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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1963, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Windy and cool today, Thurs day partly cloudy and continue ing cool with scattered showers, ' THOUGHT FOR TODAY | > , : Don't be ashamed of the old family sedan -- people will think it's your second car, Authorized es Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottewe end for payment of Postage in Cash, ae Price Not 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1963 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES ROBARTS REVEALS | CABINET SHUFFLE VOL, 92---NO, 190 US. Seeks Aid To End Arms Race GENEVA (AP)---The Unitedjpressed the hope of their gov- States called on the Soviet Un-jernments the Soviet Union will ion today to follow up the lim-|give the proposals careful con- ited test-ban treaty with spe-jsideration in the new spirit en- cific agreements to stop the|gendered by the Moscow test. nuclear armaments race and/ban agreement. reduce the stock of fissionable} gir Paul also called for exam- material used to produc €lination of the technical aspects atomic bombs. ' . of nuclear disarmament "in al i U.S, Ambassador Charles C./smaller forum, before the end|& Stelle submitted specific pro-|o this year." posals on nuclear arms control Sénteraiee anunees caid Sea: to the 17-nation disarmament! # conference. They would put a rapkin made no comment, but E : , read off a prepared speech in| F © ceiling on the capabilities of the) which he repeated al! known hs if iar \F "atch RRO RNIE I I Hideaway Offers Leads In Holdup LONDON (AP)--British po-|vehicles used by the bandits ilice investigating the great mail) were found at the farm, Police train robbery followed up a new) also found empty mailbags, sup: avenue of leads today uncovered| plies of canned food and a hole} by the discovery of a lonely|in the front yard, apparently -- that was the gang's hide pen ig the idea of burning ir iquor Control Board with: the Scotland Yard had | The area was sealed off ang | sppenteaent . i The name and address of a/no unauthorized person can Rt lhions jman to whom the farm was/within half a mile of the farm,|"'m, ' a ; ow jsold less than a month ago, Less than a mile away is OR ges bg rol wanes A description of a charming, | air strip which could have been and publicity. in the shifts aa. expensively-dressed man who/used for an escape, nounced by Mr meharts at came to collect the keys; Police said they believed the press conference Irwin Has: Descriptions of a ginger jgang quit the hideout in panic ett. minister of voter insti headed stranger and a brunette|two or three days ago, There tuliche Will take aver aa min: Liquor Control Post Left Open After Move TORONTO. (CP) -- Premier Robarts today announced a three-way Ontario cabinet shut: fle to fill a post left vacant by! the resignation of Brian Cath:| cart as travel and publicity) minister, The shift leaves open} the post of chairman of the; ment.' He mentioned partiew larly that four senior civil ser. vants, heads of branches in travel and publicity, had been given notice and told that they could apply with about 300 other applicants for four newer jobs at higher pay, One of the four, Colin Me. Donald, has since been named to a senior post, A second, J, R, MeHattie, has been ap pointed as an assistant, The other two, Gordon Hogarth and F, A, Venn, have not yet been informed of their future, Mr, Auld, 42-year-old Progres. sive Conservative member of nuclear powers' atomic weapons} gl Adi and provide for a subsequent/\°V'e! arguments concerning cutback by transferring signifi- the problems of nuclear disarin-| cant quantities of uranium-295/@ment, The sources described| | to purposes other than nuclear|/is statement as "calm, moder-| | weapon production. jate and businesslike. Stelle revealed that the) Tsarapkin was quoted as say- United States is willing tojing that a cut-off and transfer} transfer a larger amount of fis-|"'of a few tons of fissionable|| | sionable material than the So-|material would not reduce the! i. viet Union should Russia feel|stock piles of thousands of nu-| this is needed to protect Sovieticlear. weapons which woud! remain," * interests. He said he proposed) 'Death Crash Near Oshawa | ~ ADRIFT ON LOTUS LEAF a Left alone on a huge lotus eries loudly for comfort. -- can support over 50 pounds woman seen in the district by;were signs of a hasty depar- suspicious country folk, ture Although the police appeared : = sec suerte 10,000 Storm to be making progress, there was still no trace of the loot of more than £2,500,000 ($7,500,- 000) snatched from the Glas- ister of transport Mr, Grossman was minister without portfolio as well as chairman of the Liquor Control Board, Mr, Robarts said the liquor board post will remain the legislature for Leeds, be» jeame transport minister in a cabinet shuffle last October, Mr, Haskett, 50, momber for Ottawa East, has held the re- form institutions portfolio for more than five years, open temporarily, There was no word of a new appointee, Mr, Catheart, 66, minister of travel and publicity since 1955, announced his resignation last Friday night at a Progressive Conservative meeting at Sarnia in his home riding of Lambton West, He told the meeting he would not seek re-election at the next elction, expected this leaf on a pond near Tokyo and rescue, The Gate Asking Nehru To Quit NE W DELHI (Reuters) About 10,000 opposition panty Butfalo Rain ( Still Falling BUFFALO (AP) -- Rain, a streetflooding hagard that has turned residential areas inte fall small lakes twice in the last |three weeks, continued to fall in FRICTION ALLEGED |Buffalo: early today, Both Mr, Cathcart and the; Almost 244 inches have pelied premier denied oppositionithe area since early Tuesday, Claims that the resignation re-/An Aug, 7 storm, the worst in sulted from differences of opin:/Buffalo history, dumped 3.88 tee i. Strike Date : ;metal-tipped wooden staves, Hotels Limited, which owns a number of liquor outlets, Mrs, Grossman last Sunday night an. nounced she had accepted an of. fer to purchase her shares, In an earlier statement Mr, Grosa. man said the shares had been acquired by his wife long before with the state of siege today,| However, the rumors led the a omy , would continue until further no-|demonstrators to march on the Drawing Near | ine Sprositien demonstrators, tice, government + controlled Radio ban b ge to represent 60 per About 400 prisoners were be-/Congo where they demanded) WASHINGTON (AP) -- With ps hed a people at In te lieved to have been released by|that a broadcast be made in- rail negotiations at a stalemate} jetiex™ ig Neteee of an Open he rioters Tuesday, forming Youlou they no longerand new doubt cast on legisla: Nehru, accusing his ; government of corruption and elephone re DO idere resi . ne A ne Telephone reports out of the considered him president tive prospects, Aug, 29 seemed inefficiency and ending with one of the worst ever seen:! "Because of the gravity of They said it appeared that the|the situation, I am taking in my out in some southside sections ws the rain renewed its attack Tuesday night, Water pressure burst a 1,000. of the conference, Semyon K delegation told the Soviet dele- grams (132,277 pounds) and by gow-London night mail train example of such an arrange-) BoWMANVILLE (Staff) ae C ] I B ill land other police experts a mM n TaZZa 1 lfrem the scene of the crime supporters swarmed to the However, we have notion Highway 401 which took four| : ; | } An unconfirmed report said V jan underworld source had fur-jtion of Prime Minister Nehru will find our proposals worthy curred. between Oshawa and BRAZZAVILLE, Congo Re-! -The government troops were) African area of Poto-Poto said/part in the raid The demonstration came a both sides desire." Vamvas, 36, of Toronto; Mrs.| anti-government riot, said to-/block all entrances from the Af-|Malians in the area the gang was: thought to havejed in introducing a motion of and' Italy's Ambassador Fran-|°t, Hamilton and occupants .of/ promised "necessary reforms,"| Latest reports said therelout of Poto-Poto today but wore) with an alibi, Nehru's administration, Catheart said he had enough ofjcaused damage estimated at d'Anjou, Quebec, (Paul Pepin ; a group of 7,000 supporters of|/%eom 3 radio, which was damaged by/out during a general strike pro-jtions, rumors spread that You- adi w f | he P jbetween $500,000 and $1,500,000, Outs Heavy Storm [impact end survived). hice in Which the strikers freed) Loudspeaker trucks toured|broadcast over Radio Brazza- slogans backing their leader, |when opposition members criti: ness places were reported westbound Vamvas vehicle|personal name the civil and By THE CANADIAN PRESS |!t to roll over and crush the|the authority of the chief of gallon capacity underground Tsarapkin, last April gation that transfer by the leaf, more | the U.S.S.R. of 40,000 kilograms last Thursday ment, |A five-man coroner's jury took! swarmed over Leatherslade of the Soviet delegation to this|an "accidental deaths" verdict| | Detectives in London intensi- main gate of Parliament here abandoned the hope that after/jives. inished the names of 10 crimi-jand protesting against the high of serious examination . |Bowmanville in the highway's on what in our view would be |public--President' Fulbert You-jout in full force in the city to-|Congolese residents had also . Inquiries. stretched to the day after all opposition parties Gen. E, L, M. Burns of Can- Susan Fudge, 24, and her day he is taking over both civil/rican quarters to the centre of, Reliable sources said the gone there some days before/no confidence against the gov- canoe. Cavalletti gunported the|*he car; transport driver Ger-|" myo president broadcast a|were about four dead and 16 in-|turned back by police, truck and two army-type) While the anti-Nehru demon: politics and wanted to make his}$93,000,000 . 9, a 3.374nch rain of Montreal, & passenger in|striking workers Tuesday in/testing the attempts to impose lou had fled the country. but the ruling Congress Party were} Mr, Grossman, $2, came un: | Fourhospital basements ane Bowmanville Provincial Po-|all the prisoners in the city|the city to announce that a ville Tuesday night to appeal! Police closed both iron gates|cized ownership by Mrs, Gross. Sweeps Across | cont et aes ae crossed the median, colliding) military powers,"' Youlou said ear, jState will be charged with re- this: to the Soviet co-chairman At that time, he said, 'my United States of 60,000 kilo- R ] d A id t this tot clutchés her doll and than four. feet in diameter, (AP Wirephoto) | (88,184) pounds) could be nl u e CCl en ee . aaacunme , seme Sas ene j | Detectives, fingerprint men "Unfortunately, the reaction/only 10 minutes today to retum Farm, the robbers' den 18 miles approach has been negative. [in the July 15 car . truck crash| | ified their search for. suspects today demanding the resigna- further study the Soviet Union Died in the coach whlch oc.| ae nals supposed to have taken! price of food, h y reach agre that we may reach Agreement) stbound lane at about 2.20 another step in the direction|?-™ Were: car driver Lester! oy speaking in the wake of aniday and were attempting to begun to molest Sengalese and/French Riviera, The leader ofjexcept the Communists succeed: ada, Britain's Sir Paul Mason|/@uenter Brenda, seven, bothiand military authority andthe city, demonstrators tried to march|the robbery to provide himself) ernment unprecedented injioh within: the cabinet, MrJinches of rain on the city and ald Melonsen, $f, of Ville i Leliured | ' vee [a strators were at the main gate,|@Xit on the crest of a tourist! On July Ns, . <d ' statement via the Brazzaville|jured in the rioting which broke! During Tuesday's demonstra , American suggestions. They ex P} R i] fall inflicted damage estimated jthe truck, was thrown out On) one incident of a battle with po- one-party rule, these were disproved when he anned al de another gate, shouting/der fire earlier in the year] hundreds of homes and busi lice describe the accident as| prison, maht long curfew, imposedifor calm jand stood guard with lathis--/man of an interest in Seaway Tuesday, Power was reported South Ontario with the transport and causing} 'A committee formed under Heavy, steady rain accompa- } nied by hail and lightning and followed by strong winds swept|Blackstock conducted the in- Coroner J, A. McArthur of across most of southern Ontario) quest, Tuesday, disrupting utilities and damaging crops. Vulnerable tobacco fields, be- ing harvested in the Dethi Brantford area, were reported) hardest hit by hail, with) Drumbo, 15 miles west of Brant-| ford, the centre of the worst| damage. | Growers feared losses on be tween . 100 and 200 tobacco} farms, but no estimate of the damage was available early to. day The weather continuing strong winds aad coo! temperatures for , today, with, some cloudiness but little or no rain Gordon office predict Drumbo said his acres tobacco were. a complete loss. Donald Brooks reported 45 acres on two Drumbo area farms virtually stripped tobacco leaves tones the size of moth- balls fell in some places, Farm ers said rain lasted about 45 minutes and the hai! about 15 Heaviest rainfall in the prov ince was at Trenton, whete nearly two inc "ll since iate Monday, weather Office said. Toron got 1% inches in the same period. Raia was lighter from Toronto west London got one-quarter inch. Johnston of 22 of of AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 | $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 | | | | | iported missing Oahavea Liheva! Nomination Wide Open In the wake of Robert Stroud's surprise resignation Tuesday as Liberal candidate in Oshawa Riding (provincial), several! hames cropped up as potential nominees: William Lawson and Russel! Murphy were both nominated with Mr, Stroud at the January meeting. Both withdrew to make Mr, Stroud a unanimous choice. Mr, Lawson is in Oshawa General Hospital and may re- ceive only family visitors. Mr. Murphy said today he has no intention" of accepting the nomination, He gave business pressures as his reason but promised '"'active support" to the new candidate, Dr. Claude Vipond said he would "'definitely not' consider accepting the nomination. Terry Kelly, Oshawa Riding Libera! Association acting-presi- dent, said emphatically that he wouldn't consider it Association secretary George Drynan said, "no, not."* And Norman Cafik, federal Liberal candidate in the April election, was reported travelling in the United States and could not be reached, j Boat Over Niagara| Report A Mystery' NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) Reports that a boat might have! Tuesday night remained a mys- tery today as daylight showed! no signs of a wreck. Niagara Parks police were continuing their watch below! the falls. No craft were re-| The workmen at the coffer dam above the falls told police they saw what appeared te be a small boat with a light on it headed for the dam. Before they could close the gates the object shot through into the ra- pids just above the falls Another worker closer to the |falls also reported seeing a light;week ended July lon the river. establishing order, resuming work and carrying out neces sary reforms." Martial law preserved an un- easy calm in: Brazza today Loudspeaker trucks proclaimed a M-hour curfew, White resi- dents were partly exempted They were permitted limited movement trolled the streets There was no public an nouncement, but it was under stood Youlou would: cancel Thursday's scheduled celebra tion of the third ¢ yersary of the republic independ ence from France, Youlou had intended to dedicate it to his hew : which would have provided only a single election list Thousands of demonstrators Tuesday attacked the local jai! and released its prisoners, The aemonstrations, led by union leaders, were staged to support demands for government re- forms and to protest plans for one-party rule § Gendarmes pa-! "Party of the Congolese,"} Berlin Wall Area Returned To Calm nto the eastern sector--and ed to tear down the wall with hands while other demon-! ators hurled rocks over it. BERLIN (Reuters)--Calm re turned to West Berlin today fol- owing rioting Tuesday night by/t hundreds of youths demanding! sti the wall must come down." The Communist-erected wall lividing East and West Berlin had crowd dispersed by midnight, but before they was two years old Tuesday and) brought the situation under con for most of the day there werejtro| rocks were hurled at an no incidents, Feature of the day) American military police . car was a formal wreath-placing on|/and a car bearing an East Ger the Western side in memory of} man diplomatic plate persons who died trying to es eane © ying to ¢ A side window was smashed cape communism ., . in the East German car, HURL ROCKS The police used truncheons to But later in the evening ajbreak up a crowd of some 300 group of youths broke through) West Berlin youths whe tried to} a police barrier at one pointistage a sit-down strike on the near Checkpoint Charlie the/ approaches to Checkpoint Char crossing point for foreigners go-| lie the LOWER THAN IN 1962 Squads of armed riot police} lInterstate Commerce Commis-/day that the limited nuclear test close today, the demand: "Quit That's the day set by most|quit." Quit, Nehru, of the United States railway for mew job-eliminating. work rules--a move the five operat: ing unions have pledged to meet with a strike What makes Aug, 29 seem closes than 15 days away is that a pall has settled over the Senate Assurances two major procedures for avert:| On Test-Ban ing a U.S..wide -tieup--negotiat,/ ing for a-settlement of the four-) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena. year dispute and legislation to/ters sought evidence from the turn the problem over to the] Atomic Energy Commission to. sion ban treaty would not prevent The negotiations, sponsored by; development of an anti-missile the. labor department, sputtered) System, to a halt Tuesday with an-| The Senate foreign relations nouncement by the carriers of, Committee called in AEC Chair. "a positive stalemate" on the) ™an Glenn T. Seaborg for a fol: key firemen's issue, The car-/!W-up_ toe Defence Secretary riers want to eliminate 32,000/Robert MoNamara's testimony firemen on diesel locomotives in| Tuesday that the program can freight and yard service on the|%@ carried forward by under. grounds the men are no longer|S*Ound testing, needed. The unions say they| ree foreign relations group, are required for safe and effi.| With members of the armed ser. ut anavotlene. vices and Senate-House of Rep- t resentatives atomic energy jcommittees sitting in, is hald. ing hearings on the treaty to prohibit testing in the atmos. phere, underwater and in outer Space, but not underground, |Senate ratification requires al | two-thirds majority, complete anti + missile system Jobless Figure Drops 32%: OTTAWA (CP) 11,000 OO 9 n mid-July, a drop of from the June figure and 15,0 under the total for July, 1962, jthe federal labor department 'and the bureau of statistics re- ported today. The joint press release noted at the heavy summer influx students into the labor force, in June, continued in th of evident July. The unemployment rate for July was 4.2 per cent of the labor force compared with 4.5 |been swept over Niagara Falls per cent a year earlier and 5.2 per cent two years ago. In June, the rate was 4.4 per cent.! The jobless rate is the numbe of unemployed as a percentage of the labor force The job picture in .br estimates in thousands July June July ef, with Labor force Employed Unemployed The monthly rey on a survey of 35,000 house holds across Canada during the 20. Since Sampling survey, all figures are 308 or Unemploy-'st definitely ment in Canada fell to 293,000 given as precise totals is based am the teen-age work foree, the number of persons in the labor force 20 years and older re- mained virtually unchanged, | Usually a sizable decrease oc-| curs in this group because many married women drop out of the} tabor force during the school va-! cation period, This year, the re-/ port said, the number of mar- ried women in the labor force! showed little net change! between June and July Of the 293.000 jobless workers nm July, some 201,000 had been atistical estimates and are not Employment rose between June and July by an estimated 207,000 to 6,742,000, an above average increase for this time of year," the report said LABOR FORCE JUMPS At the same time, there was a large increase of 196,000 in the labor force, bringing the to- ta! manpower count to 7,035,000 Against these increases, unem- proyment showed its sligh' de- cine The DBS release said the labor force: ex- ansion between June and July s characterized by "'a very nflux of students." Dur- the month, an estimated ADVISE CAUTION 199.000 teen-agers between 14 The seasonally adjusted un- and 19 years of age entered the employment rate was estimated iabor 'farce and an , arge number got jobs labor department ess,. An estimated 33,000 had been' seeking work from four to six months and 59,000 for seven months or more June but down slightly from the The total entry cent rate of July, 1962 nto the labor force du the; report includes a cautionary wo mths' from May to July/note about the reliability of the d to 312.000. This com- seasonally adjusted rate be. with 268,000 during the'cause of guesswork involved in ronding last year thon 214,000 in of -teen- s ealeul The period } 1961 said about two- re In contrast te the changes ini fy unemployed for three months or} equally at six per cent, unchanged from)! fths of the total gain in em-|Columbia 3.5 (5.1), weal ast be possible under the eae reaty, insisted that kind of between June and testing would "not be one sary to reach a decision on! whether or not we should de. ploy the system." '| "We have tested the design on ofthe warhead to the extent that the July! we know it will work," he said estimate represented an in| McNamara said the Russians* crease of 173,000, or 2.6 perjhish yield nuclear tests in the cent, over July, 1962. The larg-|atmosphere in 196) advanced est part of the advance was in/their understanding of such a the service, manufacturing and} system, but he added he didn't construction industries, jbetieve the Soviet Union has de. Unemployment rates in the| veloped a. workable system. ployment July was in agriculture, while employment gains in non « farm madustries were fairly general. | Total employment in July was reported as '"'well ahead" last July, At 8,742,000, jeabinet and chief liquor com- he became a member of the missioner, | Chief critic of Mr, Cathceart's! ministry was Donald C, Mae. Donald, New Democratic Party leader, who accused Mr, Cath. cart of "clumsy handling of gasoline tank at a service sta- tion in suburban Tonawanda, but firemen washed the gas jdown storm drains before any harm was done, Residents, many still reeling from the effects of last day's storm, again reported personnel within the depart. Atlantic, Quebee and British ee -- Columbia regions were higher « than the national 4.2-per-cent N lear P ten Is' average, while in Ontario and| uc ° ha the Prairies the rates were} Si T | ooh | Sign Test-Ban Unemployment totals by re). . WASHINGTON. (AP) -- J} gions in mid - July, with mid-jpan's scheduled signing of the' e figures in brackets: At-jimited test ban treaty today lantic $5.00) | (39,000); Quebeciwill bring toa dozen the num- 12,000 (113,000); Ontario 81.000 por of countries with the poten. (89,000); Prairies 30,000 (3litial for developing nuclear 000); and British Columbia 35.:;weanons who have committed! 000 (32,000) themselves against testing in| Joble withithe atmosphere. | June Atlan-| U.S, authorities betieve enlist. tic per ce (8.4); Quebec|ment in the treaty by these na. 37 Ontario 32 (3.6): /tions would serve to reduce the! Prairies 2.4 (2.8) and British/potential spread of independent! tauclear forces, : i rates for July res in brackets ss flooded cellars, -- SHELTER FROM RAIN | A brief rest, sheltered from the rain, was a welcome re. spite Tuesday for divet- chegers Mrs. Peggy Burgess, Bayview, and Miss Barbara Workman, Oshawa, canipeti- tors in the 1963 Ontario La. dies' Open at the Oshawa Galt Chad Oshawa Tumes Phote

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