Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Apr 1966, p. 2

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Nine Perish 2,000,000 Vote Commission Data Sought OTTAWA (CP) -- A Liberal| tion had been introduced MY questioned Liurcsuay aa pee: fnotives of the New Democratic Party in seeking production of In Peking Race PEKING (Reuters) -- More than 2,000,000 Peking voters streamed to the polls Sunday in bright sunshine to elect repre- "sentatives to eight local people's congresses. _ From dawn louds In Blaze PARRY SOUND -- Nine per- sons -- seven of them children| -- neriched in an early-morning | fire Saturday on the Parry) Sound Indian Reserve. {née tre is sepuited tw have started when a boy tossed a cigarette butt into a can_ of to ha- Uiciiass amy Unc. sae -onted to "make this information puo- lie; ta mae! urgce = 3S lots for the unopposed candi- dates, totalling about 2,400. akers|. TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|Kingston ......+++ = hat lissued by the weather office at/trentan ' WEATHER FORECAST é Little Change In Weather ' Variable Cloudiness Due 25 os 25 40 an 5:30 a.m.: "a Trento Synopsis: All of Ontario is in pe naptha. The first broke out in the home of Joseph Judges on the Parry Sound Indian Reserve. Three other children were! treated for burns, police said. Rusterity By CARL MOLLINS ter Harold Wilson is |Britain out of economic drift, {now that he has won a large parliamentary majority. | iterity budget in May. Weekend editorial tators almost unanimously ex- Seen For U.K. LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- under 'heavy pressure from friends 'and political foes alike to jerk Britain expects a tough aus- the pvorking papers of the Nor- ris commission on Great Lakes shipping strife. James Byrne (Kootenay East), pariiamentary secretary to Transport Minister Pickers- gill, spoke during continuation of debate on a motion by David Orlikow (NDP -- Winnipeg North) for production of the pa- pers. Mr. Byrne said he is sure Mr. Justice T. G. Norris "made public all matters in the public interest." He wondered '"'what is behind this determination" on the part of the NDP. The commission found the Seafarers' International Union of Canada (Ind.) and its presi- dent, Hal C. Banks, responsible for much of the Great Lakes strife. Mr. Byrne said the motion seemed to constitute "harass- ment of an independent union" not affiliated with the Canadian |Labor Congress and one that commen-' gid not make contributions to|was bet with them but their the NDP. Herb--Gray--(1--Essex West) said the only proper way such papers could be produced was through an amendment to the}: Industrial Relations and D putes Investigation Act. | There was a "dangerous prin- ciple" involved in such motions. Such documents as income tax} returns could be made public if restrictions weren't placed on disclosures. | | 'U.K. Bookies | In Close Race SELECTED Charles Cooper has been chosen as one of the two crew members for the next Gemini flight. | spread over several months at the local district level--the only s | LONDON (AP)--Britain's cee C jtion was a big victory for the 1g yprus Labor party, but it was a close | race for the bookies. They al- } most lost it. Ladbroke's and William Hill, Issue Still | the two bookmakers who han- | died most of the election ag U ettled | ns { ting, said £2,500,000 ($7,500,000) |profit was only about two per | Communist youth groups pa-|a~ light northerly-to -northwest- raded noisily with drums, trum-jerly flow of modified arctic air pets and cymbals _ throughjand this weather pattern is un- streets decorated for the occa-|likely to change significantly in sion with flags, streamers and|the next day or so. Tempera- scarlet lanterns. tures will continue rather cool. Newspapers and radio sta-|More cloud is expected over the tions estimated Sunday night)north than over southern On- that the massive response would] tario. The light snow falling at 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskasing ... .. probably compare with the|times over Northern Ontario "yes" vote of more than 99 per|Will continue and only a bad cent in the last election here.|Widely scattered snowflurries Sunday's voting in the capital|@e likely over southern On-| and its inner suburbs formed |'#!9- t 0 Se aed ions; Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, shaie ft Dabowe wae SleNaoe Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, Ni-| agatra, Haliburton, Killaloe, ones in svhich the Chinese peo-| Windsor, London, Hamilton, To-| ple directly elect their own rep-|ronto: Variable cloudiness' to- resentatives. day and Tuesday. Little change The members of the local con-|'" temperatures. Winds light. gresses, chosen for two-year| Georgian Bay, Algoma, Sault terms, will select deputies for|5t¢. Marie, North Bay, Sud- the capital's municipal congress|0UTY: Cloudy with @ few sunny which in turn elects the repre-|Petiods and a few light snow- sentatives of the national peo- flurries today and Tuesday. Lit- ple's congress, Communist | tle change in temperatures. China's parliament. | Winds light. Riese Timagami, Cochrane, White 25 25 HERE AND THERE The winners of the regular euchre held at Woodview Community Centre were Mrs. Laurie Bright, Mr. W. Laver- ty, Mis. M. Goodman, Mrs. Elsie Armstronz, Mr. J. Mouncey, and Mr. B. Gwil- Hams. Moosonee Timmins ......s0. 3% 35 35 35 35 35 35 35 Oshawa city council meets Monday at 7.30 p.m. in the fifth floor city hall council chamber. pressed hopes that Wilson will jlive up to his own post-election | pledge "to take whatever meas- ures we think necessary, whether they be popular or un- popular."" Implicit in much comment is }uneasiness about Wilson's readi- ness to tackle pressing problems | with the same flair he displayed in developing a precarious toe- hold on parliamentary power into last Thursday's electoral an Indian reserve near Parry Sound, Ont. The house was destroyed before fire- trucks reached it over bad roads, One report said the firé started when a four- year-old boy, who perished, tossed a cigarette he was smoking into a can of nap- tha gas used for lamps. --CP Wirephoto A CHIMNEY STANDING against a bleak wintry sky is virtually all that remains of a home in which 11 per- sons died during a fire at Parry Sound Island Satur- day. Nine of the dead were children. Rolly Pegahmaga- bow, 12, a relative, com- forts a dog, a pet of the dead children. The home was on U.S. Announces N-Test Plan GENEVA. (AP)--The United) toward the surface after an un- The weekly Economist, which States today announced a new derground nuclear explosion. _ | supported the Conservatives in system of detecting under-| He said that even if all surf-jthe election, said that so far, d nuclear explosions | ace traces of an underground) Wilson has indicated a belief which it said would make it al-/ explosion had been removed,|that "'political cleverness mat- most impossible for a nuclear|sensitive detectors could still/ters more than radical innova- power to deceive on-site in-|pick up traces of the telltale tion." spectors. | gases. ' : : The Labor-leaning Sunday Ob-| 'The announcement seemed to| Fisher rejected Soviet sag server said that 'while Mr. Wil-| 'offer no promise of progress to- that an underground test ban!so, has demonstrated breath-| Labor in the 630-seat House of |Commons. The final results | were; Labor 363 seats; Conserv- atives 253; Liberals 12; Irish Republican one, and the Speaker one. "This time there can be no |alibis,"" says the Laborite Daily |Mirror, in reference to the claim that the Wilson govern- ment of the last 17 months was inhibited by a tiny Commons majority and an economic crisis inherited from the Conserva- | tives. |victory--a 97-vote majority for | H. W. Herridge (NDP--Koot-| cent. ATHENS (Reuters) -- Sac enay West) denied that the mo-| Most of the money was in|army commander, Gen. George P P C -- straight bets on Labor or the|Grivas, met top Greek leaders ro eace Orps |Conservatives, but the bookies today but did not reach;agree- /also took bets on the size of La--ment on the command of the All Beer }bor's victory margin and on con- Mediterranean island republic's Seen US. Need tests in individual ridings. 11,000 - man national guard hed The bookies protected them-| Premier Stephanos Stephano-- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The 6] emaln selves by raising the odds on|poulos told reporters after the|United Nations needs a profes-| om jsuch a sure thing as a Labor |two-hour meeting that the talks|sional peace observation corps jvictory. At one point theyj|will be continued. "We hope|to help in patrolling the world's| On Market |reached 1 to 66 on Labor--a bet that all outstanding issues will | trouble spots, a group of foreign' Vi lof £66 to earn only £1. be settled,"' he said jaffairs experts has told the U.S. | On the straight bets, Lad-| Grivas, commander-in-chief of| Disarmament Agency. TORONTO (CP)--G. H. Shep-| broke's said they expected to all armed forces in Cyprus, is} They estimated the initial. cost pard, chief liquor commissioner | Make @ profit of £10,000 and a/fighting to retain control overjof organizing and operating aj for Ontario, says no beer will |Profit twice that on estimating |the island republic's 11,000-man| group of 267 officers for the first) be taken off the Ontario market the size of the margin, They ex-|national guard. : lyear at $9,131,000. lin the wake of an investigation | Pect to lose £500 on the indi-| However, Cyprus President) The estimate is given in a 646- into a number of deaths among vidual races. : jArchbishop Makarios wants to|page study, financed by the dis- heavy beer drinkers in Quebec, | Hill came close to showing ajlimit his command to Greek/armament agency and released| Intensified testing of beer wili|!0Ss on part of the operation. |troops. : Saturday night by the Washing-| continue in Ontario, however, |With Labor's victory margin 97) Grivas has rejected any such|ton Centre of Foreign Policy Dow Brewery Ltd, in Quebec |S¢ats in the House of Commons, |limitation, but the Greek gov-| Research. The centre, which or-| announced earlier this week it|Hill made a profit of £40,000--|ernment has come up with a)ganized the study, is part of the} will dump 1,000,000 gallons of| minus half that amount for ad- | compromise formila limiting | school of advanced international | beer following reports that 16/Vertising. But if the margin had|the general's command to Greek/studies of Johns Hopkins Uni-| persons, described as heavy | gone over 100, Hill's profit would|forces in peacetime but giving | versity. } beer drinkers, had died recently |have been only £7,000 -- still/him control of all the island s} The study surveyed scores of in the Quebec City area from | Minus £20,000 for advertising. troops in the event of war. jinstances beginning under the) a mysterious heart ailment. iS |League of Nations almost half} No medical evidence has| ' ja century ago, in which inter- been roduced to link the! I d d {national organizations have un-! deaths Tvith Dow, but a com- Canada S n epen ence dertaken to stop small wars and} pany spokesman said the move hold belligerent armies apart) |was a gesture to regain public N R . d Cl . . phi vie made for confidence. poverenton peaceful settlement. } ""Beer sold by Dow in Ontario ot ecognize alm The study reports that the | ' United Nations is still having | EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP){activities of American subsidi-| is produced by Ontario Brewer- ies and the company said it will to improvise groups to meet| iKitchener . 8 ig ward an agreement to ban un-|tteat could be supervised with: |taxing political skill as prime| minister, his ability seems to have been employed chiefly in the service of survival." "In future, Mr. Wilson can ex- pect to be judged less indul- gently--not as a tactical prod- igy, but by his policies and achievements." British polities has been dom- 'derground nuclear tests, how- 'ever, unless Russia modifies its opposition to inspections. Chief U.S. delegate Adrian) 'Fisher told the 17-nation dis-| rmament conference the new ystem is based on the detec- tion of gases produced by nu- clear fission which leak slowly out on-site inspections. He sai the United States, even with a seismic system "more sensitive) than any which has previously | existed," still cannot tell whether some 45 underground disturbances a year in the So- viet Union are earth tremors or underground nuclear explo- sions. Police Play Barber in governments and opposition --since 1963, the year Wilson be- came leader of the Labor party, the Profumo sex - and - security | scandal rocked the Tory gov- ernment, and Harold Macmillan relinquished the leadership of a Role governing but divided Conserva- tive party. inated by electioneering--both | A major problem in Canadian- ary corporations in Canada. American relations is that most; He said there have been hints |Americans -- and some Cana-|of U.S, interference in one or dians--do not think 'of Canadajtwo Canadian federal elections. las an independent nation, rep-| 'The general wish is that Can- lresentatives of the two nations|jada remain independent said Saturday. jhave the closest co-operation : ia with the United States,"' he said. in Areen epi he Pane! ot|"The two nations cannot survive not stop sales here. a : |Cabinet Urged | Resist Pressure OTTAWA Mico The Cana- ; dian Union of Pubiic Employees |four agreed, . fe ma (CLC) today urged the Tedoralice - operate with the United| Without each other." | cabinet to resist pressures seek-|States by acting independently | U.S. Representative ling a breakup of established na-\in such roles as mediator and|Horton (Rep. N.Y.) {tional labor bargaining units. |experimenter. Stanley Little, president of the! They addressed about 75 Ca- |92,000 member union, issued alnadian and American college) |statement after a weekend ex-/students at a conference on Ca- Frank said an tions, especially as an example for the rest of the world. but| American problem is that peo-| ple are not aware of the poten-| tial of Canadian-American rela-| such crises today and com- ments: "Improvising a peace obser-| vation mission is risky where} |time is of the essence. Delaying the control and containment of violence in the nuclear age car-} ries with it the danger of escal-| ation." | | The study was requested by the disarmament agency to de- \termine whether enlarged peace jobservation and peacekeeping jactivities by the United Nations would help to create a political climate in the world favorable to disarmament agreements. ba River: Mainly cloudy with lit- tle change in temperatures to- day and Tuesday. Occasional light snow. Winds northerly 15 Ottawa region: Sunny but with a few cloudy periods. to- day and Tuesday. Seasonable temperatures. Winds westerly 15 during the daytime. Light at night : WINS BY TKO STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (AP) Bob (Pretty) Boy Felstein, 199, of Toronto scored a technical knockout over Gene Hunt, 183, of Akron, Ohio, Saturday night in the third round of a sched- uled four - round preliminary fight. The 21-year-old Canadian is undefeated in six straight Forecast Temperatures ring appearances. Low tonight, high Tuesday Windsor ... 28 42 St. Thomas ....... 45 London ..... if you think there is not good piece te cot in Onh- then you haven' the - o ewe.... Mount Forest ..... L tried the dining room et Wingham Hamilton ........ St. Catharines .... Toronto St. Catharines eee HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. WEST, OSHAWA Peterborough .... TUXEDO RENTALS We Carry « complete line of SYD SILVER'S formal wear and accessories for all occa- sions. Free Booklet on formal weer end wedding procedures. Pick up your couy today ! "A Neme For Fine Clothes" 23% Simcoe. South 728-7974 Open Fri. Evening Until 9 P.M. -- OPPORTUNITY ecutive meeting. The Quebec-based Confedera-| tion of National Trade Unions is| \nadian-American relations. ei ; pe Pelletier said Americans are| "The American people seek 80| ninformed about Canada and| much from a country whose in-|penerally take their neighbor! |The researchers concluded that more extensive peace efforts | would have that effect. | SUMMER EMPLOYMENT MONTREAL (CP)--The po-, Result: utter destruction of lice in suburban Mount Royal the carefully nurtured tresses have turned barber, to the grief and agreement by the youths and anger of the local long- that anything would look better. : a pushing the government to re-| th ize 80 anneal The Wilson government's fore-| verse the Canada Labor Ree-lnrte toca a a too |for granted. ; : } most challenge is dealing with|tion Board's stand against split-\.'0° 8?! Bias y, for-| For any kind of Canadian-| How Te Hold | American partnership, he said,| ey % * r s ro t H * a dangerous economic situation. |ting national bargaining units)". research fellow at Harv FALSE TEETH | Britain is pledged to pay, by|jnto regional groups. renee school of international re-| Canadians must be able to "dis- 1970, foreign debts amounting to! jarlier this year the board re-; |tinguish in their own minds the ; H j rlier this year the board re-set as ase not act inde tye ee ee eng ie] More Firmly in Place The Oshawa Recreation Department is SE ee eee haired set. Police Chief Walter P. Boyle said Saturday that so far three youths have had their long locks shorn, courtesy of his depart- ment. He said the incident fol- lowed growing complaints in the suburb about the behaviour of gangs of teen-agers. A couple of evenings ago, he said, three of the long-haired members of a set which hangs eut in a Incal restaurant, were picked up for loitering and dis- turbing the peace. At the station house they were given the option of facing juvenile court or having thei hair cut--with their parents con- sent. They objected, so while two constables held each youth in So a barber was called--at the police department's expense--to convert the hacked locks ino neat short back and sides cuts. The poliie hope the lesson will have some effect, but the suburb's teen-agers think differ- ently. They're angry, and they have demanded a meeting with Mayor Reginald Dawson to pro- test. The police say that complaints about the behaviour of a minor- lity of the local teen-agers have been growing for a long time. The teen-agers have been | warned by the police that Mount Royal residenis consider . their behaviour an unnecessary ir- lritant gnd signs warning them that they will be arrested for loitering and disturbing the £900,000,000 ($2,700,000,000) at a stated that view in refusing to! time when industrial output is| certify the CNTU for 600 CBC|pendently, '"'what is the sense/autonomous thinking and hostil-| stagnant, manpower is scarce|employees in Quebec, part of a|im being a different country?"/ity, and must make a_ better} and imports continue to outstrip exports. Despite repeated attempts at 1,500-member national unit. Mr. Little said CUPE, second largest umicn in Canada, is res asked Gerard Pelletier, Liberal|definition of Canada's national member of Parliament for/interests."' Montreal Hochelaga. But, he| Of the four, only Nesbitt op deflation in the last 18 months, olutely opposed to any change|*4!d, "some Canadians, say Can-|posed Canadian membership in including efforts to restrain wages and prices, earnings have climbed by an average of more than nine per cent in a year and prices show signs of following|set up a cabinet committee tojjected suit. Britain's trading partners, of which Canada is among the big- gest, are pressing for further reduction or removal of an im port surcivarge that started 16 months ago as a "temporary extra tariff to help Britain's trade balance and relieve pres- sure for devaluing the currency. in the board's position, Larger bargaining units worked more jeffectively Prime Minister Pearson has study the CNTU complainis over ihe CBU Case ABIWMaAIr ANTUNE ada can't afford to have a for-|the Organization of American elgn policy of ita own.' | States Wallace Nesbitt, Progressive Conservative Mf for Oxford, ob to interference by the US. state depariment in Can ada's fovelen atfaiva and in the! FOR HOP SCOTCH? Do your false teeth annoy and em- barrass by slipping, dropping or wob- | biing when you eat, laugh or talk? | Just sprinkle a little FA on your plates. This alkaline (non-acid) powder holds false teeth more firmly and more comfortably. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath). Get PASTEETH drug counters everywhere. posit PLAYGROUND LEADE today at | and others) accepting applications for Summer Staff ions. RS Applications available through local High Schools and the Recreation Department, SWIMMING STAFF (Guards & Instructors) SPECIALISTS IN VARIOUS PROGRAMME AREAS (Day Camp, Track & Field, Art MINIMUM AGE REQUIREMENT--16 as of April 6 (Swimming -- 17 as of June 30) turn a third went to work with peace have been posted near a pair of desk scissors. 'their restaurant hangouts. Indonesians Eye UN-Malik JAKARTA (Reuters) -- For- eign Minister Adam Malik said today Indonesia will consider re- joining the United Nations and improving relations with the United States. He told a press conference In- donesia's policy has always been oné of friendship with the U.S., adding that there have only been differences over its imple- mentation-- Malik said his country is re- evaluating its foreign policy. Indonesia quit the UN just over a year ago in protest against Malaysia's admission to the Security Council. President Sukarno had Jed a confrontation policy -against the Malaysian federation, charging it was "a tool of the imperialist West." Malik said the new Indonesian government would be guided in its foreign policy by the reali- ties existing in the outside world 'which, whether we like it or not, will have to be faced." He indicated the new govern- ment was likely to seek more economic aid from both Fast and West. Malik said Indonesia's policy China bas not changed. | including Peking. If Peking Is not satisfied that is not our busi- ness."' Relations between Indonesia and China have been strained since the abortive Oct. 1 coup which was alleged to have been Communist-led. Since then Indo- nesia's large Communist party |has been banned. 3 Missing, 1 Dead On French Sub PARIS (Reuters) -- The cap- |tain of the French submarine 'Narval is missing and three members of his crew were dead \today after being washed over- board by a wave off the south- ern coast of Britanny Navy spokesmen said an air- {sea search for the captain was abandoned A French trawler picked up the three members of the crew alive after they had been in the water for more than two hours but they died in hospital, the navy spokesman said The submarine was on exer when the accident oc cises Fifteen per cent at first, the sur | charge was later modified to 10} per cent. ' (BOAC offers you the fastest hop to Scotland) Steep yourself in the folklore of a bygone age, when | | Bonnie Prince Charlie roamed the glens. Find a piece of FORMS MUST BE RETURNED TO THE RECREATION DEPARTMENT, BOX 10, OSHAWA AIRPORT ON OR BEFORE APRIL 6th, 1966 white heather, and luck will be yours forever. 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Before you sit down for your annual income-tax | session, be e to pick up your free copy of Pocketax - from Lausanne, National Trust SINCE 1898 sur sur wife of Italy's Deputy Premiez NINE OUT OF TEN CHILDREN CATCH MEASLES But new Your physicien can veeci t 9 just es he does to prevent amall pox. Measles is not a simple disease without problems, One out of every six children with measles develop a secondary bacterial infection such @s a pneumonia or an ear infection. While these in- fections usually respond to o doctor's care, why allow serious trouble? About one out of every 1,000 cases develop encephalitis --- an infection for which there is os yet no specific treatment. Since the conquest of polio, deaths than any other If your child has not had measles, and has not. yet been vaccinated against it, visit a physician soon. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping neorby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A front many people entrust us with their prescriptions, ay we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 Ota | Fost -- Free Motorized Delivery P. B. Francis, Phm, B. -- J. R, Steffen, B.Se., Phm, they don't have te. rary H 1 measles cause mere di "ath tidten ail a be} a Yx*K

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