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Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Oct 1963, p. 1

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¢ THOUGHT FOR TODAY ~. Fashion decrees boots for the ladies; maybe next we'll have snow shovels to match, he Oshawa Fimes & -- es ' * * » * * A | WEATHER REPORT Increasing cloudiness but con- _tinuing mild Wednesday with light winds. ' a price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 92--24] OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1963 Ottawa and for Authorized as Second Ciass Mai! poyment Post Office Departmen ot Postage in Cash TWENTY-TWO PAGES" Eastview Inquiry vines Copies Replaced MONTREAL DOCKS BUSY AGAIN Overtime For Ports. To End Cargo Holdup is cleared. So will the longshore-jthe longshoremen a 10 - cent MONTREAL (CP)--The St.)men j hourly raise in each year, plus Lawrence River's three great-'. Capt, Ligtermoet expected it)changes in overiime rules and est ports are humming again) would take a week to 10 days to vacation pay plans, and a prom- with the conclusion of the 10-'get the port back on a normal ise of a federal government in- day longshoremen's strike. schedule. quiry into the longshoremen's The 3,800 members of the In-| J. A. Livingston, Montreal pension plan. ternational Longshoremen's As-'manager for the Canadian jin iy gonme sociation (CLC) went back tolwheat board, said he expected|GET 12 CENTS = work Monday at8a.m., 10 cents\the Si. Lawrence ports will The checkers got a l2-cent an hour richer, and prepared meet their designated shipping, '#!S° - 2 a heigtoe Bs for a concentrated burst of trae hefere the Pye ragged pelts He MEO AepoOwe overtime work to clear the) About half the ShiDe.. 1 'eddv) Gleal ieargo held up by their strike. |Montreal harbor Monday were ,, tgs a eae Perhaps the best indication of|either bringing wheat to the ele- fer gE Ne York i at & return-to-normal was the ar-jvators or taking it out. Norm: oy ee ee and he tival late Monday of the Polish ally. wheat ships form about a the final negotiatigns a passenger fitier Batory in Mont-\quarter of the fall fleet. called: te costes Cine ie ine Hip lgdeh pinetes:. swsstr-toie : é Féderation of ihe ees dian ational Railways Monday|Canada, of Canada and the Arkadia,| men, agreed, Their chief nego- fear of violence during the _ The ILA strike. ; t- surprised|tHement we have ever signed shoremen, It was ended Satur- federation 56 cents an hour for URGENT TASK cals voted overwhelmingly to Longshoremen earned -- $2.33 By GEORGE FRAJKOR i tal st lucrative pad@kage. deals the: ssenger ship to mos Btve . pase Seki ft erence Mary cman ra lin os eek . Pacific™ and "Cana-' iP! e Two other liners, the Empr : representing the 38 ' \lifted their embargo on cargo lines that employ the longshore- tried to dock at Quebec City)Shipments destined through the A ¢ but gave up their panna ioe St. Lawrence ports. tiator, Edward M. Strang, 'said the first in'"'this is the most expensive set- strike and ended up going to|Montreal since 1936, Halifax. A igtee both shippers and some long- He estimated it will cost the day when the largest of Mont- €ach man by the time the con- The most urgent task for the real's three longshoremen's lo- tract end: in December, 1965 three ports is the movement of some 60,000,000 bushels of wheat!accept the proposals of federal/@% hour under their last con- and flour for Russia, part of the mediator Judge Rene Lippe tract, which 'expired: Dec. 31, 228,000,000 bushels Canada has, Even then, the small check-|1962, and had 29 cents an hour agreed to deliver by July 31,/ers local--checkers are the su- extra in' fringe benefits. 1964, pervisors of loading and place- They originally demanded an Capt. R. J. Ligtermoet, Mont-/ ment of cargo--held out' for a hourly raise of 35 cents, plus a real's harbormaster, said the few extra cents for their own|10-cent boost in fringe benefits. entire National Harbors Board| members before deciding to join . staff in Montreai will work as! other locals in ending the strike. thuch overtime as necessary un-, Judge Lippe's proposals were til all held-back cargo and grain'for a three-year contract giving South Koreans ee : | Go To Polls; Australia Faces 'Fraud Charged General Election | VANBERRA (CP) Prime, Menzies said. the: problems|opponents of military strong- Minister Sir Robert Menzies an- should be dealt with by a gov- man Chung Hee Park. nounced tonight that Australia ernment with an effective man-| Anti - government politicians will have a general election date and authority. accused the military regime of Nov. 30. In the present House of Rep- delivering soldiers in groups of Making his announcement in resentatives, the Liberal and|five to the polls and -watching the House of Representatives, Country parties rule in a coali-|how they voted Menzies said it was most im- tion government, holding 45 and' Both Park and his chief civil- portant that other nations 17 seats, respectively, in the 124-\ian opponent, former president should know whether his gov- seat house. Yun Po-sun, had to wait in line ernment's pledge of military as- The Labor party also holds 62\to vote. As many as. 10,000,000 sistance t. the new federation of|seats. But two of its seats have|voters in this country of 32,000,- Malaysia carried the clear back- limited voting rights, thus giv-\000 were expected to cast bal- ing of the Australian people ing the coalition a slender mar- lots Australia has pledged this as- 8"? Yun's Civil' Rule Party pro- sistance to the four-state South- The last election was in De- tested that troops of the 35th east Asia federation, formed cember, 1961 Division in Chonju were forced Sept. 16, in the face of a "con- Calwell suggested Menzies to vote in full view of a group frontation" policy against it by would retire after the election|leader. Indonesia -- - pg ken Goigned rH . Pusan, anti ~ A gh erie: e ore , sive federa| Treasurer Harold|leaders reported the distribu- er a Beam beched Holt an "easy ride into the tion of Park leaflets in voting "neo-colonialist" conspiracy, P"me_ministership." - booths. REPEATS PLEDGE After recounting his pledge of military assistance for Malay- sia, Menzies said close study of a speech by Labor Opposition Leader Arthur Calwell showed e the opposition believes the pres- _ence of Australian troops in Ma-| 1p laysia should be covered by a clear, open and if possible mu- tual treaty. LONDON (AP)--The British,of the prostate gland anq will "Whatever this may turn out cabinet met for two hours to- probably remain in hospital un- to ean, since any treaty in- day but announced. no decision) til late next week volves mutuality it does mot/about a successor to ailing Partly by choice and partly, mean support for the declara-|Prime Minister Macmillan. by 'tradition, the Tories have no tion made on the government's Infomed sources. said the forma! "mechanics" for choos- || SEOUL (AP)--South. Korea's presidential election. began to- day with long lines of voters UK. Cabinet Meets, TORONTO (CP) -- The -dis- appearance of sections of evi- dence in a 1960 provincial in- quiry into the financial affairs of Eastview remains officially a mystery, Municipal Affairs Minister J .W. Spooner said to-| day. He announced that the three missing copies of Volume 15 of the 19-volume transcript have been replaced as of today by going back to the original notes of court reporters covering the | hearing The issue of the missing vol- ume--missing from two copies iof the transcript at Queen's |Park and one copy in Eastview - was raised on the eve of the Ontario election when Ottawa lawyer John Nelligan, who rep- resented Eastview during the auditors' investigation, an- nounced he was unable to find Volume 15 Mr. Spooner told a press con- ference today that he does not know what happened to the ori- ginal ' copies of volume © 15, 'which included evidence given by. Gordon Lavergne, mayor of Eastview from 1948 to 1960 and Progressive Conservativemem- ber -of the 'Ontario legislature for Russell riding from 1954 un- til his defeat in the Sept. 25 election. Mr. Lavergne ran as an Independent Prog ressive Conservative in the election. TOOK PRECAUTIONS "I have no idea who was re- sponsible for its removal," Mr. iSpooper said. "But I-have heen 'asstifed by officials of my* de partment and I accept their! word that they took the usual precautions tg safeguard them! (the 19- volumes). Deputy Minister Lorne Cum- min gsaid the disappearance of Volume 15 from both sets of evidence at Queen's Park was| Oshawa Drawn In Sweep DUBLIN (CP) Following list includes Canadian-held tick-! ets drawn in the Irish sweep- stakes based on Saturday's run-| ning of the Cambridgeshire, | i with horse, ticket number, name| or nom - de - plume and home- town Smuggler's Joy --NAD 39556, Waiting, Waterton, Ont.; (There is no Waterton, Ont., listed in the Canadian Almanac.) Sword --.NMK 51780, Grably, Willsdale, Ont.; (There is no Willsdale listed in the Canadian Almanac.) PPH 47308, Tumbling Tam, Kingsville, Ont Tudor Light -- PPE 56768, St Hoping, Cochenour, Ont. Sultanas Pet -- NAE 61547, Amey, Halloway, Ont. Balfour Lass--PPK 70435, R M. Hurley, Cornwall. Giecoso--NAE 36206, D. A. Le osis, Niagara Falls, Ont. -Halian Flame -- NAK 39162, Dynamite, Elmvale, Ont.; NES 17541, H. G. Bevens, Kingston Kutelamara--NBL 61901, Alan | | Bowlly, Fonthill, Ont.; NAC 44,- . 061, String Oshawa, Count Albany -- PPE 47523, Bromo, Woodstock. Emerald Cross -- NBJ 35913, Catharines King of Babylon--NCC 32474, Stoney, Victoria; (No provincial St | | Word pects fluctuated with every edi tion of the newspapers Learned arguments raged about the Queen's "'prerogative"' in choosing the new prime min- ister, though. most agreed in NTIER PO RECAPTURED- ALGI first noticed last Aug. 15 when Mr. Nelligan appealed for per- mission to see the transcript. The volume was found to be missing from the transcripts in} the- municipal affairs depart- ment and when a set was sent from the attorney-general's de- partment the same volume was also missing Mr. Nelligan has said Volume 15 also was missing from the Eastview files. Mr, Spooner said the trans- ciipt was 'not considered se- cret in any way." He said the government cop- ies might have been lost by ac- dient. Mr, Cumming suggested that "'someone could very eas- ily have been looking at the volume and unless they were personally supervised could have walked off with it." IN LEADERSHIP RACE contenders to succeed ailing Prime Minister Macmillan. No decision on a successor to Mac-| millan was reached at the | two-hour meeting. j (AP Wirephoto) | Acting Prime Minister Rich- ard A. Butler, left, and Lord | | | } jSteres and schools were closed Ideal fall weather coaxed Ca-'during the day. nadians by the droves into the|. While opposition leader John /eountry's parks and on to rural|Diefenbaker went duck huntin roads during the last Jong week-'in his home. constituency" of end before winter's onslaught, /Prince "Al Only in British Columbia was|members of Parliament sat the Thanksgiving weather un-|through a busy session. Thous- kind. While the rest of the coun-jands of visitors thronged the try basked beneath a warm sun, | corridors of the Commons or B.C, endured alternating cloudy|lounged on the lawns of Parlia- skies and cool rain for most of;ment Hill. the weekend. Algonquin Park in Ontario re- Weather offices throughout)ported 10,000 visitors during the Canada reported daytime tem-'weekend, a Thanksgiving rec- peratures ranging generallyjord, and nearby resorts ..were from the high 50s to the mid overflowing with tourists. 70s, often 10 to 15 degrees above normal for this time of year. |And the weather became milder Chicken War To Be Judged By Trade Jury as the weekend progressed. Highways leading to Canada's parks and resort areas were fre- BRUSSELS (AP)--The Europ- ean Common Market today agreed to submit its chicken quently tied' up in a. fashion destvwation given. The Canadian Teminiscent of mid summer war with the United States to an impartial international panel Almanac lists four Victorias.) (weekends, City parks were over- Mandamus--NBC 36035, J. L. 'UW with strollers, and outdoor for settlement. | The European ministerial Harrow, Ont sports events had some of the council, ryling body of the six- ' .. best crowds of the season. Early to Rose -- PPB 40855, With the heavy traffic, there ination trade group, accepted an |American proposal that the is- ucky/ Squirke, Barrie was also a heavy toll of acci- _Monawin--NAC 51996, R F./dents, At least 60 people lost Uffelmann, Waterloo, Ont.;|their lives in. traffic mishaps NBE 55246, All Most, Chatham,!during the weekend -- slightly sues involved in the shipment of |U.S. frozen poultry to Western Europe be examined by a group of foreign trade experts. Ont. less than the 63 which the Ca- Deuteronomy -- NAM 49701, nadian Highway Safety Council Milliken, Ont. . The ministers, representing Fl in Ontario were shot to death France, West Germany, Italy, Larry, Meaford, Ont. | Under the U.S. proposal, each years ago, although some banks, ment on Tariffs and Trade with science, arrive for meeting of the British cabinet in London Earth Tremor THANKSGIVING s Hits Pembroke : tremor shook the Pembroke and| Traffic Crashes Chalk River areas of the Ot- ni eports of damage. vr oon ame Lake Heavy Toll occurred at 8:29 a.m. about 120 By THE CANADIAN PRESS miles from Ottawa. r tremor was felt in the Rolph ton atea, site of an /experimen- 110 'milés orthwest' of Ottawa.) Some housewives ran into the! Hailsham, right, minister of ey a ee OTTAWA (CP) An earth tawa Valley today but there said a small local earthquake: Ontario Hydro. reported». the tal nuclear power lant -about! streets at Deep River, 95 miles! northwest of the capital, when their furniture shook and dishes rattled. At Pembroke and Deep River it was reported a second tremor was felt at 10 a.m. Tickets | L D Lu 49665, | Here We Go Again, Ontario. (No hag predicted hometown given.) ; Hinton Blewett--NAH 51239, INVADE WOODS Unlueky, Ontario; (no home- Hunters also invaded the town given) woods by the thousands, and Principal--PPJ 36918, Tiger, fishing addicts 'got in a late line. Almost inevitably, three hunters Peter Piper--PPH Pricko, Windsor, Ont and boating accidents involving j 3 Campaign--PPS 43244, Estoy hunters or . fishermen helped poate: shtemen Wait tocuiane: Bnuja, Woodstock. swell the number of drownings.|a drafting committee before fi- Teeotal --NAH 35079, E. C.\ In all, at least 96 people died|nal action on a text this after- Gleason, Sarnia; NAC 54934, accidentally during the three|noon, according to Common days, equalling the record for|Market sources. Commander-in-Chief -- NAK) the Thanksgiving weekend, 55742, etta, Peterborough. Newfoundland was the only|side would nominate an expert Lachine -- NBE 51513, No province not. to mark Monday|and a third member of the Money, Dundas, Ont.; NAE 39-\as a holiday. In that province,|panel would be named by . the 518, Four Aces, Paris, Ont.; Thanksgiving was remove diinternational trade organization NAT 51867, Smarten Up, Osh-|from the provincial list several|known as the General Agree- wa j|headquarters in Geneva. | The panel would look into U.S. ' Rye that 'the overseas sales NEW FLASHES }of American poultrymen haye {been damaged to the sum of | $46,000,000 by the Common 'Mar- | két's tariffs. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Highway Traffic In District Snarled. .. Page-11 Barber Shop Robbed Twice During .Weekend .. Page 11 Extend Local Languages To Sacraments VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican ecumenical coun- cil voted overwhelmingly today to extend the use of local languages to the sacraments, keeping Latin only for the heart of the rites. A. majority of the council voted Monday to make the same changes in the mass, but it failed to obtain the needed two-thirds majority. The council's litur- gical commission will rework the chapter and submit it again to the council. | Plomer Discharged After Inquiry | OTTAWA (CP) -- Vice-dmiral Herbert Rayner, chief of naval staff, disclosed today that former defence minister Harkness approved the discharge of commodore James Plomer after a full inquiry into the commodore's charges Police Investigate Six Accidents ...... Page 11 Oshawa Airport Safe | bert, Sask., other; behalf by me as prime. minis- ministers had finished their im- ter." he 'said. : mediate business and were un- likely to meet again before Thursday CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS With Acting Prime Minister Richard A. Butler presiding, the cabinet met at 10 Downing POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 #OSPITAL 723-2211 Street, still divided over the is- sue of leadership which also has torn their ruling Ccnservative |party Macmillan underwent an pp ation last week for remqyall for position and personal pros-| ing a new leader. With no clear-| private that the Queen would do cut successor immediately ac-|little but con'irm the choice of ceptable to all, the vacancy at/the party elders. the top already has stirred un-| .In continuing speculation, But-! usual excitement in a party that|ler appeared to hdld the inside prides itself on an august ap-jtrack, despite reported opposi- proach to politics tien from some top "Tories. Last week's Conservative con-|There seemed to be some cool- fernce in Blackpool wasjing of sentiment for Vigcount marked by some of. the most|Hailsham, who is renquncing his frenzied activity the party has|peerage and becomfig plain known as candidates jockeyed|Quintin Hogg in a bid for the big prize, « & against the navy. Admiral Rayner told the Commons de- fence committee that Commodore Plomer more than a year ago while still deputy naval comptroller went to Mr. Hark- ness with charges of negligence in the navy Women Graduates Picket Massey College TORONTO (CP) -- About a dozen female graduate students claiming discrimination picketted all-male Massey College at the University of Toronto today. Marchers, led by Rose- mary Speirs, 22, carried signs reading: 'Seldom has so much been spent on so few" and a Latin version of '"Massey College must be destroyed." Again Stolen .... .. Page 11 K of C To Honor Rey. | F, Kwiatkowski ... Page 11 | | Agriculture Debated | In Parliament Oshawa Junior Girls | Retain Title - Page 12 Sault Wins by Senior B series .. Page 12 T & Americans Help | ot Invaders, Claim " (CP from: AP-Reuters) joub, But this was denied by ALGIERS Algiers radio|the Algerian information minis- claimed today that Algerianjtry. forces have recaptured two des-| Algerian Foreign Minister ert outposts taken by Moroccan|Abbel Aziz Bouteflika, however, troops Monday. |said '"'many thousands' of Mo- The Algerians said Moroccan) roccans had penetrated betweem troops supported by tanks,/30 and 60 miles inside Algeria, planes and heavy artillery swept/The clash occurred in an area up to 60 miles over the border 300 miles across the Atlas Moum- Monday in the area of Hassi-|tains from Marekech, Moroced, Beida and Tinjoub, the out-/ where Mrs, John F. Kennedy is posts. j : visiting this week. U.S. Ambas- The Algerian government|sador John H. Ferguson indi- never officially admitted that) -agied in Marrakech the border the two places fell to the Moroc-|clash would not evttail Mrs. can invaders. But today, the ra-iKennedy's stay, which is 'to last dio announcer said in a trium-} yntil Wednesday or Thursday. phant voice: Algeria prepared to take the "Our forces have cleared the! porder dispute before the. Or- invaders from Hassi-Beida and) yanization of African Unity, tie Tinjoub." in Addis: Ababa The broadcast aeid the Moroc- yew og yun hrervod last tf can forces were bringing in " heavy reinforcements. It al- WOULD MEDIATE leged that some of the Moroc-|, King Hassan rote, cele can troops were airlifted to the|{or 4 "direct, dialogue' between the two nations and Tunisia in- fighting area in planes piloted|'" : by American airmen, members ben it would attempt to me- of a U.S. military training de- : 7 2 tachment with the Royal Moroc:| The king, in a. radio speech, can Air Force, said. the dialogue. should "'liquid- Two special envoys of Alger-iate the frontier dispute created ian President Ahmed Ben Bella|by colonialism and which arrived today to see King Has-|threatens the integrity of our san about the border conflict.|national territory.' The two, Mohammed Yazid and| Moroccan military sources Slimane Hoffman, refused to|Said about one battalion of in- comment to reporters. fantry--about 800 men--was en- A foreign ministry spokesman gaged on either side, Moroccans here said they. were expected|were armed with automatic |to fly.on to Marrakesh to See weapons, but -had no. air .sup- the king. port, ? q ° claimed Monday Beida and Tin- Gloomy Adenauer Closes His File © By CARL HARTMAN |price for American wheat the BONN (AP)--Chancellor Kon-| Russians want to buy, rad Adenauer moved today) But Adenauer. could look back through his final 24 hours in of-jon his 14 years as Germany's fice before turning over the/first and only post-war chancel- West German government tollor as an era of raising Ger- éadwig Erhard. many from the ruins of Second President Heinrich Luebke | World War to a democratic na- was to notify Adenauer this|tion of prosperity and military afternoon that he accepted the|might allied with the West. resignation submitted by the) Der Alte (The Old One), as chancellor late Friday. Aden-| Adenauer is called by Germans, auer was to continue as acting/gave up the chancellorship re- chancellor until the Bundestag, |luctantly under the, pressure of West Germany's lower house, |his Christian Democratic party elects Erhard to succeed him/and the Free Democrats, junior Wednesday morning. -|partners in the government co- The autocratic, 87 - year - oid/alition. But he is staying on as chancellor said. he was stepping|party chairman and a member down with a heavy heart, evid-|of the Bundestag. ently fearful that a major goal!' Adenauer thinks the 66-year- --reunification of Germany --jold Erhard, his economics min- had been pushed further fromjister and vice-chancellor, lacks realization by warming rela-|political acumen despite 14 tions between the United|years in the cabinet. States and the Soviet Union. | Adenauer, poker-faced and ta- Adenauer expressed unhappi-|citurn, is a shrewd political re- ness in the last week because/alist who made big and little de- the United States did not makejcisions, often without consulting removal of the Berlin Wall its'his cabinet. ' 'posts of Hassi | | OPENING NIGHT STAR Birgit Nilsson, as the Egyp- tian slave girl in Giuseppe Verdi's "Aida", poses with Rudolf Bing ckstage after opening of Metropolitan Opera in New York last night, Bing is general manager of the Met. =--(AP Wi gphoto)

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