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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Mar 1964, p. 2

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Sodt-Clogged |INTERPRETING THE NEWS ts Made Si } No Arrests Made Since Silrik| far Gauge Three Children) policy Towards Cuba Montreal Armory Theft 1 1 OTTAWA (CP) -- With eyes|they want the federal govern-| Eskimos, said Mr, Rheaume, soot-clogged chimney diverted cast northward, members of|ment to intervene on their be-|were exceptionally intelligent! odorless, deadly carbon monox-| Parliament Wednesday took on'half whenever they have a/people. -- i ide gas into a home and killed|Canadian Press Staff Writer|Communist China and the Viet- the problems of Eskimos and|problem with some other part "This kind of attitude by one three children of Mayor John! By carefully aiming his fire|namese crisis is based more on northern frontiers. lof .the nation. of the negotiating ministers/Ostash, officials said Wednes-\at the official U.S. attitude to-|the expediencies of domestic It was hoped to begin a 10-| "As far as I am concerned calls into question whether day. jwards Cuba, Panama, Southipolitics than the global threat day Easter recess at 6 p.m.this desire to have it both people like this should be en: Police Chief Edmund Corson|Viet Nam and mainland China.|of Communist aggresion, EST, today. ways should cease and desist. '~~sted at all with Eskimo af-iof Coleman and a gas inspec-|Senator J. William Fulbright! Fulbright's words are of the For an hour, members dealt} Punctured by interruptions by fairs." tor made the discovery Wed-| may have seriously weakened kind the American public could with the Quebec Labrador Mr, Gregoire, Mr. Howard of- sie made his remarks as the/nesday during a search of the|the U.S. foreign policy position. expect to hear from some Weat- CANADIAN HONOR Flectronics Engineers from the organization's president, Clarence H. Linder, Formal presentation of the award was Andrew G. L. McNaughton, left, of Canada receives the 1964 Founders Award of the Institute of Electrical and Fear Of Anti-U Blocked Troop NICOSIA (CP) Canadianjunrest around Morphy, has| soldiers bearing the United Na-|been to show the UN flag to as tions flag did not enter Cyprus') many Cypriots as possible. Thus southern port city of Limassol)the question arose: Why didn't Monday because the British|the Canadians enter Limassol?| gathered intelligence reports; Meanwhile, things began to that a demonstration or inci-|hum with the arrival of Lt.-Gen. dent against the UN might take} P. S. Gyani of India, force com- place, it was learned Wednes-/mander. day. | Gyani pe a ag meet- United Nations officially ing, arranged without notice, | dented reports that British|With Col. Edward Amy, Cana- troops had blocked the Cana- dian contingent commander, dians' entry into Limassol on a and there were indications an familiarization patrol. After the anouncement might come to- ; ,, day about when the UN force} Canadian Son vey lett Nicos!® | will become: operational. Gyani! Lt.-Gen. Piavi yd vi dh didn't visit the Canadian camp pal ae ie ieee to Wednesday but is expected to thassol to tur the Canadians|?° *° $00". | around at the gate3 of the city. NOT DECIDED The object of the convoys,, Cesar Ortiz, chief UN spokes- which may be resumed today man, said deployment: of the with patrols to the Cyprus pan-/force has not yet been decided. handle and to western areas of Lt.-Col, Andy Woodcock, com- MDs SEEK COVERAGE 7 'Give Mentally Ill Hospital Insurance' OTTAWA (CP) -- Physician: and psychiatrists wound wu three days of discussions Wed netday by urging that menta hospitals be included in the fed- eral - provincial hospital insur- ance plan. Adoption of the resolution was a highlight of the conference on "Medical action for: mental health' which sought ways of integrating the practice of psy- chiatry with general medical} aised by speakers and panel nembers during the conference. fe said these were: --Physicians in medical schools must receive better training in methods of psychi- atric treatment, --Conditions of practice must be the same for psychiatrists and for other practitioners at all levels, both administra- tively and financially, in gen- eral hospitals and in small or special hospitals |tional with only ED made at dinner in New York tonight. . Award honors Mc- Naughton for his many. serv- ices to electrical engineering. N Rally Patrols mander of the Ist Battalion, Royal 22nd Regiment, said Wed- nesday he still expects to take oves patrol of the cease-fire line between Greek- and Turk- ish-Cypriots in the heart of Ni- cosia and also to patrol Kyre- nia, port city 16 miles north of here. Ortiz said terms of reference for the force had not yet been decided either. He declined comment on statement by External Affairs Minister Paul Martin of Canada that the UN force will not have the power to disarm Cypriots: Ortiz said a final decision is expected today on whether .the force can be declared opera- Swedish and Finnish advance parties here. These advance parties. ar- rived Wednesday and it.was not known when the following bat- talion would show up. Ortiz said at one point that the first days of a UN operation are a bit mixed up--he was in Suez in 1956--ad at another point that "everything is conceivable in an operation of this nature." OTTAWA (CP) -- An order. in - council authorizing 1,200 members of the army, navy and air force to be put on active service in conjuction with the United Nations peace - keeping force in Cyprus was tabled in the Commons Wednesday by Defence Minister Hellyer. The order was based on the United Nations action in estab- lishing the force '"'to prevent a recurrence of fighting and, as necessary, to contribute to the maintenance and restoration of law and order and a return to normal conditions in Cyprus." settled to the satisfaction of the British Privy Council in 1927 but which still makes for lively controversy. Before that, |it was the question of the pro-| posed transfer of jurisdiction over the Quebec Eskimos to the provincial from the federal! government. : | A private member's motion by Gilles Gregoire (Creditistes| --Lapointe) to have the govern- {ment study the possibility of jhaving a committee take over, the boundary question, ran into a combination of wholehearted support and stiff opposition. Mr, Gregoire said it was time "he bordér issue was settled once and for all. The present boundary was vague, it went against logic, the laws of geog- raphy, mapping procedures, demography, and industrial ex- pansion, GIVES SUPPORT Firm support came from Louis - Joseph. Pigeon (PC--Jol- iette-l'Assomption Montcalm) who said Premier Lesage of Quebec "seems to want to bow to the demands" of Premier Smallwood of Newfound- land. He thought Quebec had lost some of the, area "because the province had not sent quali- fied lawyers to London to plead the case." Firm opposition came from C. W. Carter (L--Burin-Bur- geo). As far as he was con- cerned the matter had been set- tled once and for all by the Privy Council. 'Canada ~ ac- cepted the decision as binding and final' and he suggested it would do nothing foygthe judi- cial system to have Parliament question decisions through com- mittees. It was when Frank Howard (NDP -- Skeena) rose to pro- pose an amendment that the de- bate warmed up. He said it was becoming .more obvious every day that "when someone from Quebec becomes involved in anything in the House or pro- poses anything in the House they want to have it ways." "They do not want anybody else to say anything at all about to take part in a referendum on said the what happens in Quebec but give the proposed committee power to investigate border questions between Ontario and Quebec and around the Alaska Panhandle. RULED OUT This was ruled out of order. Meanwhile Theogene Ricard (PC--St. Hyacinthe Bagot) jumped to his feet to do bat- tle with Mr, Howard over his remarks about Quebec mem- bers. "We," said Mr. Ricard, "are sick and tired of being pointed out as some sort of bird of which there is only one. spe- cies." We are tired of being accused by members like the one who just took his seat of trying to have. everything our own way. This is not what we want. We want to place our views in front of this House, and nothing more. We recog- nize that others have a right to their opinion just as we have a right to ours." A burst of applause greeted his remarks. Gustave Blouin (L + Sague- nay) later proposed that a com- mission, similar to the Interna- tional Boundaries Commission, would be more suitable than a special committee to handle boundany questions, But he was still speaking at 6 p.m., and the matter was talked to. the bot- tom of the order paper. Meanwhile, before this matter arose, a northern. member of Parliament. expressed concern about the way the government; is proceeding with the proposed transfer of Quebec Eskimos. | Eugene Rheume (PC--North-| west Territories) said he was not against provinces assuming jurisdiction over Eskimos and Indians, but he was alarmed at} the manner in which the Que- bec transfer was being carried out. He __ said Quebec Minister Rene Levesque shown "unfathomable ance" about Eskimos, and for him to say the Eskimos were not far enough advanced the 'question, Kills Holdup Man TORONTO (CP) -- A police-| man, wounded and knocked to} the floor in a hail of. bullets,| killed a fleeing holdup man with} one retaliatory shot in a down- town Toronto bank. Wednesday Constable Robert Dixon, 28, shot Gordon Dennis Peterson,|sibly the man who had robbed malnutriti alias Fred Howard, 37, through the back and heart as he reached the outer doors of a) downtown branch of the Cana- dian Imperial Bank of Com- merce. Const. Dixon treated in . hospital and contusions from was for a being shock bullet that bounced off his belt buckle and grazed the skin beneath his heart. Homicide Inspector William MeNeely said Peterson entered the bank and was recognized by teller Shirley Homer, 26, as pos her of $4,250 Feb, same bank. Miss Homer tripped a silent alarm, activating a robot cam- era, At the same time Const Dixon moved forward from the back of the bank. Before . Peterson handed a note to the teller, police cars were already comvenging on the bank 10 in the boundary, a matter that was fered an amendment that would Commons considered a vote of $684,120,260 in funds to cover| its operations. for April and May, the first two months of the next fiscal year, aims at passing this, $240,885,000 in supplementaty estimates for the fiscal ending March 31, before it ad- journs for the Easter recess. | As the House considered a vote for the immigration depart-! ment, Immigration Minister Tremblay said a more intensive publicity campaign will be un- dertaken to attract more immi- grants. He thought Canada could expect 150,000 to 250,000 immigrants this year in order to develop as it should. Last year immigration totalled 93,- 7] Prompt government action in setting up a commission to han- die Indian claims over treaty rights was urged by Jack B (PC--Athabaseca), He said the Indians are look- ing for immediate action on this ommission, promised by the Liberal government. Justice' Minister Favreau de- clined to give the Commons a progress report on the investi- gation into thefts of arms from an armory in Montreal. He also told Paul Martineau (PC Pontiac Temiscam- ingue) that no arrests 1g8 year coal. mayor's home for a possible His voluntary efforts are notiern allies but not from their likely to be appreciated by the!own high-fanking politicans, | | source of the deadly gas. Chief Corson said the chim- ney was partially blocked with) converted to natural and Mary Jane, 12, have died.' Mayor Ostash, 42, and his wife,| Marie, 37, were in hospital, the. mayor in serious condition. A fourth child, four - month- old Noella, had been taken to hospital Monday with what was) diagnosed as a "minor stomach ailment." 7 An autopsy Wednesday re- vealed Edward died of carbon to jsolate Cuba is wrong; that monoxide poisoning. Chief Corson discovered the tragedy at noon Tuesday after he was told the mayor, elected last October, had not opened the bar in his hotel, no one an- swered the door at his home,| the telephone rang busy and the mayor's car was at home.| Chief Corson found Mayor Os- tash unconscious in a crouched position beside a bed. Nearby a telephone dangled by its cord and it appeared the mayor had attempted to summon help be- fore being overcome. Other members of the family Johnson administration, The chairman of the Senate Mik The House soot that had accumulated be-|foreign relations committee is|into along with! fore' the heating system was|n0 idle gossiper and the Ameri- by merely considering that the gas from|can public has reason to listen/Us. ought to accept neutrality to hi When Senate Majority Leader e Mansfield tried to venture this new kind of ch, his words, His was the only for the Vietnamese, he was vir- Mayor Ostash's three eldest|major voice raised against U.S.'tualy trampled upon for pre-_ invasion attempt in 1961, TI late president Kennedy proba- \children Edward, 18, Allan, 15, support of the disastrous Cuban senting a weak and unrealistie view, bly regretted that he did not ac- MAY STAY SILENT cept the warning of the Arkan- sas Demoerat. It is not likely that Rusk, or leven President Johnson, would be willing to take on Fulbright CHALLENGE, TO RUSK Now Ful challenged State Dean Rusk by declaring that American policy in attempting F ; as Wbright has directlY field. Rusk may choose to re- Secretary main silent, though his m the arguments they have pre sented to their allies on the Cu- they have taken on Mans- depart- ent is deeply disturbed thaf the U.S. ought to be more Mag- yan issue have been challenged nanim Radioactive Capsule Is Missing ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)--A cap- sule containing. dangerous amounts of radioactive cobalt is believed to have been lost either have were in their beds. Edward was/in a library at the University of been made since the January dead. Allan and Mary Jane died Buffalo, or in the village of In- raid. } He said he would like to make a report but it in the public interest to do so. Rule Couple Abandon Children ST. THOMAS (CP) -- An Ot- He said he later telephoned nae ee eee Oar ; 1 tawa couple, charged with aban- "morally indefensible." | Magistrate F, R. Barnum children of Delbert Frederick Vernon Cofell, 24, and Helena, were certainly exposed to the risk of injury or impair- ment of their health, but added: "What gives me difficulty is that part of the charge that pertains to the likelihood of} permanentyinjury or endanger- ing health," The -children -- Christopher, | 3, Delbert, 18 months, and Douglas, one month were found by farmer Ronald Alden, Cofell's employer, March 9 They. were in a cottage Cofell) had rented from Mr, Alden and were covered with sores. and on when found. The S:, Thomas Branch of the Children's Aid Society has cus- tody of the children. | Cofell told the court that he) and his wife came to St Thomas to work on the farm managed by. Mr. Alden and on} the way sold a car in nearby| Lambeth for $20. There was still money owing on the car, he said | later in hospital. It was first thought the fam- soning. Did Not | the Lambeth man and requested Resources doning their three small chil-|that he be allowed to buy his had dren in an unheated farm house} automobile back. When the re- ignor-/here March 9, were acquitted quest was refused, Cofell said it) Wednesday although the magis-jhe panicked in fear of the po- both was the worst type of hypocrisy trate termed their conduct asjlice and fled. Mrs. Cofell said she accom- panied her husband hoping to persuade him to return in a few hours'and had not intended ------ his 21-year-old wife Hildegarde tg jeave the children alone for Wounded Officer | a long period. She said they continued to flee when they learned through the newspapers that the children were being well looked after. | The couple was arrested in| Windsor March 15. | Magistrate Barnum said he} found reasonable doubt that the) children were meant to be sban-| doned, : | terlaken,' northwest of Ithaca, N.Y., the state health depart- would not belily had suffered from food poi-;ment said Wednesday. David G. Hanson reported the capsule missing after instruct-| ing a class for civil defence per- sonnel Tuesday in-Harriman Li- brary at the university. Hanson, an employee of Cor- nell University extension serv- ice, said the bullet-shaped cap-| have been lost at Buffalo or in| firehouse in Interlaken, where| class Monday. But officials said searchers) equipped with geiger counters and other sensitive equipment at either jocation. State radiation specialists in} A ing the capsule on his person for more than 39 hours could absorb "more radiation than is considered advisable for mem- bers of the general population."'| ac ibincien acini! NEED... FUEL OIL ? Call PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 com av ladded. ous towards Panama and py Fulbright, Suggesting it is a myth rather than a reality to think that munism soon will be swept way in Cuba, Fulbright told the Senate there is no merit in the administration's oft-quoted hopes that Castro's regime may oon collapse, The best the U.S, could do, he said, is to stop 'oncentrating so heavily on Castro and pay more attention 'o the bigger problems of Latin America. As for Panama, it was not a test of American courage to re- fuse to renegotiate the 1903 Panama Canal Treaty, he It took no courage to stand up to the tiny country with virtually no military force of its own. "The real test in Panama is not of our yalor," Fulbright said, "but of our wisdom and judgement and common sense." HAMILTON HONORED |sule, containing cobalt-60, could) oxyo (AP) -- Alvi Ham- ilton, former Canadian minister of agriculture, and his wife were guests of honor at a ban- quet given in Peking Sunday by Nan Han-chen, chairman of the China Council for the Promo- tion of International Trade, the |found no trace of radioactivity\New China news agency re- |ported. Hamilton arrived in Pe- king Saturday to further trade Ybany said an individual carry-|petween Communist private concerns in Canada. umennnen THE KEY To The SALE LIST WITH PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 729:0474. SAA se If Rum is your drink practice. | The resolution said exclusion of mental hospitals from the plan raises "psychological, medical, administrative and fi- nancial barriers" against effi- cient treatment of the mentally ill The Canadian Psychiatric As- sociation, the Canadian Medi- cal Association and the Cana-| dian Mental Health Association, sponsors of the conference, were urged to make represen-| tations to all levels of govern-| ment that mental hospitals and hospital schools for the retarded --Present legislation on the! WEATHER FORECAST the practice of psychiatry and Status of mental patients. is Sunny, Cool e For Friday |four shots as customers and | staff ran for cover. Const. Dixon outdated and doesn't serve the purpose of modern psy- chiatric concepts. Legislation also differed widely from} province to province --Whole - hearted acceptance | fell wounded, but as the robber ran to the street Const. Dixon followed and shot him. Police found $2,000 Peterson had taken from the bank lying beside his body on 'he sidewalk. | uses NOTE Peterson handed the teller a note demanding money. Bills to- talling $2,000 were passed to him. Const. Dixon approached Pe- terson, who turned and fired of the mental patient both by the population at large and particularly by the medical profession. Thre Forecasts issued by the Tor-! onto weather office at 5:30 a.m. | Synopsis: The storm centre |will move across southern On- |tario followed by much colder goma, southern Timagaml, North Bay, Sudbury: Snow tap-| ering off to scattered snowflur-| ries and ending tonight. Sunny} with a few cloudy periods and} e Slain the He said that after reaching| farm he received a tele-| phone call from the service sta-| tion operator in Lambeth who had bought the car, demanding certain papers concerning the! car. He said the man told him] he would. go to police if he did not receive these papers | Cofell said he borrowed $45) from Mr. Alden, telling him he} was going to Ottawa to secure furniture he had left there. Wood's Old Navy is your Rum This is a rum that's dark and mellow. This Is a hearty robust rum that's every bit a man's rum, This is Wood's Old Navy, a blend of the world's | finest (many as old as 9 years). A long-standing | favourite in England, we think you'll agree that no other rum can match Wood's Old Navy for full- Special Weekly bodied flavour. Try it next time. be covered by the plan. | The restlution, along with 12 others, is to be submitted to} ' Prime Minister Pearson. | The prime minister, in a speech to the 100 delegates Mon- day, said that inclusion of men tal hospitals in the plan would receive "serious consideration" ™e", one an Alcatraz. prison at the federal-provincial con-|4lumnus, raced out of a super- ference at Quebec City next)market Wednesday into a bar- After Robbing Super-Market CHICAGO (AP) -- Four gun- weather and snowflurries. Heav- iest snowfalls accompanying the storm are expected to be some distance north of the lower lakes chiefly the Georgian Bay and Haliburton regions. Falls of six to eight' inches may hit these areas. Cool sunny weather is expected in most areas on Good Friday. continuing cold Friday. Winds! diminishing to light Friday. | Whte River, northern Timag-} ami, Cochrane: Clearing again tonight. Friday sunny and con tinuing cold. Winds becoming northerly 15 Friday. | | Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday | Police said Peterson was iden- tified by some of the bank staff s the same man who staged at least one of two February holdups at the same bank. On Feb. 6 a robber took $1,- 155 and four days later another holdup netted the robber $4,- 250. Since the rash of bank hold- Message To Members Of CHAMBERS FOOD CLUB 63 -- 102 52 64 -- 120 70 -- 32 ss -- 43 week, Dr. Gustave Gingras, direc- tor of the Montreal Rehabilita- tion Institute, summed up some of the more important points Students Plan Protest March | | | QUEBEC (CP) -- Jean Bazin, | president of the Laval Univer-! sity General Students Associa- tion, said Wednesday a planned march of some 5,000 students will go on as scheduled during the federal - provincial confer enes. The march would be staged April 1, despite a veiled sugges tion from Premier Lesage that the students call it off Mr. Bazin asked the premior to meet the students, but Mr Lesage replied he would be un- able to during the conference He expressed hope' nothing would happen "to disturb the work"' of the conference, which opens here Tuesday. It ex pected to last until Thursday Mr. Bazim said that de the fact Premier I. meet them, the students will go abead with thely march. pite sage won't \ area in recent weeks. | without Two others were slain farther Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- agara, southern Lake Huron, Windsor, London, Hamilton: A few showers this morning changing to snowflurries by af- ups this year--l4 before Wed- nesday -- police officers have been stationed in most down- town Toronto banks Windsor 20 St. Thomas 20 London 18 Kitchener .. 18 rage of police ballets were slain, one escaped. Police had set up an ambush fort he men on the west side Three 101 -- 117 167 --- 57 235 - 48 Mount Forest..... Wingham Hamilton sees St. Catharines... Toronto Peterborough .. Trenton .. Killaloe .. Muskoka .. North. Bay.. Sudbury .. Earlton' ... Sault Ste. Mar Kapuskasing the strength of a wave holdups of National Tea Com- pany food stores in the Chicago ternoon. Cloudy and cold to- night. Friday sunny and cool, Winds diminishing to light Fri- The gang pulled off the holdup a incident, then fell into the police trap as they rushed for their getaway Six thousand doliars was taken in the robbery minutes| after an armored express truck. had made a delivery. The get: and colder with _Snowflurries away car was parked in a va- this afternoon and evening. Fri- cant lot a block from the store day sunny with cloudy periods In a running gunfight one of and cold. Winds diminishing to White River. light Friday Moosoénee Georgian Bay, Haliburton Al-) Timmins ay. Toronto: Showers changing to snowflurries this afternoon Cloudy and cold tonight, Friday sunny and cool, Winds diminish- ing to light Friday. Northern Lake Huron, Windy In accordance with the provisic 6th, 1964, the Second Instalm COLOR OF INK WARDS PRINT ON BILLS No, 1,2 &3 No, 4, 5'& 6 IF ANY INSTALMENT I telephone Tax Office for ADD When remmiting by Green Red the robbers was cut aown in an- alley behind the supérmarket away before the caped GLENDALE The same curly haired ban du who -robbed the Gateway bianch of the Bank of Amer- ica two weeks ago tried it again Wednesday, but this time left empty-handed Teller Susan Leroy at his note. It said 10s and 20s bandit's gun looked It was the same took $520 {rom her J ll fourth es % GOLF * GOLF * GOLF * GOLF * GOLF* be WHITBY GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB (ASHBURN, ONT. ., . PHONE 655-4952 PRO SHOP NOW OPEN © Memberships Availoble @ Inquiries Invited Come Out ard see ovr New Clubhouse. GOLF * GOLF * GOLF * GOLF * GOLFS Cal (AP) CIVIC ADMINISTR 43 She looked me all your jooked at the at chis : face man who March ll. LF * GOLF x GOL 11095 ¥ 3109 ¥ 4109 CITY OF OSHAWA 2nd INSTALMENT OF 1964 REALTY INTERIM TAX DUE pursuant to By-Law No. 433] adopted by Council on January will become due os follows: LAST DAY TO AVOID PENALTY Please refer to your tax notice for:-- WHERE, WHY and HOW TAXES SHOULD BE PAID _ CITY OF OSHAWA TELEPHONE 725-1153 on of The Municipal Act and taxes for 1964 ents of :realty 2nd Instalment April 1st April 6th S PAST DUE -- Please PENALTY AMOUNT to mail to City Hall, PAYABLE On or bef On re + before b AND BOTTLED UNDER GOVERN Rum Compu MONTREAL. CAN 'ood. ATION BUILDING C. t. COX, CITY TAX COLLECTOR

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