Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Nov 1964, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Bo pew sts "Minister Pearson has accused The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres; VOL. 93--NO. 260 | She Oshawa Times Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy _ OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa ond Cosh, for payment Weather Report © Cloudy And Cooler Today. Mainly Sunny Friday. High-55. Low-38, ' of Postage in ' TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Pie House OK's Bill Money OTTAWA (CP) --The gov- emment received Commons ap- proval Wednesday to spend $740,000,000 to pay its bills for November and December, but was called on the carpet for spending a few dollars sending Social Credit Leader Thompson to Africa. The nine-day supply debate ended just short of leaving the government with no money to meet its November and Decem- ber payroll and bills. If appro- val had not come soon, disso- lution of Parliament and an election could have followed. As soon as the interim supply bill passed, opposition MPs opened fire on Mr. Thompson's mission to Africa on behalf of the government, Was the trip just a plum to reward the Social Credit MP from Red Deer for support of the minority government? Had Mr, Thompson been taken into the Liberal party? External Affairs Minister Martin first declined to answer the questions. He left the cham- ber at one point for a s -heduled meeting with Paul-Henri Spaak, Belgium's foreign minister. His cabinet colleagues said they did not have the answers. ASKS ABOUT COST Cliff Smallwood (PC -- Battle River-Camrose), who began the questioning, wanted to know the trip cost and whether Mr. Thompson had "gone to Africa to help Zambia with its space program, or what?" Mr, Martin said Mr. Thomp- son had gone to Africa "'at the request of the government to perform an important assign- ment in an area in which he is more familiar than any. other Canadian." Mr. Thompson had worked in Ethiopia before en- tering politics. Mr. Thompson said before his departure that the external affairs department had asked him to be part of a Canadian mission of senior officials who tions' African economic mission lin Ethiopia and visit several | African countries. Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre) asked whether Mr. Thompson's. ex- penses were being paid by the government, Mr. Martin said it would be unfair to ask the MP to undertake responsibilities for the government at his own ex- pense, ANGRY DEBATE Earlier the Commons echoed to angry shouts on the govern- ment's plan for amending the constitution. Sparking the ex- changes was a memorandum from former justice minister E. Davie Fulton to Opposition Leader Diefenbaker. The memorandum had been the subject of news stories. Lib- eral MPs claimed it upheld their party's proposals, but the Conservatives had twisted it to support their position. Speaker Alan Macnaughton eaid the dis- cussion was out of order. Once off supply the Commons moved quickly to the estimates of the department of industry and some. of the agencies that come. under that portfolio. FLAG ADOPTION BY CHRISTMAS 'Consumed With Power' PM Says Of HAMILTON (CP) -- Prime Opposition Leader Diefenbaker of exploiting the pagan £1 aed tional. unity an him to "stop obstructing and stering" governm to 500 persons Wed- nesday night at a Hamilton Lib- eral club $25-a-plate dinner, Mr. Pearson devoted most of his highly political speech to an at- tack on the Conservative leader, He d Mr. Diefenbak of misrepresenting the federal- provincial agreement for|d amending the constitution, slow- ing down Parliament. and pre- venting changes to streamline Commons rules. "T suggest he is consumed by passionate dedication to one thing--to return to office and power," the prime minister said. - In a -telewision inter- . view filmed during the evening, the prime minister said he also "expects the flag committee re- port recommending a single red maple leaf flag to be Diefenbaker an opposition can prevent will confer with the United-Na-| * Sharon Hurst, 18, Miss Osh- awa, tries on the Miss Can- during the week of prelimin- aries culminating in the selec- ada crown for.size in Toronto ton of Miss Canada 1965 this IS THIS MISS CANADA 1965? Sunday night. Carol Ann Bal- mer, Miss Canada 1964, joins the Oshawa contestant in her speculation. a decision from being r 'on the recommendation, "then that is the complete breakdown of the iiflag,"" he nt et in the. titerview. "We'll Parliament." "But that is not going to hap- the have a debate on the report of the flag committee and then we'll have a decision on that report." - During his speech, Mr. Pear- son said the resolution for the Canada Pension Plan would be debated in the Commons Mon- ay. The prime minister saved his strongest words to rap Mr. |Diefenbaker for his. opp \to the amending formula. Mr. Diefenbaker had accused the government of breaking up Canada, Mr. Pearson said, but the formula was 'jexactly the jsame" as the one the former Conservative government tried but failed to sell the provinces in 1961 Mr. Pearson said he doubts Canadians will be impressed by the opposition leader's adopted by Christmas. as Pipeline To changes. Cross 3 States TORONTO (CP) Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Ltd., is seek- ing permission to build a $200,- 000,000 989-mile pipeline south of the Great Lakes through United States territory. a press conference Wednesday night the company will apply today to the Federal Power Commission in the U.S. and the |would be built from the Mac- |kinac Straits to Sault Ste. Marie, {Ont., an afea not now served /by natural gas. Trans - Canada now serves Eastern Canada through a line jior, through Geraldton and Hearst, Ont. | A company official said this 30-inch line now is operating at U.S, POST-ELECTION SCENE WASHINGTON (AP) -- The widened Democratic margin in the U.S. Congress. could brighten chances for two key Johnson, administration propos- als -- health care for the eld- erly and aid to the depressed {Appalachian region. jected in a Senate conference with the House and House lead- ers decided against bringing up the Appalachian legislation, a sure sign that they feared de- feat despite a 257-to-178 mar- gin. Johnson is likely to ask for The White House, meanwhile, }snoedy action on two bills which is certain to read the landslide |victory 0: President Johnson in |Tuesday's election -as a man- jdate to push harder for both }measures, sidetracked in the last congressional session. Final returns indicate a ne died at the end of the 1964 ses- sion but are considered essen- tial by the administration to aid in U.S. foreign policy. One would implement the in- ternational coffee agreement; the House killed a compromise | : gain of two Senate seats for the| version of this. The other would Democrats and -- more signi-|oontinue present quotas - for ficantly -- about 40 House of|cales of foreign sugar in the Representatives seats. American market; these will In the last Congress, the Dem-|expire Dec, 31 but the admin- jocratic Senate. edge of 66 to 34/istration expects to extend them jalready was so big that the ma-| administratively until Congress |jority party could push through/can act. jeven its most controversial pro- grams. For example, the proposal to |provide medical care for. older Many Democrats are eager to vote on a social security bill since beneficiaries under this Americans by boosting social|program were given a commit- pe . ; |security taxes cleared the Sen-| ment in the 1964 session by both J. W. Kerry, president, told|extending north of Lake Super-|S°CUNYY | P jate by five votes. The $1,000,-/branches of Congress for an in- 000,000 Appalachian aid bill also) crease in their payments, j was approved by a wide mar- jgin. | National Energy Board in Ot-\capacity and Trans - Canada) REJECTED PLAN fawa for the necessary go- had to consider ways of getting) But the health plan was re- the measure went down the ahead. He said the proposed 36-inc pipeline, which could carry 800,- 000,000 cubic feet of gas daily, would be aimed at supplying market potential in Eastern Canada But the press conference made it clear the company also U.S. market'in the area through which the proposed line would pass, If approved the pipeline would head east from Emerson, Man., through Minnesota, Wis- consin and the upper peninsula of Michigan to the Straits of Mackinac, then south and.east}Lakes Gas Transmission Co., a| through Michigan to Sarnia. Mr. Kerr also said a spur line jadditional quantities of natural /8as into the eastern Canadian | market. ' The proposed new line would jnot affect supplies to Northern Ontario markets, he said, The proposed route is about 250 miles shorter than laying another line beside the existing facility and has the advantage sible, he- said. One obvious new market could be the iron ore ranges in| northern Michigan where gas could be used in a process to concentrate the ore. The proposed line would be jbuill and operated. by Great |wholly owned subsidiary of 'Trans-Canada. 'Boy, 6 Shoots | Girl Accidently TIMMINS (CP)--A two-year- old Timmins girl was acciden- tally shot dead Wednesday. "has its eye on a piece of the /of making new markets pos-| Brenda Harju, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eino Harju, was killed instantly when a six-year- old boy, a neighbor's child, fired ja .303 rifle across a_ small room. Police say the boy must have touched the trigger acci- dentally. At the time, Mrs. Harju was upstairs teléphoning the doctor jabout one of her other children. 'Mr. Harju was at work. 'On The Road To GREATER | | The House voted a five-per- cent raise, the Senate a $7 in- crease in basic payments. But _idrain in the dispute over the health care plan. Appalachians, Elderly To Benefit WASHINGTON (CP)--With 97 per cent ofthe returns from Tuesday's election completed, Johnson had won 44 states plus the District of Columbia with a total of 486 electoral votes; Goldwater had won six states with 52. JOHNSON STATES Won--Alaska (3), Arkansas (6), California (40), Colorado (6), Connecticut (8), Delaware (3), Florida (14), Hawaii (4), Idaho (4), Illinois (26), Indiana (13), Iowa (9), Kansas (7), Kentucky (9), Maine (4), Mary- land (10), Massachusetts (14), Michigan (21), Minnesota (10), Missouri (12), Montana (4), Ne- braska (5), Nevada (13), New Hampshire (4), New Jersey (17),. New Mexico (4), New York (43), North Carolina (13), North Dakota (4), Ohio (26), Oklahoma (8), Oregon (6), Pennsylvania (29), land (4), South Dakota Tennessee (11), Texas (25), Utah (4), Vermont (3), Virginia (12),, Washington State (9), West Virginia (7), Wisconsin (12), Wyoming (3), plus the District of Columbia (3). GOLDWATER STATES Won -- Alabama (10), Ari- zona (5), Georgia (12), Louisi- ana (10), Mississippi (7), South Carolina (8). : NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Yet Another Russian Space Ship? BONN. (Reuters) -- The West German satellite track- ing station at Bochum Observatory said today it was re- ceiving signals believed to be from a 'new Soviet .space experiment, Rocky KO's Goldwater MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Governor Nelson A, Rockefeller of New York indicated today he considers Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater's finished. leadership 'of the Republican party | Rocket Rhode Is-| (4), | U.S. Readies For Mars CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP)| The United States prepared to- day to launch Mariner Ill, a robot explorer, on an intended 8%-month journey to Mars to take pictures and collect scien- tific data. A powerful Atlas - Agena D/ rocket was scheduled to blast off between 1:22 p.m. and 3:17 p.m, EST to start"the complex payload across 350,000,0% miles of space for a brief encounter) with the planet next July 17. Two'year-old Mark Napior- kowski, 121 Colborne street east, is probafly the youngest chap ever to drive a car into a_ house. It happened yesterday when his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Napiorkowski, parked the family car on Colborne east while she popped into a store to buy bread. Mark was sitting in the back when his mother left the vehicle. But he wanted to be in the front so he climed over the seat. And the key was tight there in the ignition -- so he turned i The engine started and the car moved forward. Mrs. Napiorkowski heard the motor and ran from the shop just in time to see Mark and the car. crusing down the road -- then smash into the front of a house. She ran to the driver's seat and there sat. Mark quite happy and unhurt after his 30-foot jaunt. Mrs. Napiorkowski. said to- day:. "Mark certainly has started driving young. I was so frightened when I saw the car moving off with him in it but he was not hurt, "Now he is raring to go again but I'll do my best to keep him out of the driver's seat." Plaster was knocked from the wall of the house but damage was not great and the car fender was bent. "LESBIANISM ACCEPTED" TORONTO (CP)--The grand jury of York County today sub- mitted a report on Mercer Re- formatory for Women to Senior County Court Judge Robert For- syth, criticizing operation and conditions in the institution. The report from the jury, headed by Foreman Richard of the seven jury members. Criticism of the 84-year-old institution at 1155 King St. West in the western lakeshore section of Toronto, included: 1. A superintendent unquali- fied for her job, Mrs. Jean Bur- rows, has been on the staff of Mercer for 19 years and in H. Lyall,. contained signatures | Jury Says Mercer 'Jail' Staff Hid Unlit Dungeons abouts was concealed from the jury. 6. Training or rehabilitation is such a: travesty "the name of this institution should be changed to jail, since it is in no sense a reform institution." AFTEL. TWO VISITS The grand jury, led by Mr. Lyall, an insurance broker, pre- pared the submission for pre- sentation to Judge Forsyth to- day following two visits to the institution, Mercer is an institu- tion for 150 women, 16 years and over, serving sentences of less than two 'years. complete control for 14 years. 2, Medical care is so bad that| |"we could find no one with any-| | thing good to say about it." | | 3. Dental care is unavailable \apart from teeth - pulling and plates, unless paid for by the prisoners, who earn six cents a day, | 4. Lesbianism is admitted and accepted. | 5. Dungeon - like basement bucket cells used for solitary confinement are four - foot by seven-foot cubicles without light or windows, furnished only with iron bed and chamber pot, the sheet metal doors barred. with| Sun Shines On Accused Hunter BRANTFORD (CP)--A Brant- ford man was freed Wednesday of a charge of hunting after the legal deadline, because the sun set six minutes later in' Brant- ford than in Toronto. Conservation officer Carl Lid- dle testified in magistrate's court that Albert Petersen fired a shot at a duck at 7:25 p.m. He said his departmental calen- der listed sunset that day as 6:52 pam. Hunting is allowed} sing CHINA BOSSE VISIT MOSGO 2-YEAR-OLD JOYRIDER CAN'T KEEP HIS HANDS OFF WHEEL Kremlin Wants End To Rancor MOSCOW (AP)--The Kremlin appealed today for an 'end to "nationalist narrowminded- ness. and.. discrimination'. in world Conimunist ranks: as, Chi- na's Premier Chou Enlai and other foreign communists chiefs converged on Moscow for talks with the Soviet Union, The appeal 'published. in Pravda, the organ ofthe Saviet Communist party, was. clearly intended to serve as the key- note for the first big brent of Communist leaders since' Ni- kita Khrushchev's downfall last ae ms "The Communist party of the. Soviet Union calls for an im- placable struggle against time, the Russians accused 'the Chinese of. fomenting @ schism in the Communist world with nationalist, chauvinist polic The charge Has also : ropean Communists, most note ably the Romanians, . . ' Another article in Pravda to- day reaffirmed another Sovii policy attacked by'the Chinese, belief in the ity Of Come munist take. + 'overs|:. Leeroy means in the velo oh ' The jury's first visit was of- vicial and the second a surprise. -- hour after sunset, ut the department's sunset time ig recorded in Toronto and Petersen presented an official statement from the department of transport's meteorological branch, stating that sunset here on, the day of the incident was 6:58 p.m, THE TIMES today... Missing Tots Return Safely--Page 3 Woman Dies In Whitby Crash--Page 13 Shatto Named Best In East--Page 9 Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classified--22, 23, 24 Comics--20 District. Reports--7 Editorial--4 Financial--25 Obits--25 Sports--8, 9, 10, 11 Television--20 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2 Built By '65. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Cate ada will have 10 new peniten- tiaries worth $50,000,000 by 1966, Allen J. MacLeod, f com missioner of penitentiaries, an- nounced kere Wednesday. He said the new prisons enable Canada to, become & world leader in correction work, : Mr. MacLeod, in Vancouver lon his semi-annual tour' of fed> eral prisons, told @ press cone ference two new prisons ate now under construction, a third will start in two weeks and six-inch gratings. Their where-| seven more will be going up by next October, \ a om Roderick Stewart and. -his wife examine a sign painted on the wall of his home in CANDIDATE'S HOME 'SMEARED' Galt, Ont. Stewart, Liberal candidate in: the' Nov, 9 by- election in Waterloo:S o-u t h, said yesterday the work was done by a crank. Mr. Stew- art.was an unsuccessful NDP candidate in the riding before | changing parties this year, (CP Wirephoto) OSHAW A COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900. s11f670 | | $128 0001 | | | sisfasel LJ | $174 0001 | | | $208,001 | | 0 | saaoook | | | sastloool | | bs275.s00

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy