Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Nov 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville,' Pickering and neighboring centres; VOL. 93--NO, 264 She Oshawa Times Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office as Boe se Deportenget Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1.964 " Weather. an LST SE Spee Report Cloudy And Mild Today And Tomorrow. Light Winds. High-55. Low-40. Postage in FORTY:SIX PAGES Jubilant supporters carry NDP candidate M. S. (Max) SALTSMAN Salisman on their shoulders after the 43-year-old business- SHOULDERED man defeated Liberal and Pro- gressive Conservative candi- datés in the federal by- election in Waterloo South. PC'S LOSE SEAT NDP Laundryman Takes Opponents To Cleaners GALT (CP) -- M.S. (Max) Saltsman, 43-year-old operator) of a chain of dry-cleaning es- tablish m ents, won Monday's federal byelection in Waterloo South for the New Democratic centage in any federal byelec- tion in Canada. In the 1963 federal election Gordon Chaplin was re-elected as Progressive Conservative member with 11,417 votes to for Liberal candidate Don- » hg liad See as . Mr. Stewart also-lost/fion a farmer-labor enter } and a Galt mayor run- ws as a Liberal in 1953, have 'sitaken Waterloo South from the 'Conservatives since 1896. and vas SSUES NATIONAL wae The complete count gave Mr. Saltsman 12,508 votes to 9,876 for James Chaplin, son of the Progressive Conservative mem- ber for the riding: who died!. earlier this year, and 5,168 for Roderick Stewart, who broke , with the NDP and won the Lib- eral nomination in an intra- party: battle The total represented more than 77 per cent of the riding's eligible voters. Returning offi- cer W. C. Woods said he be- James Chaplin and Mr. Salts- out} man have both been prominent in jocal politics in Galt as city council members, and all three candidates campaigned person- ally while devoting most of their formal speeches to national is- sues. Mr. Saltsman was campaign} manager in Mr. Stewart's two! unsuccessful NDP bids for a federal seat. ja commanding vote. in the ur- ban areas of Galt, Preston and Hespeler which assured his election less than an hour after lieves it to be the highest per- the polls closed, described the outcome as "a true reflection of how the Canadian people feel wasted there." The voters had "swept across party lines to known to everyone," Mr. Chaplin was quoted as saying he would, take legal ac- for . etions: OTTAWA (CP) -- New Dem- ocratic Party Leader T. C. Douglas thé NDP in Waterloo South rid- ing. the Canada Elections Act. He was quoted as saying that at about Parliament and the time|two Preston polls false ballots with Mr. Saltsman's name on them were left in the polling make their desires and wishes cubicles. Mr. Stewart said he would be| ready to start campaignings for| a general election within two fats. High Says 50 More Ridings Could Go NDP "We fought the election by saying that Waterloo South had said Monday night/a chance to speak for all the there are 40 to 50 constituencies| people of Canada in telling Par- in Ontario which might have|liament to get down to some produced the upset victory of|bread - and - butter issues. The voice of the electorate in this |matter has been heard, and I He told. reporters that while|hope it will be heard by Parlia- he isn't predicting NDP victor- Mr, Saltsman, who rolled upjies in that many ridings in the| |next general election, the re- jsounding defeat of the Libera jcandidate and the jvictory for the NDP ' a. trend." 'indicates old ment." Opposition Leader Diefen- j|baker said through a_ spokes- smashing|™man that he was naturally dis- appointed at not regaining the Conservative seat. | |--and Chou En-Lai Asks For Major Meeting GAVE SEVEN-VOTE EDGE LONDON (CP) -- Prime Min- ister Harold Wilson has won his first big House of Commons test it seems his biggest threat came from fog. Eighteen fog - delayed Mem- bers of Parliament from Scot- land, travel-weary and frayed jof nerves, trooped into the House Monday night in time to give Wilson's Labor government a seven-vote edge on a Tory motion condemning steel na- tionalization. The fog, and illness among some Labor MPs, probably |threw more of a scare into La- bor strategists than the some- what wavering attack launched on steel renationalization by the Tory opposition, ied by Iain Macleod. When the vote finally came the socialists tallied 807 com- Fog-Bound MP's Aid Groggy PM pared with 300 for the Tories in the 630-member House. Twenty-three members were absent or did not vote. The speaker votes only to break a tie. The nine Liberals in the House supported the Conserva- tives. The seven-vote margin, which normally might be considered a close squeak, did not look s0 small to Wilson since his over- all margin is only five with all members present, At one point Monday, the mangin seemed down to three, with a couple of Labor supporters ill in hospital, Wilson faces a second Tory no - confidence motion today, changing socialist policies. would imperil the well-being of Brit- ain, But tension has gone out of the air with the initial vic- tory. France-West | PARIS (AP)--Former chan- celior Konrad Adenauer and President de Gaulle met again today for more talk about the strained relations between pierons di nap the government of Ad r's successor, Chancel- lor Ludwig Erhard. The 88-- year - old German statesman at de Gaulle con- ferred for 45 and 55 minutes ences between over' common agricultural prices for the European Com- mon Market and the U.S. spon- sored multilateral nuclear force. what was said, but Adenauer in a speech to\the French in- stitute's academy of moral and political sciences Monday called for lasting friendship be- tween France and West Ger- fied Europe. man friendship treaty which he} minutes 'Monday: pt \ "ty oie. There was no indication of | many and the creation of a uni-| Referring to the French-Ger-| German Relations Discussed uary, 1963, Adenauer, said: This is necessary in the tumul- {technics plane." and de Gaulle signed in Jan- "This treaty, which seals the reconciliation between +| foreign' office togay tuous development of our world both on the political and the No steel bill has yet. been in- troduced and Power Minister Frederick Lee, presenting La- bor's case in the debate, gave few details except to express the socialist conviction that: "Only public ownership of the main part of the industry will make 'it possible to remedy the industry's shortcomings 'with the speed and determination which the national interest de- mands." Macleod's speech was listened to with close interest, it being his first front-bench appearance since last year when he re- fused to service in Sir Alec Douglas-Home's cabinet after the Scottish aristocrat suc- ceeded Harold Macmillan as Tory premier. Labor members yelled scorn- fully 'the prodigal has turned" as Macleod, a possible future leader of the Tories, said his party hoped to "cut the throat" of any. Labor steel measure. Macleod had tough going be- cause he had to agree with Lee that present steel. prices are in "disarray." UNESCO Official | Defects To U.K. LONDON (Reuters) -- mir Ilyich Ponomarev, 39, .@ Gaviet official of bat lng in has been iesesina to stay here, @ British apokesman said The spokesman said: "He came to the United Kingdom recently on a visit and asked permission to stay here. This has been granted." VANCOUVER (CP) -- The Province quotes unnamed "AVALANCHE FURY" 'Horror' Mudslide Entombs Woman _.A workman at right begins the task of digging out an auto which was battered, over- turned and partially buried by floodwaters and mud _ yester- day in a suburban Los Angeles area, not far from the home where Mrs. William Miller was swept away. The batter- * residential street, § tombed in a catch basin--along = with cars, furniture and house- ed auto came to rest at the entrance to a large catch basin. --(AP Wirephoto) LOS. ANGELES (AP) -- Rain was predicted today in South- ern California, where storm- triggered mudslides struck Monday with avalanche fury at areas saved earlier from dry- season brushfires. One mydslide sluiced down a fire-denu canyon and into a sweeping a fleeing housewife with it. Police say Mrs. Aimee Miller may have heen carried three- quarters of a mile and en- hold debris--in a 20-foot deep mass of mud, Her husband, William, 49, singer Frank Sinatra's accom- panist, tried to save his wife from their crumbling home, and also was swept away. Firemen). rescued him-as he clung to a car in the swirling flood. Their daughter, Meredith, 17, climbed uphill to safety as the family's canyon home twisted and cracked under the on- slaught of mud. The Miller home was de- stroyed and eight others dam- aged in the Verdugo Hills sec- tion of Burbank, a Los Angeles suburb. Other mudslides hit the Santa Barbara area 100 miles to the north, which lies at the foot of s of the Vancouver branch of the Seafarers' Inter- national Union as saying they assisted the Liberal federal committee in the 1963 f uf election. The local SIU members are further quoted by Vancouver's morning newspaper as saying the SIU supplied a force of 35 men to help maintain order at Vancouver Forum during Prime Minister Pearson's tumultuous federal election campaign meet- ing there April 1, 1963. The newspaper adds: "The 35 man crew, it is claimed, wore Liberal badges and assisted city police and Pa- cific Nationa] Exhibition offi- cials in maintaining order at the meeting which was the row- diest in the entire national cam- paign." It says SIU men here also claimed they "took an active interest in the campaign con- ducted in Burrard (constitu- Helped Liberals Says Seafarers CRATE-MAN HAS TO PAY $970 SYDNEY, Australia (AP)--~ Reginald Spiers, the 22-year- old athlete who flew 2,000 miles hidden in a wooden crate because he couldn't pay $640 for a ticket, must pay $970 freight charges, Air In- dia said today. "He knows what he has to pay, it's set out in the con- signment," said George Ta- lati, Perth manager of the In- dian line. Spiers said Monday he would pay up but it would have to be in instalments. Talati said the company wants a lump sum. The manager said Interna- tional Air 'Transport Regula- tions prevent the line from waiving the freight charge. Spiers, a. javelin thrower who failed to make Austra- lia's Olympic team,.went to London to try to win in Eng- lish track and field meets in the hope he would be a last- minute Aussie Olympic selec- tion, but he failed again. Broke and homesick, he got a friend to crate him up and ship him C.0.D. to a nonex- istent firm in Perth. Spiers spent nearly three days cooped up in the crate without. food or water. At Perth, he broke out of the five-by three-foot box, cut his way out of the customs shed's screen door and hitchhiked 1,800 miles to his wife 'and child in Adelaide. £39 rs " srervevesnees: LONDON (AP)--Prime Min- ister Harold Wilson said today Premier Chou En-lai of China has sent him a message pro- posing a major power summit meeting to discuss nuclear dis- armament, Wilson told the House of Commons his Labor goverti- ment is consulting with allied nations before answering the proposal, 4 China recently set off its first nuclear device, but Western stir entists doubt. that it has: yet de- veloped a. workable bomb or. the means to deliver it by plane or rocket. MOSCOW (AP) -- A new call came from the Kremlin today for a world Communist .confer- ence on the Moscow-Peking rift, but there was no indication Chi- nese Premier Chou En ~; ldi's talks with the new lead- ers have brought the two camps closer together. A Moscow dispatch 'to L'Unita, the Italian Communist visit for: further talks. SAIGON (AP) -- fire called up to raze day nish ays federal and state mediators. NEWS HIGHLIGHT s US, Army Captain Killed In Ambush Pec Vietnamese RAs mortar: suspected Comm i instead on a gov killed. three sorecnet inc! ae Some Agreement In Printers Strike DETROIT (AP) -- Tentative agreement on 'a mew'con-: tract between Detroit's strikebound daily' newspapers and one of two striking craft unions was announced today by and organizing talent and put in hundreds of man hours dis- tributing and nailing up pos- ters," Minister Convicted CHATHAM (CP)--Rev. Rus- sell D. Horsburgh was con- victed today on five counts of contributing to juvenile delin- by Juvenile Court Judge W. H. Fox. The United Church minister was found not guilty on another three charges. It is expected he will be sen- tenced when court resumes this afternoon. Mr. Horsburgh, free on bail since his court: hearing con- cluded a month ago, had said Monday night that it 'doesn't ency), by Ron Basford, the pres- ent MP, a triumph." THE TIME Stamps Stomp 'Riders--Page Ann Landers--P. 14 City News--P. 11 Classified--P. 16, 17, 18 Comics--P. 20 District Reports--P. 10 Editorial--P. 4 September. Financial--P. 19 Ajax Council Vetoes Sporis Vote--Page 10 Council To View District Pools--Page 11 S today... Sports--P. 8, 9 Teen Talk--P, 6, 7 Television--P. 20 Theatre--P, 21 Whitby News--P, 5 Women's--P. 12, 13, 14 Weather--P. 2 "They say they supplied cars | quency in a 57-page judgment) -- matter how the verdict goes, I| | intend to turn this tragedy into} § Mrs. Frances Jackson was born 100 years ago last Satur- day in Hope Township, and to celebrate her birthday she spent the day entertaining friends with her accordion-- an instrument she first started mountains eds fire last to play 83 years ago. "I'm old _ ~:100-YEARS-OLD and I know it," she whispered to friends as she opened tele- grams from Prime Minister Pearson, Premier Robarts and Seen with her here at Whit- by's Fairview Lodge is Nurse Dorothy Clairmont, --Oshawa Times: Photo On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 suitero | | $128,000] | |b srefazol | 1 I srz%ocol | | | s2odeool | | | s228oool | | | sas8oool | | |: $2729

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