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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jul 1963, p. 2

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CHAINED IN PRO Upraised arms of 14 pickets are chained together as they sit in entrance to construction site of Downstate Medical Center in New York's borough of Brooklyn Thursday. A squad of policemen later moved in to remove the chain with wire clippers and arrest the dem- onstrators, A member. of the TEST anionic Silipos By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) -- A blister: ing attack on the federal bud. get's sales tax was delivered Thursday in the Commons with weather to match. i While the capital wilted in ex: treme temperatures, the House sat overtime as Opposition Leader Diefenbaker and his fol- lowers launched another assauit on the June 13 budget decision to levy the 1l-per-cent tax on building materials and produc: tion machinery. Plans also were announced to press ahead Monday with legis- lation to provide members of Parliament with an unspecified increase in pay and pension benefits. Budget Sales Tax Assaulted Again as Canada deleterious to our country," Mr, Diefenbaker added; 'One ean only be amazed that any government would introduce a budget . . . so abso.ute !n its wrongness, 80 colossal in its in- eptitude . . . waffling, retreats, confusion and great recanta- tions." Gordon Chaplin (PC--Water- loo South), describing the bud- get as 'Walter in wonderland" presented on "amateur night in Canada," charged that Mr, Gordon's proposals for repatri- ating control of the economy were largely punitive and dis- criminatory rather than being incentives to Canadians to achieve this end Existing MP $8,000 annually plus $2 tax-free expenses, Senate paid $10,000, all taxable, creases last were provided in 1954, a , in ors are scrutiny of the spending esti- mates of the department of transport, begun a week ago. In other Commons develop iments Thursday: Prime Minister Pearson an- nounced that parliament will re- assemble Sept. 30 if certain leg- islation is approved before the Congress of Racial Equality janticipated recess some (CORE) chained the oor' jnext week together as they sat in road- | ° 2 : _ |MAY ACT ON SIU way to protest alleged job dis: | The prospect loomed that this crimination. time} He said Mr, Gordon's empha- isis on the incentive ieatures of the budget were overstressed | minister will be disappointed with the results unless a cli- | {HOUS IMPROVES | J, J, Greene (L Renfrew South) said he had a word of good cheer for the "lachrymose jgentlemen" in the opposition |who had been wailing about the jeffects of the sales tax; Hous ling starts had increased in P, B, Rynard (PC --Simcoe East) predicted that tha govern iment will register the highest ideficit in Canadian nistory for Ithe 1963-64 fiscal year | {n-|and predicted that the finance} | ; Today the Commons resumes|mate of confidence is restured --(AP Wirephoto) Test-Ban Felt First Fred Stenson (PC -- Peter-| jtries in his riding had been! jhard hit by the tax | borough) said secondary indus- There remain two of three main sections of the builget to! jlegislative package may include }measures to implement some of jthe recommendations directed against the Seafarers' Interna. jtional Union of Canada (Ind.) by the Norris inquiry into Great | _ Real Cold War Thaw By TOM OCHILTREE agreemen on a preamble, 17 Associated Press Staff Writer articles and two annexes of a The agreement reached in draft treaty But they never got Moscow Thursday for a partial agreement on setting up inter. nuclear test ban came after a/national enforcement machin- diplomatic tug-of-war aS ery. i ie age be- Pa : : most since tie atomic Af ° WANTED CONTROL POSTS pe i The United States and Brit- Before the United ---- ain originally wanted 170 to 180 ain and the eouhha ake international control posts scat- achieved this a. poise tered throughout the world and their yp grees ereited Na. international inspection teams tains of wore i eG... jto go to the site of suspicious tions headquarters and in Gen-| 4. : I of : disturbances. But the Russians eva, Washington, London and youiq not have this, saying Moscow. West was really trying to plant Over and over again the ne-/ spies in the Soviet Union gotiators wrestled with this problem, Sometimes they took a few steps on the road to agreement Then months went They were blasted wher the by in deadlock. Russians on Sept. 1, 1961, began And in the end the three pow-|5 cories of around 40 tests, in- ers settled for half a loaf rather ciuding one of over 50 mega. than none, They agreed to end) tons. testing everywhere except un- Hope was at its lowest ebb derground, where cheating is Nea thea power talks Maal most difficult to detect without crake gp ly Ait all arent inspection poithaoredte 5 an sun Yet, limited agreement and Verena ie a pe oa kept all, it is an ep a for rejoic- bu id ng up, howeve r. More and . ing, most diplomats agree. The more scienti $ said the powers Moscow understanding, in their . " view, represents the most hope- ful East-West accord since 1045 One Western source said: "Considering the present state of relations between Moscow and Peking, the test ban could be the first real thaw in the cold war." . MUCH SCRAPPED Much has been scrapped dur. MONTREAL ing the years of negotiations. year-old student charged in con T chief casualty is the con-inection with the terrorist activ a giant internationaliities of Le Front de atior system designed to pre-|Quebeycois was comm ations and set trial Thursday ) attern r. enforcing ral disarmament. Contro! arrangements, includ-| Mario g on-site inspections, presum- with } ab.y would be necessary if the blow a radio-t ) powers ever banned under- on top of Mount Royal nd te arted dismian-'He was sent to trial basis of evidence after 20, an elevator op retracted an car implicating Bachand the ie The talks were conducted dur- ing a voluntary moratorium on testing by the three powers, a (CP) 20- hey cept of ro of to testify gen. fusal an Bachand docu dink * rst phase of the latest ar t ban negotiations ex- erator om Oct. 31, 1958, to statement 1961 n the plot ree powers -- the Rizier was deci: States, Britain and the witness after Union engaged those negotiations at Geneva At one time they secured WEATHER FORECAST Warm Weather Will Continue Forecasts by the weather of-) Winds south to southwest 10 to fice at 5 a.m Synopsis: Ninety-degree tem peratures are forecast for most of Ontario today, Saturday is not expected to bring much in the way of change in Southern Ontario but increased cloudin-|* : ess and scattered thunder./Ritchener 68 BB storms spreading eastward Mount Forest 65 83 across Northern Ontario wil!) Wingham 65 88 bring slight relief Hamilton 68 88 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, St. Catharines. 68 Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On Toronto 70 tario, Georgian Bay, Halibur.|Peterborough . 65 ton regions, Windsor, London, Trenton 65 Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny and/Killaloe 60 continuing very warm today Muskoka .. 60 and Saturday, Winds light today North Bay........ southerly 15 Saturday | Sudbury is Algoma, Timagami regions, Earlton aes sess North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Sault Ste. Marie.. Marie; Sunny and very warm) Kapuskasing ...... today. Saturday partly cloudy White River....... with a few widely scattered Moosonee thunderstorms. Winds south to Timmins sasees ses sout sed o GOOD FOOD Thite Breoktest. Lunch, Dinner ? A.M. te 2 PLM. 5:30 P.M. to 8 PLM, Hote! Lancaster red a hostile » Emile Tro - in tier ed statements were contrad A short-lived hun strike by Forecast Temperatures Lows overnight, highs Saturday: Windsor 68 88 St. Thomas....... 68 &8 Landon .. 68 a8 RS River gions . i ew cloudy periods and very warm today Partly cloudy tonight and Sat y. A few scattered thand erstorms in northern portions early today and through out the egions tonight and Saturday re y negotiators FLQ Suspect Sent To Trial In Blast | tted for g e themselves thostile. | Lakes labor discord | Finally, the first 50 divorce {bills of the parliamentary ses jsion got second reading: -- or |approval in principle -- without opposition from New Democra at least should stop the explo-|tic Party MPs sions in the atmosphere, on the) If they survive committee earth's surface and in water-- (Study and achieve third and fi all types of blasts which cause/M@l reading, they will radioactive dangers substantial Newfoundland to health, the first Quebec and SOUGHT NEW EFFORT vorce bills neither The UN assembly insisted onjhas a divorce court -- to be a new effort to be made to get/passed in three parliamentary agreement, This produced the/sessions 17-nation disarmament confer-; An NDP spokesman indicated ence which resumed in Geneva'the progress sprang from be March 14, 1962, Eighteen coun-/hind scene consultations but tries were named to it, but|that approval of more of. the France refused to take part 1,000 bills still awaiting action While the smaller nations at/M@y: not necessarily get the the table sought for ways to Same routine treatment se an agreement, the). Phe NDP stand has been that i i Britain and the the House of Commons should Soviet Union bogged down in/20t be asked to handle such leg the same old arguments islation After 15 months, the confer- GORDON ATTACKED ence produced no test ban. The Mr. Diefenbaker and his sup old on-site inspection issue wasiporters in the main debate. on the stumbling block again. The|the budget bore down heavily conference now is in recess, jon the salés tax and the brief The Moscow talks with new/record of Finance Minister Gor- for the West--W. don Averell Harriman for the! But this fifth straight day of Mited States and Lord Hail-'debate on the budget measures sham for Britain -- simplified produced progress as the House the problem by putting the un-/of Commons sat nearly an ex derground test: question aside. (tra hour to give second reading --or approval in principle--to of d group he bil Mr. Diefenbaker said the tax should be. dropped on building materials and production ma. chinery Then he confided that "I don't know what we'd do without the mistakes he (Mr, Gordon) has made." N s in Bor He said the decision to reduce Tt the. impact. of the tax from the original 11 nt to an in ent two other FLQ suspect deaux Jail ended began Wodnesday they skipped two meals before ait four per cent meant that rd convinced them that they/Manufacturers had collected be ed their strength and tween $7,000,000 and $8,000,000 id eat ip to July 8 Consumers now The two would have to get back this tax payment t own without government assistance whole tax should be with s fo, dtawn, he said "They can't hurt tation for retreats," he said of the government and its two amendments to the budget WOULD BE COURAGEOUS "This would be an act of courage. There is no courage n adhering to a policy which per ce t Der Lamoureux acques Gu us on tained ¢ : and two thar repu according to their ¢ awyer Pierre Champagne IS ONE OF FIVE Giroux is one of five charged with non- al murder for the bomb death 'an army night watchman, and Lamoureux with various charges connection with the time-bombing of mail boxes in suburban Westmount that badly injured an army ser- geant-major i Bizier, testifying at the pre imin hearing of Bachand v y, said he didn't want to mention the names of those with whom he visited the ratio. TV tower 'because I don't want to testify against them." After an interlude granted to allow him to think over his po sition, he said he went "with patriot (Gabrie!) Hudon and pa- triot (Raymond) Villeneuve." "That's enough of this pat stuff," warned Judge T Bizier said an earlier ment he made to police impli cating Bachand was false. "I said this not to implicate compan tons erence in By GERRY McNEIL QUEBEC (CP) -- A St. Law rence River pilot says the ore arrier Tritonica was spotted on British freighter Roonagh Head's radar nearly two hours before the two ships collided 45 miles northeast of Quebec City Pilot Henry Gamache, 535, of Quebec City testified Thursday at a coroner's inquest into death of 18 men aboard the 12,- $63-ton Tritonica. Fifteen still the re nag miyself," he testified, "I thought/4re Missing and there were 17). survivors Mr. Gamache said the 6,000 ton Roonagh Head went to half speed at 12:10 a.m, after spot- ting a vessel on radar sven or eight miles ahead on the St Francois Channel in the St Lawrence River I had to make a statement, ! had no lawyers at the time. I had slept two nights on the floor and I wasn't under oath" Judge Trottier declared him Hudon, 21, described in ear lier testimony as the bomb- maker for the terrorist group, ; become} province) be passed, plus a bill protect. ing the austerity surchage de cision of the conservative gov- jernment last year from legal jaction | Mr, Gordon's comments Thursday were brief but ne said jthat Mr. Diefenbaker again jshowed that his 'well aients for histrionics jof statistics and economics," iprime minister of inaccuracies jin his figure of sums on which manufacturers had _ claimed payment of extra taxes because of the alteration in the sales tax impact LANDING HAZARD NAIROBI (AP)--One of known are| jgreater than his unders.anding | | He also accused: the former) the cabin & Byron De La Beckwith, 42, of Greenwood, Miss,, was transferred Thursday from the Hinds. county jail to the state mental hospital at Whitfield He is accused of the slaying Eccentric Artist May Go PEMBROKE (CP) A 49. year-old Polish artist who lives the life of a hermit in a small near here was tried in first aircraft to land at an air-absentia on a charge of viola strip serving Kenya's latestition of a township building by- game lodge was charged by an law and fined $10 elephant, There was no reported damage. The lodge is 150 miles north of Nairobi about nearby The artist, Leonard Elsner of Stafford Towaship, has lived for four years with sev- INTERPRETING THE NEWS 'Mac Contributed Heavily To Pact By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press aff Writer It may be an exaggeration to call it Mac's Pact but Prime Minister Macmillan doesn't ob ject when newspapers use tha} tag It is generally agreed in Brit ain that no one has worked more consistently than Macmi ian for a nuclear test ban treat) --and no one is to gain more from its cessful con clusion All the ical disasters months failed to shake his de termination to make a full Bril ish contribution to such a-treaty and in this one thing at least he has enjoyed solid backing throughout the country The prime minister stated his attitude in the House of Com mons June 18 at a time when some United States spokesmen were stressing obstacles in the way of a treaty, including dif. ference between the Soviet Un s and of last sensations polit the Vessel Collision Evidence Heard Mr, Gamache said the bow of the Roonagh Head appeared to scrape down the side of the Tri tonica to its bridge Capt. William Haddock, 61, master of the Roonagh Head, said he first saw the low-slung ore carrier "four or five points off the starboard bow." He said the Triton.ca - was swinging to port "crab and "touched me "We parted company ing." MASTER IN HOSPITAL Two survivors of the Triton ica also testified and the inquest was adjourned unti! Capt. John G. Swanson, 50, master of 'the sunken ship, can appear he was. still in hospital scrap few |' ion and the. West on the need for n-site inspections "This is a question of the will to reach agreement," he said "If there is the political will on both sides,.I feel certain that some solution can be found to the so-called technical prob lems."" , CLIMATE CHANGED Macmillan has given his cri tics a lesson in political science by far sex security scandal caused resignation of War Minister Profumo so t the John Even his worst political: en emies concede suc s at the Moscow negotiations should strengthen his position furt This doesn't mean his troubles are over, but the political cli- mate certainly has change since a month ago when peop! were talking about Macmillan being banished i The British 3 puts Macmillan in a happy po sition since there is no question of Parliament's approval -- the "door is open," as one source put it, President Kennedy, -on ithe other hand, has the task of wise"; US getting the treaty through the Congress LEFT OUT There concern in, London however, that France would ap- parently not consider itself bound to eschew nuclear tests, not to mention Red China when it develops nuclear weapons One newspaper. cartoon de- picts Foreign Minister Andre} Gromyko, Lord Hailsham and Avere!] Harriman peering over a fence while President de Gaulle and Chairman Mao Tse- tur rade with a banner urg ing "ban the test ban." he hope also is expressed that the nuclear treaty would lead to a real start on general and complete disarmament, the point being made that even without nuclear weapons the world could be wrecked by the use of conventional arms at their present stage of develop is refused to testify because of political principles." } SPOT CASH \ REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 DIXON'S OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER SO YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 PICTURE FRAMING SEE... Walmsley & Magill 9 KING ST. E. -- OSHAWA Norris Proposal -- Ruling Expected OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament may be asked next week lo pass legislation imposing temporary government trusteeship on Ca- nadian marine unions to ciean up labor lawlessness on the Great Lakes waterfront, reli: able sources indicated Thurs. day. Both Prime Minister Pearson and Labor Minister MacRachen informed the Commons Thurs- day that the government is moving with all speed toward a decision on the major propos. als of Mr, Justice T. G. Nor. ris, Mr. Pearson announced that it is "possible" that-a measure based on the Norris report thay be ready for action in the Com- mons next week -- before the House adjourns for a summer trusteeship proposal in the light of what he said was a threat to Canada's economy and an emergency in international trade resulting from lawless ac: tions by unions in the United States -- the Seafarers, Team- sters and Longshoremen's un- {lons. | He said these unions are caus- jing strife and disruption 'o Ca- nadian shipping in an effort to keep Haf C. Banks, SIU presi. dent In Canada, in power, The judge, reporting after @ year-long investigation of Great Lakes labor troubles, described Mr, Banks as a lawless, power. hungry dictator who dominates Sailors and shipowners with ter. ror, intimidation and violence He said that Mr, Banks and his lieutenants should be pede aged gen pelcing office in | ithe SIU, w ree trustees---a However, " sources indicated ransport exper td taking over leat the 'government is pre-|{Re union as government trus- pared to clamp @ trusteeship) "pie judge applied his trustee: fon unions representing sa"lors,|.); : | : ship p! arine r . |marine engineers and deck of-| hip plan to marine transporte 7 q ions generally. ficers of Great Lakes ships. [Hen patil nerelly A decision me * cabinet is expected within a few days, | Several Cases Of Deportation to remain in Ottawa and work} ona plan of action to deal with) the lawless situation exposed by} Mr. Justice Norris in. his report. | 1) Since receiving the Norris re-| 'jport July 18, governmet ition Minist spokesmen have declared that| sidering a number of controver. Meanwhile, Labor Minister) Reconsidered MacEachen cancelled plans to} fly to Nova Scotia this weekend/ OTTAWA (CP) -- Immigra. er Favreau is recon- Dil the 318page document is re:|sial deportation cases including ceiving urgent consideration |that of 36-year-old Irenee Re: They have also made it clear) brin, Slavonic lecturer at the jthat the implications of the Nor-| University of British Columbia, ris recommendations must be) This is a normal procedure j}earefully weighed before any/after a change of government BECKWITH QUERIED jmade Re the Commons of civil rights leader Medgar | Evers, The 'handcuffed Beck- with is shown answering ques: /ernment consideration of the tions upon being admitted for |Nopris report, warning a mental examination "very serious results may fol- --(AP Wirephoto) low inaction now." " "The government is potapd of the implications ot} any delays in this matter," said/ \Mr MacEachen | ; "IT am sure it would be the} jwish of the government to bring} jforward any measures as quickly as possible." Mr, Justice Norris framed his Dymond Cites Nursing Needs To Jail jeral dogs in a cabin which pro- vides only half the 480 . square foot floor space stipulated in a township bylaw as the minimum for dwellings A bearded man who speaks} little English, he refused to at- tend the hearing TORONTO (CP) -- The cur- Graham Walsh, prosecuting} rent yearly volume of graduat- counsel for the township, said/ing nurses in Ontario must be he was Elsner cou'd not doubled to 5,000 from -- 2,500 pay. the $10 fine. The alterna-| within five years, a health de- itive is 10 days in jail partment committee has ad- Reeve Percy Hawkins, 63,/Vised the provincial govern. who testified Elsner was eccen-| ment tric at times, said he first crossed paths with the artist al Dymond said Thursday the spe. year ago when he, another/cial committee has urged jmember of the council and a/greater training facilities to j towns constable j Mr sisner to persuade him to! shortage get rid of his dogs or buy them! He released a summary of the tags committee's report, which said ieee: eniwaieaian that a continued shortage of ye gg oc ge juavelen trained nurses could result in tion proved unsuccessful -and/ 2" nee in the number of Binder bewak 16 Sen a he oF unoccupied hospital beds hatchets lying on the cabin The committee bd recommen- floor. He said the township of: dations, which would mean a fielals sensed the interview was considerable increase in govern- ended and raced for the door,| MOM spending, included ithree-of Elsner's missiles whist. 2 Expansion. of present ling after them Schools of nursing; Sines antes ti Establishment of new nurs- ship four years age ing Schools; and enough mc 3. Encouragement to univer- idential lot ar sities to increase their output His only ot specialized nurses; leived to be a ing of salaries for nurs. paintings which g teachers and administra. wish to sell rs Most of the time Elsner and jthe dogs have lived on $5 worth |of food provided weekly by the municipality Magis eS. C Elsner will have with the bylaw, jail sure PY the town nt truck pa a cabin res. her full does trunk he 5 ablishment of a contin- uing nsultant group to advise the minister of health on nurs- ng needs & The committee included rep. Pilatus said) resentatives of the nursing and to conform medical professions, nursing pay the fine or schools, hospitals and the hos- Health' Minister Matthew B.! called on! overcome a predicted nursing, {policy decision can be wisely/to enable the new minister to }become acquainted with each n Thursday, Case and to determine whether Opposition Leader Diefenbaker,| the deportation order should re. called for a apeed-up in gov-|main undisturbed Miss Rebrin, born in China of that) White Russian parents, was or- dered deported Jan, 22, 1959, on grounds that she was a member fully] of a class of persons prohibited entry to Canada as landed im- migrants, Later she was de scribed in the Commons as a security risk by then prime min- ister Diefenbaker and then im- migration minister Ellen Fair. clough An immigration department official said the Rebrin case is among a number which have been "recapitulated" by depart: ment officers and placed before Mr. Favreau "The cases are placed before the minister without any kind of recommendation by depart. ment officials,' the spokesman said. "No decisions have been made on any of the cases ex- cept that of Weldon Chan." In May, Mr, Favreau an- nounced that the Hong Kong Chinese, who spent 3% years in hiding to escape deportation, would be allowed to stay in Can- ada for one year, It's expected that if Chan shows in the year he will make a good citizen that he and his wife and nine-year. old daughter, Alice, will be granied the status of landed im. migrants, OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way. carpet and broad- toom has been o specialty for 18 years . with thousands of yards on display to select trom. PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. pital services commission, No House Airing | For Hanging Case LONDON (AP) -- The case of jJames Hanratty, hanged for a imurder to which it is claimed another man subsequenty con fessed, was refused a parila mentary airing Thursday Government spokesman Iain MacLeod rejected, at. least for the present, a request by Labor member Fenner Brockway for! a House of Commons dedate on the affair. Hanratty was hanged 15 imonths ago for the slaying of a motorist who gave him a lift one night in August, 1961. Brock way recently claimed aaother man has since confessed to the rime METTE PLUMBING CO. LTD. HOLIDAY NOTICE CLOSED SAT. JULY 27 RE-OPEN Tues. AUG. 6th Your local drugstore is a friendly ploce where you can obtain money orders, postage stamps and pay bills conveniently DRUGS 9 SIMCOE ST.N. OSHAWA Your Pharmacist ... HE'S THE MAN WHO PERFORMS MANY CUSTOMER SERVICES ced ~*~ LIMITED ELEPHONE 723-3431

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