Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jan 1965, p. 1

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'Hometown Newspaper hawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, ering and neighboring centres, -- NO, 5 She Oshawa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY, 7, 1965 Sr ee Sa. _. Weather Report: Sunny. With Cloudy Perjods. 'Turning Much: Milder, High-42, Low-30. ores eee. SHIVERING STRIPERS - native to the warm Kenya country of Africa, are fed by owner Bruce Wisely on his 'What's black and white and blue all over? Rocky and Robi, that's what. The zebras, snow-covered farm on the out- skirts of Vancouver. There's little relief in sight from the the cold snap which has gripped weeks, West Coast of Canada for (CP Wirephoto) INDONESIA Ol UNITED NATI Millionaire Posts Bond SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-- Harry S. Stonehill, international financier arrested Monday night as he stepped off a plane from Mexico, was released from jail Wednesday after posting a $100,000 federal bond. An examining trial scheduled for Wednesday was postponed until 9:30 a.m, Friday to allow time for legal documents in- volved in the case to get here from federal court in New York. Stonehill gained freedom as he posted the bond with a $40,- 000 cashier's cheque from New York and three $20,000 money orders from California. Two were from Beverly Hills. and one from Los Angeles. Terms of the bond stipulate that Stonehill must stay in the jurisdiction of the federal court of the wesieiii district of Texas. Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion agents arrested the former U.S. army sergeant--and now a millionaire living in Canada-- as he stepped off an airliner that brought him from Mexico. An agent said an_ indict- ment accuses Stonehill of shipping three crates of ciga- rette manufacturing machinery to Manila June 12, 1961, under a pretence the boxes contained grain threshing machines. Brutal Weather Kills Livestock By THE CANADIAN PRESS |said Wednesday night ch Death and hunger are stalk-|are taking place in the upper ing the cattle ranges of Albertajreaches' of the cold air. mass and Saskatchewan with increas-|covering the Prairies and these ing energy in brutal winter|/might foretell some moderation weather. \Friday. Temperatures have The deaths of more than go9|been as low as 30 degrees be- cattle have been reported injlow zero for four weeks. southern Alberta's | short-grassitwo PROVINCES ESCAPE country, where ranges, Norm-| Government officials in Man gary stockyards said 10 to 15 cattle a day are being sold there as "distress" cattle because they have frozen feet or other injuries due to the cold. G. R. Sterling, an jagriculture department official, said the feed situation is worse jin Saskatchewan than in Al- _|berta. Northern Saskatchewan, normally a feed surplus area, Alberta) "OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY" MONTREAL (CP) -- The eighth lJargest brewery in the United States has become a wholly - owned subsidiary of Molson Breweries Ltd. Senator Hartland deM. Mol- son, president, announced in a letter to shareholders Wednes- day that the Montreal - based Molson Breweries and Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. of St. Paul, ally almost clear in winter, noW/itoha and British Columbia said are covered with 18 inches Of|weanesday their provinces = snow. jfar have escaped any cattle| enone . tary and 'Sas |deaths or feed Cydeory Be tehewan livestock feed is in)a spokesman in B.C. said prob- short supply and selling at asijems could arise if unusually} niuch as twice the usual price.'cold weather persists along the Stock watering is a growing|west Coast. problem in southern Alberta. | There were no reports of pro-| Livestock officials said Wed-jducers trying = ee cattle} nesday the industry faces worse|to avoid high feed bills. feed shortages, hundreds more) Alberta officials said : Lani rganiot q cattle deaths and permanent in-|cattle deaths =e tp the Med-|nt., charged with capital mur jury to many animals from ex-jicine Hat, Brooks, Hanna an - : 4 ki if hare is no break in|Coronation areas, A Calgary of- Bt hyp al geohe el e the weather in the next fewjficial said the figure of 800 to tah "15 by Magisirite Don. few days. deaths could be cages giro ald Graham 3 r ic les K edy of the Cal-! . . The Edmonton weather office! Char es Kennedy f ides ieee a jseveral hours after the child's + |body was found in the toy de- 7 partment of a hardware store. * |He was questioned for about 4 |four hours and then charged. | Ships Not Safe, Seamen Charge VICTORIA (CP)--Crew mem- bers of the transport depart- ment weather ship Stonetown said Wednesday their ship and its sister, the St. Catharines, are not seaworthy. The Stonetown returned to Victoria Monday from Weather Station Papa with a nine-inch crack in her forecastle deck that developed in a week. of mountainous seas and_ gale- force winds in the Gulf of Alaska. She returned to sea Tuesda had a drought most of last ter with low reserves. Man Remanded On "Come And See Atrocities" LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--Pre- +\mier Moise Tshombe has _in- 'jvited the leaders of Algeria, Ghana, Mali and Egypt -- all avowed supporters of the Con- golese rebels--to meet him in Stanleyville and see for them- selves atrocities committed by the rebels. "Come and hear the stores of massacres and_ torture," Tshombe said Wednesday on his return from a brief visit to the former rebel capital. 'come and take note of the elimination month-old son with a head- lof educated people who are, for sie BIG CITY PAPOOSE Mrs, Gaby Seccombe of To- ronto doesn't have to worry about her baby carriage get- tained from Red Lake Indians. In it she can carry her seven- summer and went into the win-| Sex Murder Charge TORONTO (CP)--Carl Wayne} most|Stringer, 25, of nearby Maple,|Paul, Los Angeles, San Fran- qider in the sex slaying Tuesday|in the U.S. company's name is police | Minn., have merged. Molson Breweries operates jnine breweries in Canada from |Quebec west to British Colum- |bia with a total annual capacity of 3,695,000 barrels. Sales were |$125,246,757 for the year ended jlast March 31 and net. earnings jwere $21,587,129. Hamm has breweries in St. sco and Houston. No change Molson's Take Over Huge U.S. Brewery jcontemplated, Senator Molson said. Senator Molson said the Hamm-Molson merger "is an outstanding opportunity for Mol- son to obtain a major interest in the U.S. brewing industry." Hamm, with sales: of more than $124,000,000 in 1964, could be expected to contribute "sig- nificantly" to sales and earn- ings of the combined enter- prise, The U.S. company's stock has not been traded publicly. Molson class A shares closed at 40 Wednesday on the Mont- real Stock Exchange, un- changed from the previous day's close. By the end of last week after rumorssspread of a possible merger, the shares had risen 4% to 39 over the previous week, | LONDON (CP) -- Many Britons, emigrating to Can- ada, are embracing their new country with exhilarating en- thusiasm, says The Evening News in a three-column re- port headed: 'Having a won- | | | derful time . . . in Canada." It publishes quotations from some of the hundreds of let- ters that have flowed back from emigrants to the Cana- HAVING A LUVERLY TIME, SAY IMMIGRANTS FROM U.K. dian immigration office here, praising . life in- Canada and urging others to come. along. Aceompanying: the report are two photographs that might give Britons a miscon- ception of Canada's climate. One shows boats sailing in Halifax harbor in the sum- mer. Another shows life on a Canadian summer beach. There are no _ photographs showing Canada's winter. Insurance-Health Care Package Proposed By LBJ y . ¥ ; with the crack repaired and| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-|tion's Health, plugged first for with the same crew aboard. |ident Johnson proposed today alenactment this year of medical |broad health insurance - health care package that includes a suggestion that the federal gov- ernment pay part of the basic Operating costs of medical and| dental schools. Johnson, submitting a mes-| sage entitled Advancing the Na-| insurance for persons 65 and over under the social security program. He made the message his first one on a specific subject in the new session, thereby giving it high priority. ting stuck in snow drifts. She uses en Indian Takanagan ob- strap or the shoulder harness. |some of you, of your race as ~--CP Wirephote |they are of mine." THE TIMES today... William Boddy Retires From PUC -- Page 13 Mrs. M. Hughes Tops Whitby Ray Grant's Rink Wins -- Page 10 Ann Landers -- 17 City News -- 13 Classified--20, 21 Comics'-- 19 District Reports -- 7 Editorial -- 4 Financial -- 22 Separate School Bd. Poll--P, 5 Obits -- 22 Sports -- 10, 11, 12 Television -- 19 Theatre--23 Whitby News -- 5, 6 Women's -- 14, 15, 16, 17 | sense." California "SAN ~FRANCISCO. (AP) -- Swollen. rivers receded and rains tapered off today to give flood - ravaged northern Cali- Gets A Break | fornia a welcome breather. But in the high Sierra a blind- ing snowstorm. stranded hun- dreds of travellers. Several hundred residents of the Eel and Mad River districts straggled back to the homes they fled the last two days when torrential rains sent the rivers to flood stage. Forecasts of only scattered showers promised im- proving conditions, Not Quitting, OLD TIME GAL , Andrea Lynn Lennon is only five weeks old but she's dress- ed in a gown that was made by her great, great grand- mother in 1872 in Birming- ham, England. Andrea, daughter of Toronto Star pho- tographer Frank Lennon, is the 54th baby to be baptized wearing it. Mary Willets, who made the dress for the chris- tening of her daughter, used a fine cotton material called madoplin and embroidered it with panels of lace. The dress followed the family to Canada and now is kept ina: plastic bag; washed after every -use and. repaired whenever a thread becomes loose. --CP Wirephoto '|karho | | Sukarno Says 'We Walk Out' taking se nn he i a i les friends in the A' in - Asian camp, to keep his country. in the world organization. (A spokesman at UN 'head- quarters in New York said no 'ormal notification has been re- seived yet of the withdrawal.) Addressing a rally held to zondemn foreign military bases, Sukarno--to the cheers of the crowd--declared: "On Jan, 7, 1965 at 2230 hours (10:30 p.m.), I declare as fol- ows: In my announcement a 'ew days ago I said that if Jalaysia becomes a (UN) Se- curity Council member, I will order Indonesia to walk out of he United Nations. Now since Malaysia has become a Secur- ity Council member, I declare 'hat Indonesia has walked out of the United Nations." At the UN, Malaysia today told the Security Council it. will 'mmediately seek UN aid in lefence of its territorial integ- rity if Indonesia launches an offensive. Ambassador R. Ramani, head lof the Malaysian delegation, said he was doing so because of a heavy Indonesian military ouild-up on the Indonesia-Ma- laysian border in Borneo and 'Indonesia's announced intention to withdraw from the UN. Before Sukarno made his an- mouncement, the rally, approved 7. a ippro ¢ | } (See Story On Page 2) Bank Thett TORONTO. (CP)--Three Tor- onto men were committed Wed- | nesday for trial by judge and jury in connection with a $100, 000 theft Sept. 19 from. York Trust and Savings Company. Says PC Chief OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said today a report that he is considering retiring as Progressive Con- servative leader is 'utter non- "It has never entered my mind," he said in a brief tele- phone message from Trinidad. Mr. Diefenbaker said he and Mrs. Diefenbaker, who have been on a noliday in Trinidad and Tobago since Christmas Eve, plan to return to Ottawa Sunday night. PM's Anniversary Not Too Popular? OTTAWA (OP)--Federal poli- ticians will join political figures 'rom Ontario and Quebec in Kingston next Monday to cel- ebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of Canada's first prime minister. The celebration in the city where Sir John A. Macdonald began his political career as an alderman comes nearly 100 years after his greatest achievement, Canadian Confed- eration. It will take the form of an elaborate civic-state dinner sponsored by the Kingston His- torical Society. But in Ottawa, little outward interest is being shown in the birthday anniversary, and there has been newspaper editorial criticism of the lack of Cana- dian interest generally in the first Father of Confederation. The dinner bill is being paid by the federal and Ontario gov- ernments and the City of Kings- ton. Prime Minister Pearson earlier accepted an invitation to attend, but is sending Privy Council President George Mc- Iiraith- and Revenue Minister Benson to represent 'the gov- erament. REPRESENTS PM Mr. Mcliraith will' be Mr. Pearson's personal representa- tive at the banquet. Mr. Benson, the Liberal MP for Kingston and junior member of the cabi- Weather -- 2 lsent the net in seniority, will also repre- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS New Yorker Charged With Spying WASHINGTON (AP) -- FBI agents arrested 'a 29-year- old New Yorker today and charged him with conspiring to transmit U.S. military secrets to the Soviet Union. identified him as Robert N. Director J. Edgar Hoover Thompson, a self-employed fuel oil distributor. FBI He. said FBI investivation revealed that Thompson was recruited into a Soviet intelligence operation while serving with the 'US. Air Force in Berlin in 1957. Antwerp Dock Strike Ends ANTWERP (AP) -- A seven-day strike ended today in Antwerp harbor, one of Europe's' biggest. more than 200 ships. tinue. It had tied up Negotiations on pay raises will. con- Wayne Wile, 23, a former branch. manager, is _ charged with stealing $60,659.96 in cash and securities from his em- ployer. Kempton Gravelle, 25, Douglas Godin, 24, and Wile are also charged with possession of $8,362 cash and negotiable doc- uments stolen from York Trust. Bail was set at $50,000 prop- erty for the three men, or $30,- 000 cash for Wile. and $12,000 for the other defendants. All three were arrested after a police informer tipped off a detective who then imperson- ated a dealer in stolen docu- ments. Despite police requests, Magistrate P. L. Bolsby ordered the informer, Moe Bernstein, named in court, d. istration, Nancy Thompson. a student nurse at St, Luke's Hospital in Denver, has no qualms what- soever as she blithely charms a 6-foot South American boa "SNAKES ALIVE" constrictor, 'Nancy claims she is getting in the swing of things as the year 1965 is The Serpent Year according to Japanese and Chinese sooth- x Sayers. 'The lucky snake is owned by Lautron Roark of Pueblo, Colorado. --AP Wirephote c sia Sukarno

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