6a Wy TE IIE A Grits Could Rise On Service Vote By RONALD LEBEL Libera] candidate, 12 to the OTTAWA (CP) -- Results of|Conservative, 26 to Mr. Rond- the armed services vote, ex-jeau and two to the New Demo- pected to be announced Satur-|crat. day, could turn some election-| An official count will be held night victories into defeats. in Shefford Monday to remove The Liberals, with 129 seats|the possibility of error. After on the basis of civilian voting,|that, any candidate has four hope to pick up two more injdays in' which to ask for @ ju- the traditionally - Liberal mili-|dicial recount. tary voting. The second-closest race saw is would leave the govern-|Conservative D. Hugh Gillis, ment only three seats short ofjhead of the communications de- a clear majority in the 265-seat|partment at Boston University, Commons. (The Speaker, al-junseat Liberal John B. Stewart ways a government MP, doesjin Antigonish-Guysborough by not vote except to break ties.)|19 votes. The 1963 service vote There are four constituencies|in the Nova Scotia riding was where the MP-elect has a cush-|Liberal 161, Conservative 49. fon of less than 100 votes and is| Mr, Stewart, a former philos- highly vulnerable to service-jophy professor, was parliamen- vote inroads. Two of thesejiary secretary to State Secre- ridings. went Conservative and|tary Lamontagne in the last two Liberal in Monday's elec-| House. tion. : The two Liberal-MPs-elect in Spot checks of Monday's re-|danger are George E. Nixon, a sults in polling stations on or|25-year Commons veteran, and near defence establishments|Jack Roxburgh, a blunt-spoken across Canada showed the Lib-|tobacco grower -who regaled the erals consistently ahead, even|last House with his blasts at in ridings that elected Consery-|Health Minister Judy La- atives, Marsh's anti-smoking program. GIVE LIBERALS EDGE HAS 23-VOTE LEAD In most provinces civilian) Mr, Nixon has a lead of 23 lis at military bases gave the|votes over Conservative Russ jberals edges of 2 to 1 and|/Ramsay in Algoma West, In the 3 to 1. 1963 service vote h» received The Liberals took "70.5 per|196 votes compared with 35 for cent of the total service vote|his Conservative opponent, in 1963, compared with 41.7 per) Mr. Roxburgh won by 46 votes cent of. the civilian vote, They;more than Conservative J. have dominated service polls|Evans Knowles in Norfolk, since 1940, where he took the last service The number of 'eligible serv-| vote 120 to 37 for his Conserva- ice voters dropped by nearly|tive opponent. 20,000 in this election and the) Apart from these four close Liberals' share of the civilian|races, upsets conceivably could vote slipped to 40 per cent. occur Saturday in 10 other Commons standings on the|ridings where the winning mar- basis of civilian votes are Lib-|gin was under 500, but these erals 129, Conservatives 99,/are remote possibilities. New Democrats 21, Creditistes 9, Social Credit 5, independent 1, Independent-Conservative 1. The most vulnerable MP-elect is Conservative Paul Trepanier, mayor of Granby, nursing a nine-vote margin in Shefford over Oreditiste Gilbert Rondeau and a 13-vote edge over Liberal Louis Neveu, LIKELY TO LOSE If the results of the 1963 serv- ice vote are duplicated, Mr, Ne- veu will topple Mr. Trepanier. In that election, Shefford serv- icemen gave 115 votes to the The Volatility Of Rhodesia Spurs Quick Move To UN By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Prime Minister Wilson's quick action in taking the Rho- desian issue to the United Na-| tions recognizes that the situa- tion could still run wild. | As Wilson told the British Parliament, it was inevitable in any case that Rhodesia's unilat- eral declaration of independ- election-night winners in 1962 and 1963 and one in 1957 and 1958, In service voting conducted from Nov. 1 to 6 in Canada and around the world, there were 122,614 eligible voters, com- pared with 141,210 two years ago. Between 80,000 and 85,000 were expected to exercise their franchise. Turnout is lower in the serv- ice vote because of a long se- ries of formalities required by law to ensure secrecy. All this is indirectly but cru- cially involved with a long, ob- scure struggle now being waged before the World Court at The Hague. There South Africa is desperately defending her right to administer the huge territory of south-west Africa, placed un- der her mandate following the First World War. POLICE EXAMINED SL IE HE ORL VE, NEWSMAN'S WAR The Jungles Of Viet Nam NDP Big Gainer On Party Voting OTTAWA (CP)--In terms ofja percentage point in 1963. Two the way the party vote went in|were elected--~an Ind each province, the New. Demo- pa Ane Yvon Dupuis, 39, former minis-|Napierville, the riding he held ter without portfolio in thelin the last Parliament. ppt lp Ap NP fe peoeiaplinih Pearson cabinet who lost his' THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, November 12, 1965 15 post over a race track dal, said Wednesday he is retiring \from public life, Mr. Dupuis, running asa self- declared Liberal but without the backing of the Liberal party, was defeated in Monday's elec- (CP)--|tion in St. Jean - Iberville- Dupuis Quits Public Life ST. JOHNS, date, Que, up 6,287 votes. Mr. The riding was won by Con- servative candidate Paul Beau-| lieu with 12,491 votes. Next was the official Liberal party candi- Jean Desmarais who polled 6,702. Mr. Dupuis picked those who had shown '"'cruelty and ingratitude" toward him. He said he had no immedi- ate plans but that he was con- sidering a number of offers "of very interesting em) og Mr. Dupuis faces influence In a statement to the pressipeddling charges connected Dupuis said he forgave with the race track scandal. cratic Party achieved most suc-| cess in Monday's federal elec- tion. The NDP increased its share of the vote in all provinces ex- Are My Beat Associated Press corres-.. pondent Peter Arnett has Conservative znd a straight In- dependent -- both in Quebec where the "other" share of the party vote amounted to four per cent, all an increase over 1963. The military vote toppled two) ence would be debated' in the UN. So it was better for Brit- ain to take the initiative. The bitterness in many Afri- can countries toward Rhodesia The case--initiated by Ethio- pia and Liberia--has developed into an examination of South African policy not only in the mandated territory but in South Africa itself, and indeed racial In B.C., NDP and Liberals ran close on the party vote, the NDP getting 33 per cent and the Liberals 30. This reversed the 1963 showing of Liberals 33 and NDP 30. It was the second time the NDP had gained the largest share of the B.C. yote. They did covered the Viet Nam war for more than three years, He tells what it is like. By PETER ARNETT SAIGON (AP) -- For men whose daily job it is to capture and transmit the taste, the feel, the smel! of battle, few wars have been as perilous as the nightmarish struggle in Viet Nam, Not since the Spanish Civil War of three decades ago has a conflict been comparably so difficult and dangerous for those who cover it. This is because it is a war) without any front lines, without clearly marked friendly or en- emy territory or clear lines be- tween combatants. It is a war jof treacherous ambushes and of lswift hit and run attacks by a wily foe who. materializes sud- denly from the jungle, strikes viciously and vanishes. Reporters and photographers cept Newfoundland. It didn't change in the Yukon or North- west Territories, In British Co- lumbia, it captured more of the vote than any other party--%3 per cent. : On a country-wide basis, the NDP increased its share of the party vote to 18 per cent from 13 in 1963 and its Commons strength to 21 members from 18. The winning Liberals, whose country-wide share of the vote dropped to 40 per cent from 42 in 1963, lost ground in six prov- inces--Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba and B.C. They stayed even in the others and gained in the Yukon and Northwest Territories. Conservatives led in 1958 with 49. TORIES STRONGER In Quebec, the Liberals won 55 of the 75 seats on 45 per cent of the vote compared with 47 seats on 46 per cent in 1963. The Conservatives elected nine members on 22 per cent of the |vote compared with eight mem- GOT BIGGEST SHARE |bers on 20 per cent two years Liberal candidates got the|ago. biggest share of the party vote| Over the last four elections, in four provinces, topped by|four provinces have consistently their 64 per cent in Newfound-/giyen the largest share of their land. It was 47 per cent in New|yote to the Conservatives-- Brunswick, 45 in Queec and 43 P.E.1., Manitoba, Saskatchewan in Ontario, Compared with 1963,/and Alberta. Newofundland has jregularly venture to placesithey dropped one percentage/been just as consistent for the where gd oe bo oar point in Quebec, three in On-|Liberals. in words and on film the color,|tario. Be ee ' | the flavor, the terror, the tri-| Liberals elected 129 PE Fin hg ee a umphs and the heartbreaks of ajthe same number as in 1963.|i, 1963 they tied the Liberals confused and confusing conflict.| The Conservatives, whose, ee oe ry ee with 47 per cent apiece. But there is no safety either share of the national vote at 33 in the battlefield areas under|per cent was the same as in) Vr" fire or in Saigon, where sudden,|1963, scored gains in PEL, tet ee i eh a ar ia bloody acts of Viet Cong terror/Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, |\ne, ComservAuves (© tt) toes are commonplace. lQuebec and Alberta, 'They | 1962 an to the Liberals in 190s stayed even in Newfoundland and 1965, |FIVE HAVE DIED and lost ground in Ontario, Man-| Quebec and Ontario show Five members of the press\itoba, Saskatchewan and B.C, identical patterns. Each gave corps have died this year, three|plus the Yukon and Northwest| most votes to the Conservatives of them within the last 40 days.|Territories. in 1958 and to the Liberals At least a dozen others have| Conservatives got 54 per. cent|since. New Brunswick has an even it in 1962 with 30.9 per cent. The || been pounded and still others) of the vote in P.E.I., 50 in Nova) = have had hair-raising escapes. |Scotia, 40 in Manitoba; 48 in About 300 newspaper, press|Saskatchewan and 47 in Alberta agency, magazine, radio and|to lead in those five provinces. THINKING ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE television correspondents are| They won 99 seats against 95 accredited at this time to cover|in 1963. the Viet Nam war, PWIOIIN: 7 They go into the field with full my gs Aett ue n arees aime od : bia ae age ad share of the vote than in 1963 are, where Vietnamese Ameri-|jn ae tee ae tw ovalager cans, Australians, New Zealand-|share Oar all pot hg ne. | ers and Koreans gg ees COM-| where it rose by five percentage| RESO DDRRt euany, They tee points to 18. It lost ground in | 'th an oat #4 i. |New Brunswick, Ontario, Mani-) rv if plac tha ci "ue P ¢.|toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta! shied 'aur ane honda : ome"|plus the two far-north seats. re | It also fell back in Quebec. One was Dicky Chapelle who|There, Social Credit candidates died last week from a Viet Cong|won 27 per cent of the vote in} booby trap. 1963. This time the party had| . ~ jno candidates in Quebec but) "aces on 'lave been|creditistes obtained 17 per cent} dying j " of the vote. | inbeching Viac' Veeck teas On bs country-wide basis, So-| than 40 Frenc? rises ane redit obtained four per) : «it of the vote and Creditistes In the early "850s, Robert Capa (tt equal share Monday. In 1063, lee r oP" Social Credit, including Quebec, noted American photographer, won 12 per cent. a -- a Viet Minh) " Social Credit elected five can-| didates and Créditistes nine.| ete noe ca lucky be ihe|The Social Credit figure in 1963 new phase of the war up to this!was 24, year. Then the odds began to) Other candidates picked tp catch up. one per cént of the vote last) Po Saigon, newspaper men| Monday across the country} ave had near misses in res-;compared with less than half of e Why Not Call TOM FARQUHARSON SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada RESIDENCE: BUSINESS: 668-4371 725-4563 taurants blown up minutes after hoy can hardly be exaggerated. 4 Even before the declaration, "lations in other parts of the) there were complaints because} : : Britain did not use force--as it, A South African authority re- was strongly suspected she\cently told a reporter: "The would have done if the rebels|British and Americans take the had been non-white. \view that if we get a slapdown jat The Hague court, it becomes| HATED TRIO impossible for them to apply} Rhodesia, in African eyes, is the brakes at the UN. There not simply a country fighting would be a juridical basis for) majority rule within its ownjaction against South Africa by! borders. It is the ge of|sanctions or a blockade or what- the hated trio--South Africa, |ever," | MONTREAL (CP) -- Alumin- Portugal and Rhodesia--which) pis might explain in partjium Ltd, of Montreal will can- stopped the movement of Afri-iwhy South Africa, in the events|cel its aluminum price in- can nationalism at the Zambesi)jeading up to its declaration ofjcreases following similar action they had left, and narrow es- capes from flying glass from the many terrorist bomb at- tacks on buildings, No Aluminum Price-Jumps River. independence, was circumspect Victory or even survival ofjin its comments on the Rhode-| Rhodesia on its present course|sian situation, evidently anxious | would, in the view of many non-/not to irritate Britain and the white Africans, make still more/|U.S. impregnable the pOsSition Of; Observers feel one danger jby United States producers, a spokesman said Thursday. The U.S. companies boosted the price of primary aluminum ingots to 25 cents from 24% cents recently, but withdrew the South Africa. tnow is that a foolish move, per-|increases Wednesday night Portugal, too, would be en-jhaps by a policeman or soldier, after a week of controversy be- couraged to maintain her grip/might light the flame in Rhode-|tween the producers and the on the two southern African sia. Johnson administration. territories, Angola and oo When blood flows in Africa, The spokesman for Alumin-| Concealed and decorative fighting can be wsed in dozens of bique, constituting the biggestjall Africa is involved," Lord)jym T.td, said the Canadian +7 arent i empire remaining in the world|Caradon, now British UN dele-\company had to follow its U.S.| : : pte clan 2s! ale so GE ge igs ancl A ag a ra oe ye | LIVING SPACE. W'you'te adding a room, exveting your those territories would suffer a of may rooms in which ss i ihe us markets. | Dasennont or attic voce inde entra living spach, Yoo con ested setback. lity was in progress, sometimes supplementary electric heating for less than it costs to extend The other side of the coin is/good, sometimes misguided. Your present heating system. that sanctions successfully ap- "Meanwhile down in the cel- plied against Rhodesia would lars--in the southern states of encourage those who have been Africa--the fuses are already | campaigning for sanction silit, They are likely to cause ex- against South Africa's apartheid plosions which will blow not (racial separation). jonly the cellars but the whole ------ --------- |house sky high." Election-Funds Ceiling Sought TORONTO (CP)--The execu- tive of the United Church of| Canada's board of evangelism) and social service wants the federal government to limit the amount of money candidates) may spend on an election cam-) paign. | However, a resolution ap-) proved at an executive meeting Thursday did mot suggest a limit. A church spokesman said the executive would have the government set the limit. The resolution presented by the board chairman, Rev. W. Clarke MacDonald, also asks| the government to introduce| legislation requiring a "full dis- closure of contributions to party | funds in excess of $50 by in dividuals and organizations." Secrecy that surrounds con- tributions to campaign -- funds "enables criminals and greedy | elements to buy. influence and) favors," the resolution says. PLANNED LIGHTING MAKES ROOMS MORE INVITING. three low cost ways electricity can help you modernize your home VOLKSWAGEN | Seles & Service WekNER'S SERVICE CENTRE Highwey 12 and 7. 983-7162 @ Planned Lighting @ Supplementary Electric Heating CANADA'S FINEST ALL ELECTRIC -------HOME HEAT SYSTEM------ @ Full Housepower Wiring. For more information ask: & FULL HOUSEPOWER WIRING ADDS SAFETY AND CONVEN- TENCE: Full 100 amp. service supplies enough power to oper- ate all the electrical appliances you'll ever need. It provides added safety by eliminating the risk of over-loading your present wiring system, your hydro LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY : @ SAFE @ CLEAN @ DEPENDABLE Installed First in Oshawa OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION, PHONE 723-4624 -- In Co-operation With -- WHITBY PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ..... . . . TELEPHONE 668-5878 AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC COMMISSION ...... . . . TELEPHONE 942-0500 PICKERING PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION. . . . . . . TELEPHONE 942-2930 by wa. The Most Dependable Neme In ELECTRIC HEAT Toto! or Supplementery Units © 728-4611 50 PRINCE ST. OSHAWA FOR FULL CALL INFORMATION