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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Oct 1963, p. 1

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Your Commun THOUGHT FOR TODAY The automobile has brought many benefits, and has stoppe* a lot of horse stealing. hg ae 2 Y gx y Villest -- She Oshaw V iL. rh umani WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and continuing warm Friday. Winds south at 15 miles per hour. 'ic i Si + ann moe Ciil T I ee yy é saa te. s, { irl + Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy * VOL. 92 -- NO. 249 TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1963 Siler and? ter same ae hate ee" Con. ; Ottewa and for P r Mrs. Churchill Took Life With Pill Overdose (AP)--A coroner) Saturday night and talked gests age in 1935 ended in divorce in : Their son, Julian, a lawyer, LONDON ruled today: that Sir Winston|future plans for their work with Churchill's daughter Diana,)the group. whose nude body was found in) Dr. J. H. H. MacRae, Mrs./and one of their two daughters, her home last Sunday, took her|Churchill's doctor, said she)/Mrs, Edwina Dixon, own life with an overdose of called him at l a.m. Sunday and/nesses at the inquest. sleeping pills. said she was worried about the not specifically call the death|the Samaritans. years an a ; suicide, a legal term. He listed! 'She sounded quite rational,"|three drinks of whisky in an the cause of death as acute bar-|Dr. MacRae testified, evening "but I have never seen i soni self-adminis- her adversely affected by -- poisoning, self-adminis FOUND BY HOUSEKEEPER "7 3 y were wit- Young Sandys said his. mother Coroner Gavin Thurston did effectiveness of her work with)had taken sleeping tablets for and often had two or lerews return to their ships BANKS WILL MEE 3 NEW TRUSTEE | Waterfront Czar Heads For Ottawa Showdown OTTAWA (CP) -- Waterfront Legal War Looms | Over Trusteeship \ezar Hal C. Banks has agreed MONTREAL (CP) -- Officials|of the five unions to a meeting tone showdown with the fed- of the Seafarers' International|in Ottawa. leral trustees who have taken |Union (Ind.) were reported to-) Some 400 seamen milled about/jegai--if not physical -- control jday - td -- " titution. ach pig Wednesday |of his rebellious Seafarers' In- i P " legal attack on the constitution-/night before the trustees met.| j i ing in Ottawa this morning to jality of the, federal trusteeship|Some were already sttagglide| tr fandiy Glnde heedaa discuss the maritime labor joyer it and four other maritime|/home after collecting clothing Dryer said he talked to Mr. union question. junions. sa a al) and other belongings from lock-|Banks by telephone short'y be- (CP Wirephoto) at was: reperiog the the. SIU lers. oe fore 10 am. EDT. __*_____| will claim the Trusteeship Act) In Toronto, William Glasgow, pte, jviolates the Bill of Rights and/stU port agent, said the union He said Mr. Banks agreed to will seek to have the courts de- would comply with trusteeship|°°™® to Ottawa as quickly as clare it invalid. legistation but declined to say possible for the meeting, which Hal C. Banks, SIU leader in|whether his statement indicated|S, *Pected to take place in én Canada, and other executives|a return to work. Ottawa hotel. met with their lawyers. "Our decision was that if| The Vancouver jurist said no The union last week sent a|there were any new develop-|time had been 'set for the con- letter to Justice Minister Che-| ments we would hold another|frontation with Mr. Banks--ex- cept it would take. place as soon as the SIU leader could ar- ° Firm Calls Back e e Striking Seamen vrier requesting a re-examina-| meeting, and we will have one tion of the act, claiming that/,. soon as possible," he said. ee eee Action on the Great Lakes OTTAWA (CP)--Striking sea-jice which is our right under ourjits provisions "are inconsistent + | men of the Scott-Misener Steam-|present contract with the unic n.|with the purposes and elec cave Astra Be pe bre gig eagle poe Abut 200 sailors and Oat th ha ye A sn Ph _ \traffic in Montreal, because/labor crisis was moving on two | Pal A d ° neers employed by Scott - Mis-|and that it "is contrary to the) chins did not meed tugs to tie up|fronts--the three trustees work- «= their ships "as quickly aS P0S-iener Steamships walked off/tight of freedom of assembly|.+ grain elevators, but a tie-upling on their own to meet sep- sible" they will be replaced|their ships last weekend in re-|and association guaranteed by wa: reported at the Lakehead arately with Mr, Banks and the with, seamen hired through the sponse to an SIU order, Bight|the bill of rights." + lwhéte tnke: treiuiteve' Wek" aasiioimees-ar Wis four 'oth ;. ee I imployment Service. ine i Meanwhile, word came from... ; : rig : er mari National Employment of the 12 ships in the Misener , m western grain for trans - ship-|time unions today, and the cabi- Ralph S. Misener, president] fleet have' been tied up--four in Ottawa that Banks has agreed ment to deep-sc . ports net meeting 'tor the third of Scott - Misener Steamships,|Montreal, three at Fort William|to meet with the trustees there. The' VICTO flows. "a tke straight day fourth largest shipping line and one at Sault Ste. Marie. | Banks left SIU headquarters|troishter manned by members : on the Great Lakes, promised! pe Misner line was the first| @POut 8 on age Wednesday) or the Canadian Maritime Un-/HOLD SPECIAL MEETING full protection for members of|Great Lakes company to stand|2cCompanied by an unidentified'i,, (c1C), is the only vessel re-|._,.0¢ full cabinet met) right the striking Seafarers' Interna-|., pyblicly against the 10's | Woman. oes her into his) norted to have left the Lake-|2!ter ® special cabinet commit: tional Union of Canada if they work stoppage which the gov-|™' ree Cadillac. He was reported joaq with grain since last Sat-\'Ce Mapped out plans for deal- returned to their ships. ernment has called illegal. |to en . his home] i +day. ing with the illegal strike of "There is no dispute between) Mr. Misener said his com-|jy ri Senge a laire:short-| Ports on the Great Lakes, St. roller ee = & cee our company and the Seafar-|.1. has every intention of oh ah Lawrence River and the Atlan-|lrares and caaera t si ers' International Union of Can- honoring its present contract He refused to open his door|tic coast were affected by the contd poe ceca une m was previges over by Labor Minis- | | NO TIME FOR QUES- TIONS, -- Labor Minister Mc- Eachen tells a reporter as he hurries along Commons corri- dor to a special cabinet meet- VICTOR DRYER ada," he said. ; 'ah - to reporters and could not be} with the SIU, which does not SIU walkout. "We are requesting that our! exijre until March. 31, 1964. |Teached by telephone. | There were forecasts Wednes- | y | 8 Me the gantectimnp: he ald: Meanwhile, some SIU mem- day ht a quickiy as possible. é "'In'the event that they do not wish to return, it is our inten. tion to seek replace ments through the seamen's division of the National Employment Serv- tice Oheyrier, s port er Mcliraith and Im- migration Minister Favreau, . robab! from @n east coast port. had testified he was prescrib- J ir ing them for occasional insom-|seven Sunday morning," Mrs the use of her maiden name but|are cold.' I felt her. She had no) ip. way for sale of 1,200,000 retained the title of Mrs. after|clothes on. I took the bathrobe!) noise of corn to Hungary. But which seeks to dissuade people; Mrs. Lucas said the level of ch with a suicidal urge from kill-a bottle of whisky which had ths Wheat deciethe hicher aie, idecision, not through negotia- tion | he © &. € Hike where '"'available." ? a te ie, . The commerce department 'Board of;stations in Ontario, New Bruns-| In a written judgment the|pended the increase # . i commissioners also turned ceiving a number of pi 5] e J "Algerian Thurston took her active life| The body was found in the -------------- -- into: account and concluded she bathroom of Mrs. Churchill's was fully in possession of her-|house in fashionable Belgravia US Wh t§ ] self and had full knowledge of|@ few hours later by her house- ale ea ale the effects of the pills. A doctor | Keeper, eg a tom. ' "T got up at a quarter to T Ru ia nia, Lucas said, "and saw: the lights 0 SS "It is quite impossible to see|on outside Mrs. Churchill's bed- a how a lady of her intellect could/room. That was unusual. Still Confused have made a mistake about dos- 'I pushed ope: the ork ig age,"' the coroner said. door and saw her lying there. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Mrs. Churchill, who resumed) "I said to her 'oh, mada, you|y; ¢ poverninent wid cleared her divorce from Colonial Sec-|off the rail and put it over her mp retary Duncan Sandys, was 54.|because she was so cold, as I gg Seg . wheat sales Ironically, for the last 18) thought i ae a aac months her main interest in life! 'I did not think she was dead|-- Cabinet officers huddled Wed- had been working for an organ-juntil I saw there was discolor-|nesday with a Soviet trade dele- ization ealled the Samaritans,/ation at the side of her face. gation and failed to iron out the ing themselves. been in Mrs. Churchill's room|ping rates charged by Ameri- Miss Jean Burt, an associate|the night before had been low-|.,, shipowners in the organization, told the in-jered bv an eighth to a quarter.| A : ' A quest Mrs. Churchill called her! Mrs, Churchill's marriage to, There is a growing feeling] --______._.. |here that the problem can be! NO STUDENT INCREASE lresolved only by a White House| + | The corn sale to Hungary was! resolved smoothly because corn) rt Board Rejects and other grains are exempted) Y "s from' the condition that wheat! sold to the Soviet bloc must be; carried in American ships| PYTAWA (CP) apr ; : sc oy one sft Masport Commissioners an-|w "}ment py issuing a licence for its! sp nee wick Quebec and Western Can and'..a. spokesinan: : for application by the Canadian} The CPR had filed the pro- Incorporated, big Min-| acific Railway to increase|posed new rates with the board|"¢2! srain pt some of its commuter passen-jin December, 1962. Th ere firm, said the corn ger fares in Ontario, New\to become effective at cf will shipped soon, pi Brunswick and Quebec. lof this year but the bo down CPR's proposed inerease| A public hearing wa{,,em02ID in scholars' rates between all|Montreal in June on Ow and) Ns ee antennas -----------|posed increases. using In its judgment. the \ for| said the Canadian Pacifipuse| | 'Throne Speech | Says EEC Bar Interruption' shown a need for the incry [a.-| revenues it would have réalize by the increased fares," ZAGORA, Morocco (Reuters) In the absence of~subsidies,/,4 fierce battle today raged be- federal, provinciat~and munic-|tween Algerian and Moroccan ipal grants the company WAS/forces near the strategic oasis entitled to obtain the requested| or Hassia Beida and the out- revenues from those using the! nost of Tinjoub in the disputed LONDON (Reuters) rhe commutation services. desert area. speech from the 'throne prorog- However we are not dis- Moroccan military sources uing parliament said today that posed at this time to permit the said the Moroccan' Army was Britain's unsuccessiul bid to en-|SPecific fare increases proposed|receiying air support as both ter the European Common Mar-|by Canadian Pacific, i sides prepared for further bat- ket was only an "'interruption."! board tle The speech was addressed to" 'The company's proposal is) The fighting began when pow- both houses of Parliament and to put the burden of those in-jerful Algerian forces attacked read to the House of Lords by creases on purchasers of com-|\the Moroccan lines Wedaesday Lord Dilhorne, who as Lord) mutation tickets who travel the|and continued through tie night, Chancellor is Britain's chief ju-jonger distances. The Moroccan command e¢sti- dicial officer 'In our opinion the objective) mated the Algerian strength at The Queen was.not able to de- should be to obtain the neces-|three battalions armed with liver the speech--formally wind-\sary revenue requested by the|machine-guns and heavy mor- ing up the last session of Par- company while spreading the tars liament--because she is expect- hurden thereof in the most, Newspaper men. said they ing a baby in the new year equitable and reasonable way saw about 5,000 to 6,000 Moroc- The speech said Britain was ypon the whole body o° persons|can troops, nearly all insancry continuing to work for wider ysing the services or upon es dug in with machine-gun nests European unity and would step many of them as possible." on high ground overlooking the up help to developing countries. i i ¥ i at The government was "'encour- aged' by the partial nuclear test ban treaty and hoped the "Blast Moroccans SCOTTISH ARISTOCRAT WORST, COMMONS TOLD Mortars wait the oases regular Algerian RENE LIPPE agreement '"'will be followed by others helping to reduce inter- national tension." | _ HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 250,000 225,000 200,000 175,000 150,000 125,000 100,000 75,000 50,000 25,000 Start . Lloyd, making his comeback on the government front bench as house leader, sought to turn the argument against Wilson. ee Lloyd: said many opposition members seemed embarrassed by Wilson's references to Benn. raised a ruckus of shouts and The hard-hitting nature of La- jiaughter when he suggested bor's attack on Douglas-Home that the new prime minister was symbolized by backbencher jcould thank Benn for opening Emanuel Shinwell's comment the way to a Commons seat that the new prime minister is The prime minister was notja Scottish aristocrat -- and a lable to attend today's emer-| 'Scottish aristocrat is the worst jgency debate in the Commons |type of aristocrat." - 'but is expected to take his seat' Lloyd denied Wilson's accusa- jprovided he sidered a safe constituency Scottish byelection Nov. 7 The 39-year-old Benn, wearing his customiary red tie, had just wins what is con- tion that Douglas-Home had not in a consulted the cabinet on the question of postponement o the been formally introduced when | Wilson opened his attack on the new prime minister, installed new -session of Parliament for two weeks until Nov. 12 while jduring the weekend after a two- week leadership crisis: he contests the byelection. As for Wilson's suggestion of an immediate general election, The peers' bill enabling titled to disclaim their peer ted from LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis-; Selwyn ter Sir Alec Douglas-Home was pictured today as trying to ride nto the House o° Commons on the "'coat-tails" of Labor mem- ber Anthony Wedgwood Benn, the former "'reluctant peer." Labor Leader Harold Wilson Lloyd said: "We are rady to meet him when the time comes This was greeted with Labor laughter and cries of "now." a Loyd said Douglas-Home wa Benn's long struggle howing no disrespect for Par lation enabling him. to become a liament by delaying its opening lcommoner. juntil be himself could Jead the! esu largels for legis Fight Over Peerage ¢ : night that cxpoany wil ager Blonon Nendartk Ges onan aeake woulda ane, ai every way possible" with the) --i4 thay ware' beepiae in touch ments Of paper and disrupt eeship set up Wednesday lie siethone wi 8 tq|Montreal's timetable for com- by the federal government over|tives im Ottawa, f "PTe*°'@ pletion of the: 1967 world's fair § a ni jite. : , Latest reports indicated the|* ba igen P ' general walkout of SIU mem- r . He aor Ny an interview er bers, which started last week-| 350 H ilt of staff: ja request for crews was made} r ' ag , ' fo the SIU 48 hours ago andje%, had tied up at least 91 in-| Q@MIULTON Rayner" chiet of naval staff jagain today, He declined to set/conadian corts No SIU creme RCMP Commissioner C. W. a specific deadline when the) 24 aoe thi dd! Beggin ee aed | Seamen Buck Harvison; Chairman Howard A. company would seek non-SIU} Th ae 's " ork! Mann of the National Harbors crews to replace its striking) |. Tad followin ip mocting bg ros ger officials of § , jthe irtments of external af- palit ' of the three-man board of trus- Return Order |fairs tober, justice es rs "But we won't vely|tees empowered to take over tort, vg two tiny oases of Hassi Beida long," he said. full control of the SIU and four HAMILTON (CP)--Some 350) E ; A and Tinjoub eae aes lother maritime unions. The Members of the Seafarers Inter- of he es sha te Pegg Wednesday night 2 ltrustees also summoned-lea national Union here are not re- special committee, ; wat eee baie at Macmillan Goes tes 2!s0 summoned-leaders tioning to work today, accord.|MacEachen said he had' noi intervals. by heavy F A D " | ing to SIU port agent John Mce-|heard nw sy Bog trustees mortar fire F | = /Quaig. | appointe ednesday to take It was impossible to estimate or uto rive US. Claims Despite action by Parliament/ver the SIU and four other casualties as fighting was dis-- LONDON (Reuters) For- placing the union in trusteesnip| Marine unions, persed all day along a front)mer prime minister Macmillan ,and the request for the men to} The trustees --Mr. Justice about 30 miles long. But therejleft hospital today for the first astro purne return to work "the rank andj Victor Leonard Dryer, 52, Van- were dead and wounded on both|time since his operation two file members are staying Away) couver; Judge Rene Lippe, 53, sides. weeks ago and went for a drive. s had their ships," said Mr. Me-|Montreal, and r-tired union At dawn Wednesday the Al-| The 69 - year - old statesman R d C A d ualg. jleader Charles H. Millard, 67, gerians made a diversionary at-| 4. proy ht to the hospital door| e TOSS 1 There are 10 ships and two) Toronto--donned velvet gloves tack on a small. unnamed out-|"* 8 : oP WASHINGTON (AP) -- The 47@d8es tied up here by the dis-/for their first moves into the post to the north, driving out)? @ wheelchair and was as- United Stabee: ha bi itace Bit pute. Their crews abandoned lawless, corrupt. and violent the: 20-man Moroccan garrison. sisted into the car by nurses. jo EES 8s present eco-|2em as soon as they docked |waterfront labor crisis. When the Moroccan Army, "I'm feeling very well," Mac- mic measures ecaibat Gubal ie ocr moved to retake the post, the/millan said, "but just a little). long as the Fidel Castro gov- Algerians launched a major at-|tired."': jernment follows its aggressive iar eg ope _ and Tin 'Phe car was driven by his/course, the state department eh ead Vidaeuniy aight the! Wile Lady Dorothy. jsaid Wednesday, Moroccana still held the rocky Macmillan underwent an op- In a long and bitter statement, escarpment which overlooks the eration for the removal of Me ee er ane ne Rigas Hassi Beida waterhole. prostate gland. ing of economic pressures GU aera yes Si SURES |which Premier Castro claims| have caused the loss of more lives than hurricane Flora. At the same time, Press Of- ficer Robert J. McCloskey, who read the statement, said further) investigation of the strafing of the U.S.-owned ore ship J. Louis, indicates several jet fighters| presumed to be Cuban were in-| volved in the attacks shortly) debate on the government's foreign secretary and chancel- after Tuesday midnight. | new legislative program \lor of the exchequer, whom) McCloskey said the investiga-| Parliament reassembled in an Douglas-Home earlier this week' tion has not yet been completed atmosphere of high . pulitical|appointed to be leader of the put that a protest will be filed| tension as the Laborites and House of Commons. lthrough the Swiss embassy in Conservatives faced each other LABOR WINS |Havana. | again in the Commons and the' "ine decision to hold the de-| | Lords bate today -- a tactical victory) ; | What was to have been a dec-/for Wilson -- averted possible 4-Truck Crash | Kills Driver; s Driver; . Snarls Traffic orous ceremony to close oui the ehaos in Parliament, old session threatened a' times : | to explode into a ful"-scale pobi- The een a ey ve ical rumpus, Conservative and| Norm goss at. aa eine'| Labor leaders rallied their full] su Sha se th parliamentary strength. Th elpar Fhe ool a gal HOUR OF VOMEHEE ee verre semmoned to the Lords to hear' But the Conservatives were , . without their, new 60 - year - old ps + sags pe even TORONTO (CP) -- John Col- eader to speak for them. Doug- cession But the Laborites had 180M, 42, of Toronto burned to as-Home, who shed his six an-:treatened to hold up proroga-/ death in his blazing cab early cient titles Wednesday, had atition indefinitely unless they got! today amid a spectacular, four-| that time forfeited his right tolg qebate. cone reg ag a. -- sit in the House. of Lords, and! while the Commons . debate|" Police blamed the crash on a until he is elected cannot sit Ni raged on, the peers took a vote| Sanati § the Commons. | jeom ination of fog and peat jon the Labor motion: As ex:/smoke which swirled across the "We now have a prime mn.) ihe ; Br aah ister,"" Wilson. taunted, "who is for to! Sama Conservative erie |agtway, Feducing bcrene sg Me a member of neither house of ning margin of 69 Three trucks collided and Pat beak The Conservative Marquess of were sideswiped by another In the prime minister's ab- Salisbury accused Wilson - of'also heading east from Toronto.! donated by a flour company, sence, the Conservative defence) acting' not in the interests of the, Burning wreckage was spread, in Montreal 'to provide relief was being led by Lioyd, formerination but for party gain, {300 yards across the highway. ' for the victims of hurricane FLOUR FOR HURRICANE VICTIMS Dock workers load flour, Flora on the West Indies Is- land of Tobago. The space for the shipment was allocated by a shippifg company on 'their chartered vessel. The ship ment is now en route to 'the West Indies. (CP Wirephote) *

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