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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Sep 1963, p. 1

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' THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'A buffet dinner is a social func- tion at which the guests out- number the chairs, he Oshawa _ WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny but-cool Sunday with light winds. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1963 VOL. 92--NO. 222 WASHINGTON (CP) -- The| US. Slams Door Over Auto Parts Sale Plan Both countries face problems| Canada already has tried this| F ie, | VATICAN CURIA REFO PLEDGED BY POPE PA Wider Basis For Membership Seen CP from AP-Reuters [orensee in salaries and wages said today he wants the Vati.| The Vatican ecumenical coun: United States has slammed the|in solving worrisome balance-jout in a small way through a . : of-payments deficits. Drury es-| f pig if door against a Canadian PIO. ead Canada's _ deficit none year tariff incentive to in i posal which in effect would|trade with the U.S. amounts to|°Tease exports of automatic can Curia, central administra-|ci! opens its second session tion of the Roman Catholic/here Sept. 29. 1 Church, thoroughly reformedigowp ARE CRITICAL and internationalized. - % HUGE SEARCH FOR GIRL MAPPED OUT \Canadian restrictions against) Searchers To 6 Mine-Mill Men , Said Communists | Comb Wide Rrea For Gir BOWMANVILLE (Staff) DEAIVENS: Pele. (AT? Sx Searchers on foot, aided by air-|present and past officers of the planes, were out early this/International Union of Mine, morning hoping to find some/Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) ace -year-ol oreen| , ' Greenley, missing from her| se eas cue ca Maple Grove home since lastiiona) Labor Relations Board Saturday. iclaiming they were not Com- wid tcl 'ie sagas' amu A seventh way Tee scour 60 miles of bushland be-| The six are:Albert C. Skin- t Highway 115 and Osh-|ner, union president, and Irv- pec east boundary. Men from|ing Dichter, secretary-treasurer Duplate and General Motors and Harold C. Sanderson, all of have been joined in St. John|Desver; Charles H. Wilson, Ambulance Brigade volunteers/Tucson, Ariz.; Raymond Den- and Boy Scouts. ( |nis, Chicago, aod Maurice R. Seven busloads of men were|!tavis, Richmond, Calif. lsome $450,000,000 worth of an-| nual automotive imports from) the U.S. Canadian trade department) statistics show that Canada ex- ported to the United States in 1962 cars, trucks and parts totalling $10,190,587. Defence Production Minister C. M. Drury raised the proposal} Friday at closed-door sessions of a joint cabinet economic con- ference and Commerce Secre- tary Luther Hodges lator told reporters: "'We don't like it and we put up a damn good case versed the convictions and er-| dered a new trial, District Judge Alfred A. Arraj set Oct. 7 as the deadline for the defence to file motions for a new trial. He also agreed to a defence motion that the de- : Mo fendants remain free on $5,000|/284inst it. bail pending final disposition of! In other high American quar- the case. iters the Canadian proposal was described -as '"'screwy" and PLAYS KEY ROLE something that Mexico might The testimoy of the deadjadvocate rather than Canada. man--William Mason of Butte,! But Drury said he wasn't) Mont.--played a _key role in] giving up. He would keep press- Van Camp's acquittal. ing the Americans to look fav- After deliberating two hours, jorably on the plan, though he the jurors asked Friday to re-|admitted his initial attempt had deployed along county and town-| Jesse R. Van Camp, 54, Dan- ship roads by officers of the| ville, Ill., was found not guilty Bowmanville Provincial Police|--through a dead man's testi- detachment. Search headquar-/mony which the defence didn't ters, a Dutch Reform Church|want admitted. on Scugog street in Bowman-| All seven were convicted two ville, is in-constant contact. with|years. ago, but. the U.S. 10th|Arraj ruled the men. Soviets Fire New Blasts At Chinese Circuit Court of Appeals re- officials. An admitted former Commun-; Mass UN The six who were convicted now are liable to a maximum| UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- penalty of five years in prison|The United Nations General As- ist, Mason died in an automo- bile accident last October. Judge and fines of $10,000. sembly ended the first week of its fall ion on a bitter note early in the second Friday after four days of al- hear Mason's testimony, given' failed. trial that Mason's testimony be most unbroken ha: y. of the 111 at the first trial of the same e S. Africa } admitted. | About two-thirds force the U.S. to open its gates|ahout $850,000,000 annually. He|transmissions and engines. wide to Canadian automotive|said the Americans have ad-|Duties on these products are re-| products or face the prospect of/ mitted something must be done|pnated if an equivalent value of about the Canadian deficit, just) as something. must be done about the over-all U.S. deficit. The Drury plan, which has not yet been officially unveiled in Canada, was placed before the American ministers to test their reaction before it was for- mally implemented by the Ca- nadian administration, Since Canada imports about $500,000,000 annually in motor vehicles and parts, with about 90 per cent coming from the U.S., Drury reasoned that the U.S. parent Companies of Ca- nadian subsidiaries should en- courage an expansion of Cana- dian automotive production in) the form of parts or complete vehicles, shipping more of this production into the American market. This wodu Ireduce the Cana- dian need for imports; reduce the Canadian payments deficit and at the same time provide| more employment opportunities) for Cenadians. | Spurs Walkout Algerian delegate Abdelkader Chanderli demanded inclusion of the item, saying South Africa Canadian parts is exported. This has led to some expansion in| % exports of auto parts. Now Drury wants to try this out-on a bigger scale. TALK LEAD, ZINC Hodges said that along with) the Canadian plan to boost Ca-' nadian manufacturing, specific, problems in such commodities and Smelter Workers (Ind.) HEADS MINE-MILL Ken Smith of Toronto, (above) was re-elected president of the Canadian section of the Inter- national Union of Mine, Mill Many of the work's 2, Roman Catholic bishops: attend: formulated and carried out by|ing the assembly are under. the Curia itself," the pontiff/stood to be critical of some as- said. 'The Roman Curia must|pects of the Roman Curia's not 'fear recruitment with ajoperations, They want a de; wider international vision." of decentralization in c Pope Paul made the remarks | government, at an audience for the Curia it-| The council begins its self, made up of about 1,000 pre-|Sept. 30 by dis ing a draft lates and priests who run all|decree entitled Ecclesia the congregations, tribunals and|which deals with the nature of offices of the Vatican. the church, the authority of the. Major importance was at-|bishops and the role of tle tached here to the Pope's ex-| laity, ; : "They (the reforms) will be rd as lead and zinc, lumber and) at the union's annual conven- oil were discussed in a general] tion in Sudbury Friday, (CP way. He did not believe the| Wirephoto) ' conference would come to any conclusions but that discussions "may help change the pattern or policies affecting those com- modities."' Hodges told reporters that if Canadians want to boost ex- ports, they should call a meet- ing, such as the' White House conference on exports' expan- sion, and find things to sell to the U.S. that the U.S. does not already have. Asked for comment on this point, Drury remarked: 'What would the Americans like us to export to them? Tropical fruit?" ° Hodges questioned. whether the Canadian plan, i de- tails of which have not ye} been disclosed, would be legal 'under the General Agreetient on Tar. ifts and Trade, | 5 Youngsters Die | In Two-Car Crash LOWELL, Ind. (AP) -- Five youngsters homeward bound after a hayride and a girl driv- ing home alone after a date died early today as two cars smashed head-on three miles least of Lowell. The cars, driven by Carol Jean Wilson, 18, Hebron, Ind., and Tod L. Belshaw, 17, Lowell, Ind., 'crashed at cne minute past midnight. Killed were both drivers and Belshaw's passen- rs -- Gerald Griesmer, 15 onard J. Austgen, 16; - Robert Felder, 17, all of Lo Lake, Ind. pos we ell, and .Gwen Stack, 16, Cedar |pressed: desire to broaden the| Authoritative ec c 1 esiastical joutlook. and composition of the|sources believe the assembly. Curia, Its membership includes} will then discuss a draft decnés 130 of the church's 80 cardinals|entitled De Episcopus, which |and scores of monsignors. Most|concerns jurisdiction of bishops, jare Italian. Those who are not/relations with the Roman ispend long careers in the Vati-jand the powers of \ean. episcopal conferences. There have been suggestions from other prelates and theolog- jans in recent years that the Curia be reorganized along the lines the Pope mentioned. The Pope recalled he had worked for the organization for more than 30 years hefore coming archbishop in Milan, POPE NEEDS CURIA He said a Pope meeded 'the Curia as an instrument to carry. out his work. He noted, how- ever, that criticisms were some- hed "made of the organiza- tions. "We must welcome thé criti- cisms which surround us with Trading Stamp Issue Sweeps. » Great Britain " LONDON, (CP)--Squirrel ite kle woman equals. tomer, ; tion -- as en, it is Popped nto the news i two weeks as trading w to a minor national TRADE SETUP SEVERED should never have been per- mitted to join the UN. Jooste exercised his right of reply at the end of the session, MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Russia today fired a mew broadside at Communist China for opposing the partial nuclear test - ban treaty. Observers said the latest cri- ticism took the two nations nearer than ever to a complete break. The bitter attack, published in today's Russian press, came in a 7,500-word "first instal- ment" reply to a Chinese state- ment of Sept. 1 which called the treaty a "deceit" and a "betrayal." Russia accused China of "treachery and hypocrisy" and trying to split the world Com- of Communists, in the eyes of the world." It added the Chinese leaders "suffered a serious moral and political defeat by attacking the treaty," hammered out by Rus- sia, the United States and Brit- ain, The statement weakened earl- Russian nuclear might was suf- ficient to defend China and other Communist 'natios. The statemet weakened eari- ier Soviet pledges of military aidto China by saying the "chinese leaders have devel- oped some special aims and interests "which the Socialist munist movement over the test- ban issue. The statement rejected Chi- camp cannot support by its military might." This appeared to be a refer- | Swim At Own | Risk Around Docks - Broker BARRIE, Ont. (CP)--A Tor- onto stock broker whose son is charged with operating a mo- torboat in a dangerous manner said Friday that children should swim at their own risk in areas adjacent to public docks. S. J. Brooks, a member of the Toronto Stock Exchange °was court trial of his son, Gerard, 16, whose motorboat struck and killed Leo McMulkin, 14, of Tor- onto who was. swimming with underwater equipment in Lake Simcoe Aug. 8. testifying at the magistrate's| | assembly members staged a mass walkout as South Africa's G, P. Jooste took the rostrum to reply to an attack on his country's racial policies. Earlier in the day the assem- bly had heard.a policy address from President Kennedy in which he outlined ways that East-West relations could be improved--including a possible joint Soviet-American expedi- tion to the moon. The assembly, the U.S. leader} said, was meeting in "an at- mosphere of rising hope, and at moment of comparative calm." But the peaceful moog was broken late in the afternoon as the assembly considered whether to place the South Af- nese criticism of the treaty and|@®ce to China'g actionson the said China opposed the pact|!ndian border already con- only because it wanted to get demned in a party newspaper |rican race issue on its agenda. Judgment was reserved until 27. LEADS ATTEMPT Sept but as he started to speak, delegates in all parts of the big} chamber rose and silently) |streamed out. | Jooste, allowed to finish al- though the assembly lacked. a) quorum, said the demonstration was "against the spirit of the charter," and had set a "dan- gerous precedent." |MAY HAPPEN AGAIN | Alex Quaison Sackey of /Ghana, leader of the African |bloc, told a reporter later there was no plan to continue the boy- cott. But he said a similar ac- tion might be taken in the as- sembly's special political com- mittee when the South African issue came up. Other African delegates spoke of an attempt to challenge South Africa in the credentials com- mittee. nuclear weapons at any price. | It said the Chinese position) "amounts to a complete apost- asy from the common, cvllec- tively formulated line of the Communist movement on these questions." 'TREACHERY' "The Chinese leaders can is. sue a thousand and one more statements on the nuclear test- ba treaty but they will not be able to whitewash their treach- ery and hypocrisy in the eyes | _ VIOLENCE RIPS NDP RALLY IN TORONTO editorial Thursday. Several times, in slightly dif- ferent phrases, the statement repeated the charge that China was attacking the rest of the world Communist movement on the nuclear issue and thus had virtually outlawed itself, Sharon Park, 14, of Toronto said she was fishing from the government dock at the time and had asked the McMulkin boy to moveaway from her line. She said the boy remained under water most of the time, with only 1% inches of his breathing pipe visible. When Jooste first sought the floor to oppose the item, Al- geria spearheaded a successful attempt for a 20-minute ad- journment as a "'symbolic dem- onstration."" After. the recess the South African was permitted to make his formal objection. The walkout left a handful of Asian delegates, most of the Latin Americans and the full Western bloc -- including Can- ada--seated in the chamber. | Prime Minister Pearson, who |wound up a five-day visit to the |UN today, had left earlier. Plumber Admits Election Pace Mounts By THE CANADIAN PRESS The pace could be quickening as the campaign for Wednes- day's Ontario election nears its Killing Three Wintermeyer had made a '"'del-\tice W. D. Roach. It carried iberate attempt. to mislead the|Mr. Justice Roach's ruiing that people" by playing politics with|the opposition parties were to Ontario separate school educa-|be given access to the provin- name--he appealed to smail-L liberals not to split the anti- Conservative vote. Earlier in the day, Mr. Win- Youngsters FLAGSTAFF, 56-year-old plumber unexpect- edly pleaded guilty Friday to murdering three California chil- dren he said he was helping run away from a foster home. Rober! Alford's switch from an earlier plea of not guilty sur- prised Superior Court Judge Laurance T. Wren, who said he would need some time to decide whether the punishment should he execution or life imprison- ment The children were shot to Arig. AP)--A| jin Toronto, when Liberal party end. Issues brought up by the three provint party lJeaders and other{"candidates Friday generally were the same ones that have 'had a wide airing since the start of the cam- paign. But the first violence re- ported since the start of the electoral contest cropped up at a New Democratic Party rally for Leader Donald MacDonald | supporters tried to raise a ban- ner tion policy HITS ENDORSATION Mr. MacDonald criticized the Liberal party's endorsation of the proposed federal pensions) program when they do not know) what it will contain. He said} Federal Health Minister Judy! LaMarsh, who has appeared | support of Liberal provincial candidates, should stop "gal- umphing across the province . . . daring Ontario to reject the Canada pension plan." Mr. Wintermeyer read a let- cial secretary's files, But, the letter said, the in- formation from the files' was not to be used "unless and un- til the commissioner at a hear- ing of the commission rules that any part of this material is relevant and admissible and admits the same in evidence." Mr. Wintermeyer reiterated that he could not name Mr. X unless Mr. Yaremko agreed to release the Liberals from last year's agveement, Mr. Yaremko has denied knowledge of such an agree- jsermeyer made a tour of the! \fair-grounds in Lindsay, home of former premier Leslie Frost, after first being required to re- move party slogans from his cavalcade and pay admission. | Speaking in Hamilton, Pre- jmier Robarts accused Mr. Win- jtermeyer of "the usual flip flop, indecision, wavering and decep- tion'"' in a claim that only the Liberals could give the separ- ate schools equality with public) |schools in financing. | The Ontario Foundation tax Indonesia Cuts Malaysia Ties | Information Minister Roeslan Abdulgani admitted. this in a recent speech, but insisted that, in the long run, Indonesia Will severance of diplomatic rela-|be able to develop its own trade tions with Indonesia. centres. Deputy First Minister Jo-| Confusion, meanwhile, con- hannes Leimena said President)tinyed to surround commercial Sukarno decided on the action , th at a conference with his aides jive ge FP ling al te at Bogor. |prime target date of anti-Mal- Leimena said the break*was|aysia hostility since the feder- ee erry -- ation was formed Monday. ingapore and Malaya, the) Jazarta was ; § wealthiest members of the fed- ports of Pe Sage py ster . eration composed also of thelterests on Java Island, includ- former British Borneo territor-|ing 33 British-owned rubber, ies of Sarawak and North Bor-|tea and quinine plantations, neo. CP from AP-Reuters BOGOR Indonesia -- Indon- esia broke trade relations today with Malaysia in retaliation against the new federation's humility, with reflection," he said. "Rome has no need to defend herself by being deaf to sug- gestions' which come to her from honest voices, and even less when these voices belong to friends and brethren." He said proposals to modern- ize the structure of the church would not find resistance from the Curia. The Curia, he said, would be im the advantage if the peren- nial reforms of which the church herself, insofar as she is a human institution working on this earth, has perpetual need," The pontiff said the reforms would be carried out prudently and attentively. He was addressing the com- plete Roman Curia--its congre- gations, tribunals, offices and the papal gourt--at a special audience in the Vatican's Pal- ace's Hall of Benedictions. Britain. : ' With a 'sort: of reluctant fasdl- nation, the British retail and public have been : over the sales device which, while not new here, 'now is bee ing promoted on a North Amer» ican scale, with Canadian ty- coon Garfield Weston the key figure. : It all started when the Fine Fare supermarket chain, owned by the Weston group and the biggest in Britain with some 300 stores, announced it will experi . ment with trading stamps, start- ing in November. This marked the end of a _gen- tleman's agreement by ich supermarket chains had pledged to refrain from using stamps. Competitors yelled foul and threatened a price-slashing war. FIGHT TO LEAD ; Spearhead of the opposition is the 100-member Multiple Groc- ers Association. Some observers see in the offing not just a fight The Pope asked the Romanjover stamps but a struggle for Curia to give him their obedi-jleadership in the rapidly -ex- ence and reminded them they|panding supermarket field in were, above all, his assistants.|Britain, which now has about The pontiff also announced in-\1,000 such stores. | «ny Leimena said it was also de- cided to stop using Malayan dollars as the medium of ex- change in the Rau Archipelago, a series of Indonesian islands just off Singapore which has traditionally dealt in Ma!ayan currency. Sukarno has decreed, Lei- mena said, that the national economy should be a major weapon in Indonesia's anti-Mal- aysia campaign and that the policy of hostile. confrontation with the new neighboring fed- eration should be extended to the economic field. CLAIMS ECONOMY HURT The president emphasized that economic relations with Singa- pore and Malaya were under- mining and hampering the pro- gress of Indonesia's _economy, Leimena said. il The meeting at Sukarno's pal- ace in this resort. town 40 miles from Jakarta originally was in- tended to probe the economic consequences of a_ prolonged struggle between. this potentially rich but economically shaky country and prosperous Malay- 8 a, But militar, also. As the session got under way,| Indonesia announced the first) -- y leaders attended plan for education, Mr, Robarts|move toward cutting trade with) ° said, would provide completely|Malaysia: The goverment-con-| } equal - educational opportunity,| trolled Antara news agency said |jtake no right nor any taxes/the directorate of customs and jaway from any separate or pub-jexcises had ordered its officials and were punched anditer to a meeting in east-end chased out. Hamilton which he said sup- Some of the oratory became!ports his contention that he|ATTACKS COVER-UPS_. more cutting, _.. |¢annot name Mr. X--the mah} The Liberal chief aiso at- Lands and Forests. Minister|in the provincial secretary's of-|tacked what he said were cov- death and their bodies dumped) |ment. in a forest. | | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 -- ' Kelso were ai John Wintermeyer, then made a pointed reference to the "big Provincial Secretary John Yar-the campaign began, he said porters have on their share of|to hurt Indonesia. Much of its Adolf power, said Mr. lie" technique used by Hitler in his rise to Premier i Roberts claimed there/fice who he has said is a friendler-ups of corruption by the t least 10 deliberate lies|}of gamblers--because of a for-'Conservative government. Pre-|interfe |in a speech by Liberal Leader|mal agreement lic school re with any board's |mier Robarts has had to order|autonomy and would remove Malaysia. The letter was addressed to five or six investigations since|complaints separate school sup-| emko from R. F. Wilson, gov- ernment counse] to last crinie hearings year's|New Democratic suppor!--with-}in mun taxati under Mr. Jus-lout mentioning that party by! : on. ERO Ain AL OR er one. i ly TRCN al icipal. assessment andj ber . 'Singapore board, would not|to discontinue processing docu- ments relating to trade with! Severance 0 ftrade was bound Mrs. Ngo Dinh Nhu, and copra, pass through | bouquet as she stands with her daughter, Ngo Dinh Le MADAME NHU VISITS ROME : South And in an apparent bid for company taxation and inequities|export trade, particularly rub-| Viet Nam's First Lady holds no plans to see Pope Paul vo Rome today from Athens for She is on a world tour to exe a four-day stay. Mrs. Nhu, a plain her government's stand Roman Catholic, said she had in its dispute with Buddhists, Thuy, 18, on their arrival in

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