Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jun 1965, p. 4

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- Teach Your C e can MLAs Down Attempt TORONTO (CP)--A bill giv-jlevel government control of} ing the provincial government|emergency services, with the) widespread powers over muni-|premier or a cabinet minister) cipalities in the event of nat-|designated by him authorized to| ural or national disaster was|take over personally local po- approved by the Ontario legis-|lice and fire departments and lature Friday. other municipal services if two} In other developments: an at-jor municipalities are hit by a tempt to give Metropolitan Tor-|disaster. onto council power to pass} Liberal store-closing bylaws supersed- ing those of member municipal- ities was defeated. Attorney » General Arthur Wishart said the disaster bill would help improve municipal- provincial planning for disaster situations and would step up the activities of the emergency ' 0 measures organization. lems that might arise in an The legislation provides top-iemergency. Nazis Killed 50 Relatives, But Lawyer Defends One Leader Andrew) tempting to work out emer- gency plans before a disaster occurred. | Kenneth Bryden (NDP--Tor-| onto. Woodbine) said that the! EMO program _ provides TORONTO (CP) -- A Jewishthe federal government had the|\Commonwealth conference will/Soldiers from Viet Nam--pre-| sociation lawyer, who said Nazis had|power to rule on political acti-\send a team of leaders under|Sented another awkward snag./next year in Ottawa, killed 50 of his relatives, volun-| vities. : tarily defended William Beattie,| Nevertheless, Magistrate Rob-| 23, self-styled leader of the Ca-jert Dnieper fined Beattie $25. to/set up Viet Nam peace talks.|force is impossible. New Zea-| nadian Nazi party, in bylaw|be paid within 15 days or five! court Friday. days in jail. At the conclusion of the two-| The Crown called for more/and Trinidad's Eric Williams/laying dispatch of his artillery, hild To Swim - 4 and his mouth at the same time. AL AFEMPMNRATG Hh ! Canada Will Help To Let Metro Set Closing Viet Peace-Plans Thompson criticized the appar-jof ent lack .of emphasis on at-jenc delegates in an attempt to get |the plan off the ground. Here is the fourth lesson of The Times' 10-part series showing how to teach your-child to swim. These simple instructions were developed for The Star by Dick Lough, director of aquatics for Central YMCA in Toronto. : As your child progresses, remember to make sure that each step is thoroughly mastered before proceeding to the next. This fourth lesson is best taught in the swimming pool or at the lake shore. But it may be done in a wash basin, if. necessary. Its purpose is to teach the child to breathe out through the nose and mouth with his face under water. Have your child breathe in, then put his face in the water and have him breathe out through his nose, Next, have the child try breathing out through his nose Then have the child breathe out only through his -- mouth; When this is mastered alternate with nose-only breathing-out exercise. Have the child practice these techniques until he is able to do them easily. Hf nest gM TettN | Wilson and Foreign Secretary By HAROLD MORRISON ter Wilson mounted a weekend battle to avert collapse of his five power Commonwealth peace mission on Viet Nam. As the 21-national Common- wealth prime ministers confer- ence went into a weekend re- cess, Wilson received his col- leagues in groups at Chequers, his official country residence 40 miles west of London. The visits provided Wilson with an opportunity for talks to convince t'he' Commonwealth leaders to close ranks in sup- port of the Commonwealth peace-seeking mission under the Britisii prime minister's leader- ship. A spokesman said Canadian Prime Minister Pearson, travel- ling to the country -hémes. of to in de U. pe: DI bu as Sai Michael Stewart during the weekend, is exerting all efforts to reassure African and Asian critics of the mission's value though some countries still de- By CARL MOLLINS {will meet another group of lead LONDON (CP)--Canada and|ers. Among them is Kenya's ex- India are expected to be asked|ternal affairs minister, Joseph to help work out guidelines for| Murumbi, who has voiced res a Commonwealth peace plan/ervations about Wilson' ht for Viet Nam. lto lead the-peace team. Informants said today offi-/- In town, two of Pearson's cials of the two countries are|aides were working on other likely to join a working group|delegations. Arnold Smith, as- the Commonwealth confer-|Sistant deputy external affairs e being formed this week-|minister, and Gordon Robert- end. Canada and India, along|$0", secretary of the privy with Poland, are, members of|Council, conferred with officials the International Control Com-/of other member countries. mission in VietNam. Pearson opened his efforts Formation of the working|Friday in seeking the support s rig meaningful answers to the prob-|tied in with a diplomatic rescue|sharpest critic of the peace! world." mission to help Prime Minister|plan. Pearson later reported the " was "very good." SEEN AS SNAG Nkrumah's appeal for will gestures--a halt Prime aim of the diplomacy|bombing of North Viet Nam, mission. Prime Minister Pearson and his aides were working on other good- lis to smooth out dissension that|Withdrawal of Austtalian forces larose within hours of the an-|ffom the war area and with- nouncement Thursday that the holding of token New Zealand Wilson to Communist and West-| Australia's ern capitals in an attempt tojzies said withdrawal of his Ghana's Kwame Nkrumah,|land's Keith Holyoake, how- Nigeria's Sir Abubakar Balewaljever, said he will consider de- day trial, John Weisdorf, as-|severe judgment because of thejare assigned to accompany Wil-|force if Communist reaction to sistant director of legal aid, ar-|disturbance Beattie had caused/son, Ceylon's Dudley Senanay-|the peace mission is encourag- gued that Beattie was accus ing was illegal. a Beattie was charged for al-jas any first offender. lowing his house to be used as} To do otherwise, he headquarters of the Canadian|would be an admission Nazis. "our law had lost treat Beattie in the same way) said, Shulman Clears Grocery _ ropolitan Toronto, Friday exon-|death to be gastro-enteritis--an erated a food store which soldlinflamation of the stomach and a parfait cream cake that hasjintestinal tract that can result been suggested as a possible/from food poisoning. ; cause of death of two young! Doctors say there is only cir- Toronto boys. j}cumstantial evidence so far to Dr: Shulman said he wasjconnect the boys' death with issuing results of laboratory|the cake. They say food poison- tests made of food samplesiing is only one cause of gastro- taken at the store prior to the/enteritis. inquest into the death of the! An inquest was ordered for two youths to relieve apprehen-/July 13. Several cakes of the sion among shoppers. type consumed by the boys Thomas and Glen Drake, 2\have been taken to the attor- and 3, died Wednesday in hos-jney - general's laboratory for pial after they had eaten alanalysis. Metro Building Shut Down And Isn't Likely To Start TORONTO (CP) -- Commer-jare expected to walk off their cial and industrial construction|jobs by the end of next week. across the city shut down for, Ajex Main, president of the the weekend Friday and is not)Toronto Building Trades Coun- expected , to resume Monday cil, composéd of the construc- when 3,800 of its workers will/jion unions, said a complete be on strike. shutdown of the industry is in- Three thousand members Of evitable, the United Brotherhood of Car) phe carpenters want an in- penters and Joiners (CLC) be- beeaae Ok Ab Gents "ah hour ih gin their strike Monday against) . the Toronto Construction EE para ar on" Nee ation, joining 300 hoisting en- es we Cation, joining . The hoisting engineers want gineers whose strike began Fri- r ag 500 cement masons cents an hour during two who have been out since June Years. Current rate for a crane 12 operator is $3.40. : ion, the Bricklay-- The cement masons rejected a eee al Plasterers In-/4" offer from the construction ternational Union (CLC), will|@s0ciation of 20 cents during take a strike vote today and'W9 years. They now get $2.97. ONE PIECE LEFT The only thing in the White House as old as the building is| Gilbert Stuart's painting of George Washington. Discrimination Against Wives -- OTTAWA (CP) -- Harold Winch (NDP--Vancouver East) called Friday for eaveriment| action to ensure that no female | |MEET AT CHEQUERS that/resident of Chequers overnight) P® and his|Friday, had a chance to discuss Beattie's) ideology had won."|the peace plan with Wilson, ea sai norton hn sainanwcein = Williams, India's Lal Bahadur | Shastri range | rou \towards the Communists as aj)socializing. prelude to' the peace mission. In Death Of Two Children :.: wealth Secretary Arthur Bot-|there at the end of the Second) when my home became a cen- TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton|cream-filled cake Monday. Anjtomley of Britain is entertain-/World War, and had tickets to|tre for refugees and missionar- Shulman, chief coroner of Met-\autopsy showed the cause of ing relays of guests, SAVE $ $ ON the bylaw which/in the neighborhood, but Magis-\ake backed out because of ill ing. ed of break-|trate Dnieper said he would|heaith. | Informants said moves are under way to persuade Presi- Pearson, at Wilson's countr |dent Johnson to consider a sus- : nsion of bombing raids a if the Commonwealth plan ap- pears to have a chance of suc- cess. Pearson planned at least two and Nkrumah, who concessionary He was to visit agi Sheffield, British minister Sunday night at nearby Dor-jin Washington when Pearson Wood, where Common-|\was Canadian ambassador Pearson'the theatre tonight. B-B Commission Now Asks Canadians How They Vote OTTAWA (CP) -- The royaljfor one, wouldn't have any commission on bilingual-|trouble answering such ques- ism and biculturalism is asking}tions: Canadians how they voted in| Outside the House, Mr. Winch the last federal and provincial|caiq he felt the commission elections, it was learned Fri-|woyld be over - stepping _ its day. : terms of reference to ask such Sources said, however, the questions. questions are being asked not) "If this information is true, to collect -political data, but to/then it's time we brought this verify the validity of surveyS\commission 'under official in- being made on issues closer tO\ vestigation. Maybe it's time to the commission's terms of ref-!wipe out this commission," erence, | ; Sources said, however, This information came|commission researchers to light following an exchangejasked no such questions. in the Commons in which Har- that have as mission chairman. manded that Wilson step down ya ab The spokesman said New Zea- | | | | | LONDON (CP) -- ee wealth leaders who had earlier argued over the | conference table gathered at a festive table| in London's ancient Guildhall) Friday night and heard a Ca-| \nadian tribute no|group to co-ordinate strategy is|of Tanzania's Julius Nyerere,!as 'a -vital unifying force in) Magna Carta as : ment in history." He recalled|ference which he is hoping will Alan Macnaughton, -Speaker|Canada's "deep debt to Britain" put pressure on the Communist |Wilson save the faltering peace/Tanzanian president's reaction/of the Canadian Commons, was|2S Well as to the other found-|world to enter negotiations. |proposing the toast on behalf|ing nation, France, and praised) Meanwhile, Nyerere of Tan- of Commonwealth representa-|the ideals of liberty that Brit-\zania tives at a dazzling lord mayor's|@! |banquet, held to mark the 7th in U.S./anniversary of Britain's Parlia-|cratic tions of equality and the broth-|son's military policies in South erhood of all men, has spread] Viet Nam. In the Canadian view across the seas to many lands.|there was no prospect that Wil- As-|Whatever may. be its imperfec-|son would step down. be held|tions, it still represents the fin- it wasjest form of government known ing among some Commonwealth Sir Robert Men-|learned Friday--has also been|to man." ment. Macnaughton, here annual meeting of monwealth Parliamentary ----which will for the) the Com-} land's LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis-|Holyoake has agreed to withholdj/duced the mission to Wilson, son ef "A the dispatch of troops to South|Ghana's Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, Viet Nam if Peking would agree|Nigeria's Sir Abubakar Tafawa mese war. And a number of countries, including Canada, are ready to make a fresh move to get Presi- Nam to meet the demands of Ghana, India, Pakistan and oth- ers who feel such a move might brighten the prospects of a All 21 countries agreed to the idea of a peace bid Thursday been formed to visit Washing- ton, Moscow, Peking, Hanoi and for holding a Viet Nam peace conference, Varying expressions of discon- tent Kenya Prime Minister Dudley Senana- Commonwealth Toasted As Vital Unifying Force attending a special conference} jof Commonwealth Speakers as|ranged the details of transport part of the anniversary celebra-|and- a common secretariat for! Wilson Works Feverishly © To Save His Peace-Plan Prime Minister Keith open its doors to the mission its effort,to end .the Vietna- nt Johnson to call a halt to S. bombing in North Viet ace Manoeuvre. SSENSIONS ERUPT it dissensions erupted almost soon as a five-man team had igon in search of a formula from Tanzania, Ghana. - Ceylon's came and ke announced he would be un- le to join the team because of other engagements, That re- Balewa and Dr. Eric. Williams of Trinidad and Tobago. Tanzania's President Julius Nyerere meanwhile charged that setting up the mission after consulting Washington but not Peking appeared to be an at- tempt "to put China in the! dock." Kenya's foreign minister, Jo- seph Murumbi, objected to Wil- son's presence in the mission be- cause Britain was too tightly linked to the United States, he said. Then Nkrumah at the confer-' ence session Friday morning de- manded a Commonwealth ap- peal to the United States to halt its air attack on North Viet Nam immediately. He also urged Sir Robert Menzies of Australia to withdraw 'his country's token force of 900 troops from South Viet Nam, and asked Holyoake to cancel the projected dispatch of an artillery battery. MENZIES SAID 'NO' . Nkrumah got a flat no from Menzies. Conference sources said the atmosphere at the con- ference table grew measurably more tense, | tions. Macnaughton described the parliamentarian pay\Joint anniversaries of British|/be ready to leave after the first to the Commonwealth|Patliamentary democracy and|week in July, following the end "a great mo- n had sent across the world. "From this island the demo- spirit, with its connota- "Mr. Formosa' Back Home 'After 38 Years In China By ROSEMARY SPEIRS TORONTO (CP)--'Mr. mosa" has returned to Canada|'h {12,000,000 non-Communist Chin-| /nese. til Rev. James Dickson, }mosa longer than any other \Presbyterian missionary. "Mr. Formosa is a name I jgot after the Second World War ies,"" he said. "These days I go on preaching missions in the vil- lages every weekend. I am known from one end of the is- land to another so I guess the title is appropriate," | Mr. Dickson is in.Canada to lecture about Formosa and to participate in celebrations Sun- day marking 100 years of Pres- byterian missionary service there. : to He has seen his island church grow from a handful of work- ers to a thriving body with 170,- |000 members and has witnessed) th \su ito \th lia made a number of them feel For-|Sick one night. They thought ey had been poisoned and de- £aiN)tg talk about his 38 years' ex-|Cided to call on us as we slept|SuPport. perience in the island refuge of|4"d cut our heads off. | "Luckily they chose to wait 1 morning and make a cere- Princeton. After graduation in 1927 he came to Markham, Ont., where! e Presbyterian Church per- jaded him to go immediately) Formosa with his wife, Lil- n. Mr. Dickson proved remark- ably adaptable: "T went out with the idea of junderstanding and learning. If e aborigines ate boiled mon- key or snails, I just ate them 0. "T learned the Formosan Chi- nese dialect and Japanese and was soon able to get along. |move; pushing for a decision on the mission the first day of the lconference instead of undertak- ling greater exploration of Com-| A group of British foreign of.|fully to inland fishermen. pene \fice technicians were brought| Mr. Robichaud said the fed-'investigate penitentiaries. into contact the five capitals the mission wants to visit to find out if it will be received and ar- \the would-be peacemakers. | Wilson hopes the' mission will of the Algiers Afro-Asian con- and Kenya's Murumbi |continued to argue that Wilson |should have no place on the mis- sion because he supported John- However' there was question-| delegates whether, in fact, Wil- 'son had been too hasty in his | monwealth reaction. | | Many British newspapers con-| * jcluded the mission c pt is debating time by almost 30 per cent to 33 hours a week. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thurs: days are wiped out, as well as' the 1% hour lunch period Fri-| APPROVE LOAN ACT tended sitting. hours in the Commons have been in effect for one week and already the government considers their suc- cess has been proved. Democrat Arnold Peters, have complained about the loss of eating time, but a government spokesman pointed to Friday's on five measures Friday, all of them non - controversial, but such speed is unusual except at the end of a session. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, June 19, 1968 3 ¥ Lomper Hours Of Debate Prove Successful Move By MICHAEL GILLAN _|eral act applies across the OTTAWA (CP) -- The ex-|country, but said all provinces do not have provincial agencies to aid fishermen. The usually - automatic, third * reading will be sought by the Some MPs, particularly New|government Monday. ° The Commons also approved: © --Establishment of a _ joint'®. Senate - Commons committee - G -- a * accomplishments to justify any), ad mi ecg federal pen: < hunger pangs suffered by mem-|!t¢ntiaries. bers. The appointment to the . Central Mortgage and Hous- ing Corp., the Crown - cone trolled organization that ade . ministers the National Hous- | ing Act, of two new vice- _ presidents. --Money to pay for the exten- sion of the winter works in- centive program to April 15 from March 31, MUST BE APPROVED The budget proposals must 'now be approved in legislative The MPs gave all but final,,form, and next week opposition The Commons made progress The new sitting hours extend The two-hour dinner periods jay. and third, reading to an amend-|MPs are expected to renew ment to the Fisheries Improve:|their arguments against meas- ment Loans Act to raise the|ures affecting foreign - owned ceiling on loans and increase|Mewspapers and magazines. the repayment period. Several NDP members were Harold Danforth (PC--Kent, critical of Justice Minister Fav- Ont.) said the act should apply|reau's motion to establish a « |Senate-Commons committee to DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 KING STREET EAST PHONE 725-3594 MEDICAL PHARMACY 300 KING STREET WEST PHONE 728-6277 North Simcoe Pharmacy Ltd. 909 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 723-3418 ATTENTION GENERAL MOTORS EMPLOYEES Save Your Prescription Receipts Commencing Merch 1, 1965, Sise, rope Preseviption pg ged Plen ir m ified a will honor i h i) der the terms of the egreement. on the brink of collapse, but vet- leran officials predicted last-min- jute deals would increase mission| i PEANUT IS DISGUISED 1 ANTS MAKE GARDENS The parasol ant cuts leaves hich it drags to its nest as | The peanut is not really a nut) princi-/Mony of our death, When dawn) or fruit but the seed of a sub- wants the conference to ar-|private breaks from the week- pal of Taiwan Tehological Col-|Came they felt fine--so we were! terranean vegetable. gesturesjend rounds of diplomacy and) lege in Taipei, has been in For-|!€t off." |PROVED ADAPTABLE |_ Born on a ranch in South) w |Dakota in 1899 Mr. Dickson|compost for beds of food fungi. took his bachelor of theology at! HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS the rise and fall of several Formosan governments. After the Second World War, Mr. Dickson went into the For- mosan mountains to preach among aboriginal headhunters. He recalls that he almost lost his own head. "We gave the tribes worm jmedicine and castor oil which old Winch (NDP -- Vancouver) East) said he had been told) persons representing - them- selves as commission research- ers have been asking Vancou- ver residents whether they sup-} ported Prime Minister Pearson! in the last election and if they would do so again next time. Acting Prime Minister Martin promised to look into the mat- ter, adding with a grin that he, Two Men Killed; Car Hits Pole MONTREAL (CP) -- Two On- tario men were killed Friday night when the car they were riding in left the road and hit a telegraph pole just east of Montreal. Dead are Miles. Ticanic, 57, and Montroy Winston, 54, of Cornwall, Ont. CALL employee can be dismissed from her job for changing her marital status. AUTO INSURANCE | He said in the Commons a recent arbitration board report upheld the right of an airline-- he didn't say which one -- to} dismiss: a woman from her job! because she got married. "This is unwarranted, un - Canadian discrimination | against the married women of this country." Mr. Winch said the Bill of Rights or other applicable leg- islation should be amended to cover the point Acting Prime Minister Mar- tin said he will look into the situation and reply next week. $18.00 on your auto See... JOHN DIAL 668-8831 If you are an Abstainer you save up to 218 DUNDAS ST. E., WHITBY 723. insurance, RIEGER PRESCRIPTION IS OSHAWA WHITB for Prompt PRESCRIPTION "COMPOUNDING YOUR PHYSICIAN'S & Lovell "PRESCRIPTION CHEMISTS" "WE SEND MEDICINE TO EUROPE" us... 2245 OUR PROFESSION" Y BOWMANVILLE SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. R. J, TUMEY'S SHELL STATION 962 SIMCOE ST. 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