Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Feb 1965, p. 3

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

'Maple Leaf. Now Flying World OTTAWA (CP)--The new red and whice maple leaf flag is representing Canada around the world today after being ceremoniously hoisted Monday in dedication observances that stretched from the Peace Tower to desert army camps. With the heat of the flag bat- tle over, politicians from all parties, along with Ottawa dig- nitaries and diplomats, gath- ered at the base of the Peace Tower Monday and sent the new flag aloft with prayerful hopes. As the clock reached noon at Canadian missions and outposts around the world, other cere- monies, perhaps less impressive and more informal, were raising the new single-leaf flag for the first time Before the day was out, the first fully official Canadian flag was fluttering from some 1,600 flagpoles around the world, Ottawa, of course, was the main ceremonial point. It was here that the great flag fight ranged off and on for six months, and the new design emerged from battle before it * was even born. It slid up the flagpole Monday to the cheers of thousands who poured over the grounds of Parliament Hill to see history being made. 'A MILESTONE' 'If our nation, by God's grace, cndures a thousand years, this day, the 15th day of February 1965, will always be remembered as a milestone in Canada's national progress," said Prime Minister Pearson. It was Mr. Pearson who led the burning flag issue through the Commons under a blistering opposition attack that resulted in 279 speeches, and finally the) use of closure, before the flag) finally emerged from the Hoise| Dec. 15 In a ceremony in Parlia- ment's Halli of Fame Monday, the prime minister, like the governor - general before him, hoped the new flag would fly over a united country. | "May the land over which this new flag flies remain united | in freedom and justice; a land lada and the roar of a 21-gun sa- -Wide ings; sensitive, tolerant and compassionate towards all men; industrious, energetic, resolute; wise and just in the giving of security and opportunity equally to all its citizens; and strong in its adherence to those moral principles which are the only sure guide to greatness." « , God bless our flag, and God bless Canada." The governor - general said it is "inconceivable that the heirs to the great western civ- ilization . . . should be unable to find a brotherly way of life based upon an agreement en- tered into 100 years ago by the two founding races, and ad- apted to present-day needs and requirements. . 'SET ASIDE PETTINESS' "T appeal to all Canadians to set aside pettiness, selfishness and intolerance where they may exist, and to cultivate a spirit of brotherhood and mutual con- fidence." The two men spoke, along with Senate Speaker Maurice |Bourget and Commons Speaker Alan Macnaughton in a pre- \flag - raising ceremony inside |while the thousands of people continued to gather around the temporaiy, white flagpole at the |base of the Peace Tower. Opposition Leader Diefen- baker, who had led a stiff fight against a new flag and who sought the opinion of his party's national executive on whether he should attend the cere- monies, was on the platform with the speakers, but he did not speak. The Red Ensign was lowered with: dignity before the hushed throng, and over two prayers it was genily folded and placed in the archives, The new flag was raised to the strains of O Can- lute. Waves of cheers went up from the crowds, and within minutes every federal flagpole within sight of Parliament Hill was sprouting the new flag. At Canadian embassies in such scattered places as Mos- cow, London and Tokyo, simple ceremonies stretched from of decent God-fearing people; fair and generous in all its deal- Alaska to Puerto Rico and the remote southwest Pacific. 'Drunk' Statement Amuses Laborites LONDON (CP) Commons Monday over a Labor| member's alleged statement| that some Tories were "half frunk" during recent debates.) Sir Harry Hylton-Foster, the} Speaker, said he would rule to- day on a Conservative member's charge thal the drunkenness re- mark constitutes, prima facie, a breach of privilege. An uproar has been brewing| since Sunday newspapers re-| ported that Patrick Duffy, 45- year-old Labor member for Socialist)them, and I only wish some of laughter swept the House of|their constituents knew about this. Their condition not only hindered the debate but also \Q' DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, center, complained to Sheriff Lummy Jenkins, left, about the "voucher" method of registering voters Slowne SELMA, Ala. (AP)--Dr. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. expressed pleasure over a large right-to- vote demonstration here but said the registration procedure was "snail-like" and would be until the state of Alabama does something to speed it up. "It was a magnificent demon- stration," King said of Mon- day's march of more than 2,000 on the county courthouse. He objected particularly to a state law that sets up only two regular registration days a month in most Alabama coun- ties. In another development at Turnout Pleases King 'Dead' Man ° Found Alive 8 Years Later 1| AKRON, Ohio (AP)--It has been more than a week since Mrs. Mary Lou Bader felt the shock of learning that her hus- band, declared dead several years ago, has been living an- other life under another name in Omaha. "T haven't been able to think tive, blonde mother of four said in the only interview she has granted since hearing the news. "It was a shock to me... , It was something unreal, sort of like a numbness," said Mrs. Bader. The copyrighted interview, published Sunday by the Akron Beacon Journal, quoted Mrs. Bader as saying she had never doubted that her husband was dead and knew of no reason why he would voluntarily dis- appear, "T had to accept the fact that he was dead. . . . That was the only conclusion that I ever came to." Her first reaction on learn- ing that John F. (Fritz) John- son, an Omaha_ sportscaster, was missing Larry Bader: "I was very st unn'e d and fright- ened at first, then decided it couldn't be true." It was the fingerprints that convinced her that Johnson and Bader were the same man. Bader disappeared and was presumed drowned in a boating accident on Lake Erie May 15, 1957. Mrs Bader, now 38, col- lected $40,000 in insurance. Four days after the accident, Bader or Johnson turned up in Omaha and started a new life. He insisted he has no recollec- tion of a life as Larry Bader. He is in hospital now undergo- ing tests. Mrs. Bader said. she is not "shutting the door to a possible reconcoliation,"" but she is pre- pared to proceed with legal ac- tion against Bader if necessary to protect her children. Bader or Johnson has said he wants to remain with his Omaha wife, Nancy. He and Nancy have two children. Accidents Kill 104,000 In '64 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Acci- dents killed a record 104,000 Americans last year and cost the'-U.S. economy more than $15,000,000,000. at Camden, Ala., Monday. King said he would file a suit to eliminate the prac- tice which requires voter applicants to be vouched for by a registered voter. King visited Camden in Wil- cox county after leading a registration march in near- by Selma. --(AP Wirephoto) ss Bothers Him Selma, Negro comedian Dick| Gregory, who has been active Gregory and seven other per-jin several civil rights cam- sons were arrested early today|paigns over the South, and his after an argument over reserva-|group appeared after midnight tions at the Holiday Inn Motel.|and an argument followed. They were charged with disor-| Kin ' g led Monday's march at |derly conduct. |Selma, then went to Camden ROOMS NOT HELD jand Marion, in neighboring Wil- | Gregory, who spoke to a Ne-|C0X and Perry counties to as- gro rally Monday night, and one| sist in registration drives there. of the others in the group had| Dallas County's population of reseryed three rooms, motel|voter age in March, 1964, was manager. Harold Sewell said,|listed at 29,515, including 14,- but the rooms had not been | 400 whites and 15,115 negroes. guaranteed. Sewell said the/The justice department said motel held the rooms until/there were 9,542 whites regis- /8 p.m., but Gregory never ap-|tered to vote at that time and | peared. 335 Negroes. INTERPRETING THE WAR The Public Health Service also reported Monday night that accidents put about 2,000,- America threatened the whole purpose of having a Parliament." | UOTED DUFFY The story also quoted Duffy as saying later: "One had only to look at the other side of the House to see that some of the members--I refuse to name them--were not themselves but had clearly wined and dined very well... . "Some Tories have always' Cone Valley, said at a York-|joyked upon the House of Com- shire Labor "social" Fridayj|mons as one of the best clubs night that some Tory opposition|in London because of the bar members were half drunk dur-|facilities which are often avail- ing recent censure debates ON able unti; the early, hours dur- government policies. ing a long debate." Sir Herbert Butcher, 64, a for-| Duffy, who said he likes to mer Tory deputy chief whip,|drink in moderation, was organ- raised the matter in a half-jizing with other Labor MPs a - tense, half-chuckling Commonsipetition to have the Commons chamber and sent a copy of|bar closed at 8:30 p.m. during The Sunday Express story to be|censure debates. By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer In the partial lull after last week's American strikes at North Viet Nam, the over-rid- ing question has been: What are the Communists likely to do jabout them? | So far, there has been no concrete answer. And that fact alone may be reassuring to those who feared the attacks would provoke a stiff Chinese reaction. But the next move is any- The Reds Do About Them? 000 persons in hospital. Dr. Paul V. Joliet, chief of the division of accident prevention, said the number of accidental deaths was up 3,000 over 1963: Auto accidents claimed 48,000 lives last year, up 5,000. False Claims, Firms Fined NEW YORK (AP)--A corpo- ration, its president and an ad- vertising firm were fined $8,500 Monday for making false adver- tising claims about a_ so-called weight-reducing pill, "Regimin". Chief Criminal Court Judge John M. Murtagh imposed the fines on the Drug Research n Raids: What Will a tricky three-cornered relation-;experts say this was the least | ship. the Soviet leader could do under They say that the North Viet-|the circumstances to prove loy- namese government of Ho Chil/alty to the rest of the Commu- Minh, sometimes called a tool|nist world. of Peking, is actually playing a| They say the Hanoi govern- jbalancing act between the two/ment is pivotal in Moscow's |Communist giants. _ lcampaign to bring more Com- | Ho himself and his foreign) munist parties into the contro- jminister, Tran Van Dong, are|yersial March 1 meeting in jrepresented as leaning towards| Moscow to prepare for a unity ie og or strug-| conference. jgle_ wit eking. Other ele-) One expert familiar: with Ha- ments of the Hanoi regime lean noi politics said the North Viet- clearly since then," the attrac-). TORONTO (CP) -- Karl E. Scott, president of Ford Motor Co. of Canada, says the Can- ada-United States limited free- trade agreement is a "'bold ex- periment in industrial states- manship" with "clear-cut eco- nomic justification." However, he warned increas- ing wage demands imposed on automotive plants by "stub- bornly unrealistic labor lead- ership" could offset operating cost reductions inherent in the plan and further retard expan- sion of price reduction. Addressing the Canadian Club Monday, he said another deter- rent to the plan could be unre- alistic industrial taxes which are inconsistent with the plan and could blunt the economic benefits envisaged under the' agreement. He said local market resist: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, February 16, 1965. 3 also helped to perpetuate. un- economic production runs, higher costs, higher-priced cars and a smaller total North Amer- ican market. TASKS IMPOSED It is inevitable, he said, indi- vidual companies will react. dif- ferently to the agreement. I was not perfect .Contrary to the claims of critics, it was not a giveaway plan and substantial taxes had been imposed on Ca- nadian manufacturers. 'Nevertheless, taking the re- alistic viewpoint. I think it can safely be said all members of the industry agree that this im- aginative plan enables us to as- sert real leadership in indus- trial statesmanship between the two countries." Mr. Scott said it will narrow! Ford President Lauds Auto Free-Trade Pact the gap between car prices in the U.S. and Canada, create ment capital, demonstra' international teamwork and government planners will provide widespread --. for Canadians and Amer- cans. He said expansion programs "obviously preclude the dian automotive industry immediate price contrary to the views of some inadequately informed persons. He said that while hecmeg to irate Sy higher prices are s in Canada, The cemied rea- son is lower volume of Cana- dian output. ance to made-in U.S. or made- in-Canada vehicles could also inhibit and delay assembly in- tegration between the two coun- tries. The agreement in its essen- tial terms provides for elimina- tion of customs duties on new motor vehicles and original parts traded between Canada and the U.S. Mr. Scott, however, was gen- erally enthusiastic about the lan, ¥ He said the economic justifi- cation for the agreement is clear-cut One widespread recurring form of discomfort is what is commonly called backache. One frequent cause of backache can be traced to slug- gish kidney action. This condition often may result in frritation of the urinary system, followed by back- ache and tired feeling. Based on a formula introduced over What causes BACKACHE and 'how it may be helped 70 years ago, Dodd's Kidney Pills stimulate the kidneys to help over- come the irritated condition, and so bring relief from the backache and tired feeling. Dodd's Kidney Pills are available at any drug counter in the blue box with the red band, The important thing to look for is the name. You can depend on Dodd's, The Canadian market for cars is a natural extension of the U.S. market, the two parts forming what is in most re- market. "The result, over time, can be to create a rationalized and integrated North American au- tomotive industry. With lower costs and prices, the Canadian market for automobiles can grow faster than before." Mr. Scott said it is true Ca- nadian customs tariffs and con- tent requirement helped estab- lish and maintain the automo- tive industry. But these devices GM: Seat Belts In Rear For '66 DETROIT (AP)--General Mo- tors said Monday that rear seat belts will be installed as stand- ard equipment on all its 1966 passenger car: lines. The GM announcement duplicated that of Ford Motor Co. last week. Chrysler Corp.-will have rear seat belts as standard equip- ment on all cars manufactured after April 1 next, American Motors Corp. also made them \standard equipment. GM Announces Antwerp Plant DETROIT 'AP)--General Mo- tors Corp. Monday announced plans for construction of a new auto. assembly plant in An- twerp, Belgium. The project was announced at a press conference by Fred- eric G. Donner, chairman of the board of GM. The new unit will be. located | spects a single North American|® Away by your INCOME earth solution te these complicated forms, why not bring them fo us? Fast, of every tex 'return, we make any errors that cost you eny penalty er interest, will the interest. North America's Largest Tax Service 135 SIMCOE ST. NORTH OSHAWA 725-6322 GOT A CHILLY ROOM? near Antwerp and will assem- ble Opel Rekord and Kadett Passenger cars. Donner said that under GM's ADDING A ROOM? |toward Peking. | "" to Hanoi is|n2mese leaders don't like to Corp., of New York, its pres- body's guess. Kosygin's trip : sd Southeast Asia experts at the|thought to have been motivatea| think of ee janté United Nations, attempting to|/by fear Russian influence in rather ai & edie to Hidn assess the true intentions of the| Hanoi was slipping and that the them 'Glose to Miner various governments amid the|North Vietnamese might make} | ebriatsn' ade welter of threats and charges,|some move that would lead Ohare nee em the Nort shy away. from firm predic-| fighting on a broader scale in as. pawns but to maintain ident, John Andre and the ad- vertising firm of Kastor, Hilton, Chesley, Clifford and Atherton,} Inc. The defendants pleaded) guilty. Assistant District-Attorney Jo- g h foreign-expansion policy such programs are financed by over- seas earnings. Trainmen Rebel tions. South Viet Nam. their freedom of action and seph Stone, in urging stiff penal- read by the Commons clerk. Tories sat stern-faced but La-| bor ranks broke into gales of] laughter as Duffy was quotedjand other occupants of the Tory} from the Express account: "It was disgusting to look at, Prime Minister Wilson, hand to face, stared at Opposition Leader Sir Alec Douglas-Home front bench with obvious amuse- ment during Monday's uproar. Jaundice, Itch Follow Pill TORONTO (CP) -- Jaundice} and itching of the skin follow- ing the use of enovid, a con-|describe the condition jn a pa-; traceptive pill, are reported in| an article in the current issue of}symptoms during the last three| the Canadian Medical Associa-' tion journal. Hellinger | May Reope This Week | | TIMMINS (CP) -- Hollinger Gold Mine officials said Mon- day work will resume this week if conditions continue -to im- prove in the fight by more than 120 men to extinguish a fire that broke out last Monday in the nearby McIntyre mine. Tests showed the carbon mon- oxide content at Hollinger has steadily diminished following ef- forts to seal break-throughs be- tween McIntyre and Hollinger workings. The fire broke out a mile un- derground in the Mcintyre mine at nearby Schumacher, Leaking gas forced Hollinger to close. Simond Florida, 60, of Timmins | | | was asphyxiated at the 3,500-|indication the patient suffered|City last October," foot level. MD Dr. A J. Elliott and Dr. J. Hendry, both of Brandon, Man., y . . A tient who had shown these months of her pregnancy a year earlier. Jaundice and marked itching of the skin are known to occur occasionally during pregnancy, but disappear after delivery, the article states. The cause is unknown The authors said the recur- rence of this condition in the pa- tient when she later took enovid may help explain why it some- PLAY IT COOL Some say the Russians so far have tended to "play it cool"-- at least pending assessment of the results of Premier Kosy- gin's 11-day trip to North Viet | They point out that the three i\Communist capitals most di- rectly concerned--Moscow, Pe- king and Hanoi--are involved in Fanatics Said In 'Baptistes QUEBEC (CP) -- Provincial Secretary Bona Arsenault said Monday the Quebec Federation of St. Jean Baptiste Societies "is suffering from a shrill infil- tration by fanatical proponents of Quebec independence." He said in a statement that, if this situation does not change, a new Federation for St. Jean Baptiste members will have to be formed. Mr. Arsenault said the present federation is making itself the Nam, China and North Korea. | fear Peking moves that may bring massive American at- Kosygin's action in promising | tacks on their own country, | Soviet military aid in the Hanoi-| But there is no indication yet \directed guerrilla war against|the North Vietnamese will risk South Viet Nam appears to con-|antagonizing Peking by attend- flict with this view. But somejing the March 1 meeting. | "Mightiest Rocket Ever' Launch Planned Today CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP)|bleheader here. Wednesday, the The United States planned to|Ranger VIII craft is scheduled use its mightiest rocket today|'® make a 65-hour, 250,000,000- : ~ Imile trip to the moon to con- to hurl a giant winged satellite|tinue the photographic explor- named Pegasus into orbit. Pe- ation started last July by Ran- gasus is to probe the meteoroid ger Vil. hazard in space. Launching of the 19-storey, 560-ton rocket Saturn I was scheduled between 8:30 a.m. ties, claimed advertising of the "useless" pill was 'one of the| most gigantic and brazen mass media frauds ever perpetrated] on the American public." - Bi-Translated Books Sought EXETER, Ont. (CP) -- Fern Guindon, member of the On- tario legislature for Stormont, said Monday night the federal government should pay costs of French and English transla- tions of books writfen in Can- ada. The Progressive Conservative member said that if a 'national bureau of translation' were set up it would enhance the flow of communication between Eng- lish- and French-speaking Cana- dians. Mr. Guindon told a United CONFLICT SEEN [a Sennétt Accused Of 'Bank-Block' Against Union VANCOUVER (CP) -- Pacific Great Eastern Railway train- men rebelled against their union leaders Monday night and con- tinued to strike against the British Columbia's government- owned railway only hours after agreement had been announced. Picket lines went up again around PGE yards and the trainmen said they would not return to work. They said they were "sold down the river" by their ne- gotiating committee, which signed an agreement to end the strike that began Feb, 2 with- out permitting a vote among the 185 striking members of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- COMFORT ELECTR VISIT MAKE YOUR COMPLETE WITH IC HEAT YOUR ELECTRIC HEATING INFORMATION CENTRE ONTARIO HYDRO 61 Temperance St., Bowmanville, Phone 623-2561 Church Street, Markham, Phone AX 3-3331 OR YOUR ONTARIO HYDRO OFFICE men (CLC) The move came shortly after Labor Minister Leslie Peterson and representatives of the PGE and the brotherhood's negotiat- ing committee emerged from a -- to announce a settle- ment. SHARPE ELECTRIC COMPANY 110 WOOD ST., OSHAWA 728-8214 -- Church dinner in this town 20 miles west of Stratford that after the translation costs were met, the finished work could be turned over to a publisher. and 1 p.m. EST. Two networks, CBS and NBC, planned live television coverage. Saturn 1 is the forerunner of the mammoth Saturn V rocket TORONTO (CP)--Members of the Ralliement des Creditistes are under instructions from times happens spontaneously during pregnancy. Jaundice refers to a yellowing of the skin which happens' when too much bile from the liver gets into the bloodstream, The au- thors saia the patient showed no sign of damage to the cells of the liver. After she stopped taking enovid and was given |treatment the jaundice and itch- jing disappeared, | | |, The doctors suggested that in such patients some defect may exist in the liver's ability to jhplidle relatively large amounts jof the hormones estrogen and progesterone. This might ex- jplain wny the condition occurs }during pregnancy, when hor- jmone levels are high, and on jtaking enovid, which contains both hormones. There was no 'any harm, the article said. "spokesman for a mean minor- ity urging Quebec independ- ence. ; The: St. Jean Baptiste Soci- eties make: up a French-lan- guage patriotic group found mostly in Quebec. "This monolithic and auto- cratic organization," said M Arsenault of the Quebec feder- ation, 'flooded legislators. at Ot- tawa as well as Quebec City with requests for a distinctive Canadian flag. "Then, the day one was adopted, the federation de- nounced it without taking the ad- vice of the individual societies." The federation had failed to consult the member-groups be- fore it "denounced the celebra- tion of the 100th anniversary. of Confederation and it sided with creators of disorder at the time jof the Queen's. visit to Quebec the secre- ltary said. T.\nel is 14 feet wide, providing a Premier W. A. C. B tt of The agreement gave road crews an extra two-per-cent pay increase for handling long trains. TOWNSEND that is to hoist Amer'can astro- jnauts to the moon. The rocket \will be seeking its eighth con- secutive successful test flight. | Once in orbit, the payload is jto unfold two wing-like panels} to a span of 96 feet. Each pa-| Pipe British Columbia to obstruct passage of bills to charter new banks, the president of Welling- ton Financial .Corp, Limited said Monday. Sinclair Stevens told the an- nual meeting of his company-- major sponsor of the proposed ASSESSMENT RECORD VANCOUVER (CP) -- Asses- sed value of property liable. to taxation for civic government purposes has passed the $1,000,- 000,000 mark for the first time in this city's history. NEED.,. FUEL OIL? LIMITED 385 KING STREET EAST ELECTRIC 723-2343 Call PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 large target for meteoroids as Pegasus sweeps through space|in, Craditi 'li i ; ' reditistes are filibustering like a great bird in the House of Commons. Meteoroids are:pieces of] He said they have openly ac- space. debris, mostly the rem-|knowledged that they are delay- nants of disintegrated comets,|ing petitions for bank bills on which speed along at up tOlinstructions of Mr. Bennett, 136,000 miles an hour. Almost whose government has so far all are microscopic in size and|fajled to obtain Senate approval pose a possible sandblast effect|of jts petition to charter the if a cloud of them should strike|pank of British' Columbia. a spacecraft. Pegasus hopes to! The Senate has passed a bill learn the size, frequency, dis-lig charter the Bank of Western tribution and direction of these|Canada with headquarters in particles }Winnipeg and another to charter The Saturn I-Pegasus launch-|the Laurentide Bank of Canada ing is to kick off a space dou-|in Vancouver. Bank of Western Canada--that Why Pay More. ON FUEL OIL DX FU ( SAVE!! 16: Phone 668-3341 EL OIL Serving Oshawa And District "JIM" McTEAGU Electric Heating Contractors 415 Cochrane, Whitby E ELECTRIC LTD. 668-4278 Go Modern Go Electroheet 56 PRINCE ST., OSHAWA. FOR CALL 7128-4611

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy