.00 For Tickets Telephone 725-1784 |is about time to end the situa-/ | tion where the immigration de- | partment is a law unto itself) and to provide for appeal of de- partmental decisions to the | courts. | Mr. Pearson, stating he) |doesn't accept Mr. Douglas') 'words about the department, said some 'change in immigra- tion laws is desirable. He hoped the time to make them would come when the Commons com- nieted legislative business now - listed on the order paper. Gordon Aiken (PC -- Parry Sound-Muskoka) requested, and Mr. Tremblay agreed, that the Commons be given the report of Toronto lawyer Joseph Sedg- wick on immigration proce- dures. Mr.. Tremblay said he ex- pects Mr. Sedgwick's report by the end of November and in-|:7 NEED A NEW... OIL FURNACE? Call PERRY Day or night 723-3443 | merchandise, a West German |government spokesman said | Thursday. {> A million about $250,000. Among the goods delivered to the Communists were butter and other _ foodstuffs, the spokesman 'said. i The West German The spokesman, en official of ment is considering an Fast) | the all-German affairs Ministry, | German request for easier cre- said the transaction was out-| ait in their trade relations. In side the framework of the regu- the past, such requests have lar trade agreement between| heen met. with the West Ger- the two parts of Germany and man suggestion that conditions outside the amnesty for 10,000 56 improved for Germans liv- |prisoners that the Communists ing under Communist rule. |announced Wednesday. COSENS & MARTIN t Insurance | SNAKES ALIVE, | BUT ONLY 24 67 King St. E., Oshawa || been: a talk between an East German lawyer in Berlin and Erich Mende, Bonn's minister of all-German affairs. The. spokesman declined to give further details about the transaction. marks is worth govern-| - erly winds, temperatures around the 20-degree mark and| several inches of snow on the, ground. In southern regions| mild 50-degree ,overnight tem- peratures, rain and a few thun- dershowers complete. the wea- ther picture. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron regions, Windsor, London: Mainly cloudy and cooler with a few scattered showers today. Clear- ing and much cooler tonight.} Saturday sunny with cloudy pe- riods and continuing 'cool Winds west to northwest 15 to knots about midday and de- creasing to. northwesterly 25 knots tonight; cloudy; showers! or snowflurries ending tonight Lake Erie: Winds westerly 25 knots, becoming northwest 25 to 35 knots this afternoon, decreas-| ing to northwest 25 knots to- night; cloudy with occasional} showers ending this evening. Lake Ontario: Winds south-| erly 20 to 30 knots, shifting to westerly 25 knots about mid- day and inereasing northwest 25 to 35 knots this afternoon; | cloudy with occasional showers. | 25 becoming northwesterly 15 to 20 Saturday Windsor ... Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- St. Thomas burton ragions, Killaloe, Hamil-| London ton, Toronto: Cloudy with oc-| Kitchener oe 2 casional rain. this morning tap-| Mount Forest...... °2 ering off to a few scattered| Wingham showers this afternoon. Turn-. Wingham ........ ing cooler. Saturday sunny with | Hamilton cloudy periods and continuing St. Catharines. cool. Winds southerly 15 to 29 Toronto becoming west to northwest 15| Kingston to 25 this afternoon and de-| Peterborough ..... creasing to northwesterly 15 to Trenton ...... tee vob dacachd L Killaloe Forecast Temperatures ~~ 2 90 Saturday. == Southern Georgian Bay, northern Lake Huron regions: Cloudy with occasional rain changing to a few showers or .flurries of wet snow by mid- day. Cooler. Saturday variable Muskoka .. North Bay. Sudbury . Earlton ..; F Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing SLINGER LANDS, N.Y. (AP) -- Playgrounds cleared, pupils voluntarily remained two hours after school and | teachers worked dilligently to control the excitement. as Gertrude, who everyone thought was just a 'fat snake,"' gave birth to 24 ba- bies Gertrude, a water snake, labored four hours last week, beginning at. the noon lunch hour, in an elementary school in this community near Al- bany | Only a few sixth - graders | were near the two foot | snake's wire mesh cage in teacher William Baist's room when labor began. But the youngsters' efficient commu- nations -network sent word flying through the school. Principal Mary Bida said | children ran from all direc- | tions to the sixth-grade class- | room and "pandemonitim" broke loose. Baist, who took the snake | to school from a YMCA camp | director last summer, was as surprised as the children. "We're lucky . . . the nor- mal litter is about 90,"" he said 728-7515 All Lines ef 7) Insurance Res: 725-2802 of 725-7413 house? "No," he replied with a laugh, '"'riot a bit." The schedule of speakers has not yet been arranged but Thomson says he expects to speak shortly after Parliament opens Nov. 3 braemor gardens Stevenson Rd. N. end Annapolis Ave.) HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS Oshawg's Most Convenient " Community Individually designed homes ot sensible prices, EXCLUSIVE REALTOR MILLEN Real Estate Ltd. || 9 BAGOT ST. 728-1679 Pi ' hit *T cloudiness and continuing cool. White River Winds southerly 15 to 20 becom- ing westerly to northwesterly 20 to 25 by midday. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Timagami regions, North Bay and Sudbury: Rain chang- ing to occasional wet snow this morning and tapering off to scattered snow flurries by this continuing cool. Winds soufh- erly 15 to 20 becoming north- westerly 20 to 25 this morning Cochrane, White River, west- ern James Bay regions: Cloudy and cold with occasional snow- flurries today. Saturday vari- able cloudiness and continuing cold. Winds northerly 15 to 25. TORONTO (CP) Marine forecasts issued by the weather office at 8:30 a.m., valid until 11 a.m. EDT Saturday. Lake Superior: Winds north- erly 20 to 30 knots western half COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE ALL-ELECTRIC HOME HEATING For YOUR Home!! 3 KING ST. E. Phone 725-0444 OPEN FRI, NIGHT 56 PRINCE ST. There's Nothing Can Beat The COMFORT Don't have « home That's Obsolete Make It Modern with ELECTROHEAT! PHONE 728-4611 For Detailed Information OSHAWA "a it AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC COMMISSION UPTON'S PAINT and WALLPAPER _ GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Sie ae ed DISCONTINUED COLOURS SALE! SALE! THIX JELLIED PAINTS 42 PRICE OFF Regular Lines 20% OFF! 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