Sunny and increasingly warmer Friday; Chance of Thunder- storms, oll Be OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1964 Oshawa Cimes Authorized a8 Second Ottawa and for payment Clete Mall Pest, Office Osportment A wife with old fashioned horse sense never becomes a hag. : of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-TWO PAGES GOLDWA TER SWAMPS - MODERATES SCRANTON Europes Papers See Catastrophe LONDON (AP)--The nomina- tion of Senator Barry Gold- water aroused editorial appre- hension in Britain and most of Europe today. Government officials re-| frained from public comment, but newspapers in general de- . scribed the choice of the Ari- :/ onan as. a_ victory for the forces of reaction and a threat to world peace. Bitterest of all, predictably, |was the Communist press. | Pravda, the organ of the So- viet Communist part y, said Goldwater was running on the "most reactionary, bellicose and adventurist pre - election platform in American history." The Moscow newspaper So- vetskaya Rossiya declared that Goldwater was backed by a co- alition "consisting of the most aggressive capitalist groups, |racists, trade union opponents, crusaders of anti - communism }and Ku Klux Klanners." DEMONSTRATOR GETS CARRIED AWAY Liberal Hopeful Urges Cut U.S. Union Control KITCHENER, Ont. (CP)--An-|been reached on three separate} Mr. McCormack said his re- drew Thompson, a candidatejoccasions between the bargain-|action to Mr, Thompson's state- for the leadership of the On-|ing representatives of the Tor-|ment "'is that it is a pack of tario Liberal party, Wednesday|onto Typographical Union and|lies." have ruled' in the Republican party since 1940 were trampled down under hooves this morn- ing." Said Oslo's liberal Dagbla- det: "Those who once made up the 'Eisenhower wing' within the Republican party have suf- fered a catastrophic defeat, which also will turn: out to be a catastrophe for the party it- self. With Goldwater as its po- litical general it will meet its Waterloo in November."' Cassandra, columnist of Brit- ain's 5,000,000-circulation pro- Labor Daily Mirror wrote from the Cow Palace: : "The corpse of much that is decent and wise and tolerant in American society is in the cof- fin, although the lid has not yet been finally screwed down. "Goldwater has won because he appeals to the frustrations of millions of Americans who are dissatisfied with the apparent ingratitude of foreign nations, who are sick and afraid of MRS. GOLDWATE R'S VICTORY CRY evening called for a special sse-|the publishers during the last sion of the Ontario legislature/22 months, only to be vetoed by to amend the Ontario Labor Re-}an American hierarchy com- Jations Act to reduce United |fortably esconced in Colorado States control of Canadian un-| ions, sion these Colorado bosses are Mr. Thompson used the cur-/making suckers of us in Can- rent strife between the three|@da." Toronto daily newspapers and)WANTS ACTION = nos tien ao Bacon aed He said the Ontario govern- cal Union rai . pelt. aon ing of the Kitch. ment must take action to make , ener ~ Association. He was one of several leadership | aspirants to speak. provide for us being masters of! In Toronto, Robert McCor-| our own house, whether with re-| mack, president of the Toronto|gard to foreign management or| Typographical Union, angrily|foreign labor, then Premier Ro- denied the charge of imterna-|barts should call a special ses- tional control of the Toronto lo-|sion of the legislature to amend) cal and said that if Mr. Thomp-|our Labor Relations Act." | | 1 sure this sort of dispute is re-| solved locally. "If our legislation does not | son is looking for trade union| "By this I mean that once de- support for himself or his party|cisions have been made be- he is going about it the wrong|tween Ontario management and) way. |\labor, no foreign power should) Mr. Thompson said: "For the|be able to charge them. We} people of Ontario, one funda-|must ensure Canadian disputes! mental question is the unneces-jare settled by Canadians." sary interference of American) Ye said that through the |members of the international executive, | He said the union was given the name international in 1869 There were hard words for is ho, at , the Republican standard bearer Ponca adn Hegde gz. dislike the political and eco- lto accommodate the entry of| |Canadian affiliates and local/ Springs. One gets the impres-|members have expressed sup-|\CALLS 'CATASTROPHE' |Port of the international through choice and by democratic pro- cedures, He said both Cana- dians and U.S. citizens are | 'Iethink Mr. Thompson should be a lot more careful in what he says and that he should check out his facts before he Starts spreading such non- sense," Mr. McCormack said. Copenhagen ladet asserted: the battle in the Cow Palace. The progressive forces that from anti-communist journals of Western Europe as well. nomic emergence of the Ne- | groes."' APPEALS TO 'SINISTER' The Daily Sketch took a sim- ilar line: "He has a powerful appeal to two of the most sinister--but sincere -- emotions of some American voters. "Frustration -- for 19 years Americd has been the most powerful country in the world. Yet she cannot 'use her vast thermonuclear might to mop up Stockholm's liberal Expres- sen, the biggest daily in Scan- dinavia, described the nomina- tion as "'a catastrophe for the Republicans, a threat against the United States, a danger to the world." GENEVA (AP) --The Soviet Union proposed today that the United States ang Russia agree in principle to the phased de- struction of all their bombers as a step toward world disarm- ament, Soviet negotiator Semyon K, Tsarapkin told the 17-nation dis- armament talks that once the United States agrees to the 's liberal Ekstrab- "The blackest reaction won COMMONWEALTH the' Viet Cong rebels around Saigon. "Color prejudice -- to white principle of destruction of all bombers, the Soviet govern- ment is ready to discuss such deatils as the types of aircraft, VIRILE Rhodesia Issue Result 'Compromise' - Pearson | By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Americans who fear racial equality he is a man who would jstand up to the Negroes." The Conservative Daily .Mail _|said Goldwater's win at San |Francisco could affect the Brit- the phases, the over-all time limit and international verifica- tion procedures. The Soviet proposal slightly modified an earlier Soviet call Soviets Push Closer To Bomber Bontire for a "bomber bonfire' in which all bomber aircraft cap- able of carrying nuclear weap- ons would be destroyed imme- diately. Tsarapkin's new plan would allow the bonfire to be spaced out over a period to be negotiated by the United States and the Soviet Unidn. HAVE REFUSED But Tsarapkin maintained his demand that the United States subscribe to the principle of to- tal destruction of all bombers before negotiations be gin on questions ,.of detail. The Western delegations have refused con- sistently to commit themselves in advance to unspecified pro- pédsals. First-Vote Picks LBJ's Opponent By HAROLD MORRISON SAN FRANCISCO (€P)--Sen- ator Barry Goldwater, the grandson of a pediar, captured the presidential nomination Wednesday night with ease on the first ballot and promised to carry "the con- servative cause' to the Amer- ican voters in the November general election. It was a crushing defeat for th liberal and moderate wing of the Republican party--the "party of Lincoln" -- and charted its future path on the course of hard conservatism. Twenty - three minutes after the roll call of the 50 states be- gan, Goldwater became the nominee when South Carolina cast its 16 ballots to put him over the 655 total needed to nominate. By a motion of Pennsylvania Governor William W. Scranton, his leading opponent, the nom- ination was made officially unanimous. Victory for the 55 - year - old overcrowded Cow Palace, showed the overwhelming man- ner in which the Arizona sen- ator had made his views pop- ular with the 1,308 delegates. The count showed, Goldwater 883 and Scranton, 213, | At this point a chipper and smiling Scranton appeared dra- matically to walk the long length of the platform to the rostrum where he moved to make . Goldwater's nomination unanimous, The hall: burst at the seams with the thander of approval, Scranton, his face-solemn for the moment, told the delegates that the time had come when "an honorable man can say that the sense of this great con- vention has become abundantly clear." His view had not pre- vailed, he conceded. "The Republican party . . must now emphasize its unity, not its differences," Scranton said. "We must now be about the business of defeating Demo- crats. I shall work for and fully Arizona senator, who once la- mented there was no major place for 'conservatives in his party, came amid all the tradi- tional hoopla, deafening uproar and sheer. pandemonium that accompanies an American pres- idential convention, PICKS RUNNING MATE In the midst of the confusion, Senator Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky, the convention chair- man, told a reporter that he had ec " liam E. Miller of New York, the Republican national chairman, had offered him the vice-pres- idential nomination, and that Miller had accepted. But Goldwater and Miller both appeared on television later to say that it wasn't as buttoned up as Morton had said it was. Goldwater said he hadn't honed Miller to ask him to ac- ish general election .campaign this fall and subject the oppo- |sition Labor party leader, Har-| é e 5 On Southern Rhodesia, the Lifer To union bosses in our affairs.|yvears -he had good relations LONDON (CP)--Black Africa|rock on which som Whether it is interference from| with many of Ontario's labor/leaders headed for an African |Commonwealth might toanian foreign management or foreign)leaders and had the highest re-|"summit"' meeting in Cairo to-|the conference formulated . a unions is not the point. These|gard for their ability. "There|day and, says Prime Minister communique statement th at problems should be solved byjis no possible reason for their|Pearson, they carried' some-|achievement of compromise and Canadians. decisions to be vetoed by out-|thing worth while from the| concession." "We are told agreement has' siders." wealth conference. | DECLARE EQUALIT Y The feeliffg in this venerable| It was significant that the |hub of the Commonwealth is| mammoth 6,000-word communi- |that nothing has happened be-|que plunged straight into racial old Wilson, to "'an acute tac-| tical dilemma over his party's| defence policy.' "The question now is: Can| Britain risk handing over her} deterrent power to Senator Goldwater if he becomes pres-| jident? "More than ever, Conserva-| tives. will argue the necessity| Freedom, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)--Dr. Samuel Sheppard, convicted of slaying his wife in one of the most sensational American Medicare Heads Meeting Agenda By KEN KELLY |with the Canada Pension Plan OTTAWA (CP)--Federal and|before tackling such a sizable provincial health ministers will|problem as medical care. begin detailed study next week) However of the future of hospital insu-| indicated that they have a list rance and other joint health pro-|of priorities on the medical grams and initiate discussion on| a r¢ recommendations the Hall royal commission rec- : ommendations for a compre-| pp: pic, Ati hensive medical care program Priorities of the provinces. for Canada. Federal Health Minister Judy LaMarsh has asked provincial fore like the 13th conference of| Commonwealth prime ministers| that closed Wednesday night, | The Commoapwealth "has| prov<d itself virile, interesting, real--and, above all, alive," |says The Daily Mail, | "Nobody has 'triumphed,'" says The Daily Express. | Pearson encompassed both} federal authorities those views when he met re-|Premiers on the other, | porters at 11 p.m. Wednesday jafter a day that began at 10 | | andja.m, and saw perhaps the most| conference hope to compare that with the/ vigorous argument of any Com-|desian independence should be| monwealth meeting. U.K. SEES 'THE UGLY AMERICAN' health ministers to come to the} two-day conference, which} opens Monday, with statements) on their provinces' preliminary views on. the commission rec- ommendations, While the delib- erations will be. held behind closed doors, these medicare statements may be made pub- lic. The medical care question has been placed first on at agenda of the conference, which ,, : was called before the Hall com. Canadian Press Staff Writer mission reported, to follow up) Senator "Barry Goldwater's discussions at the federal-pro-| 24vance to the Republican vincial prime ministers confer-|throne room in the United ences here last fall and at Que-|States has a faraway audience bec in the spring. |frozen in something akin to Apart from medical care, fed-| horror. ee eral authorities expect a major) Bemused Britain watches the discussion on the question ofjdrama_ being played out in'San extending the present hospital|Francisco with the impotent insurance program, in which Ot-|feelings of a remote spectator tava pays half the cost, to cover|who sees a runaway vehicle ap- hospital care of mental and/proaching the cliff-edge and tubercular patients. can't do anything to stop it. The emphasis here seems to) "It has all the inevitability of be on filling in existing health|Greek tragedy," said a student programs, such as hospital in-lof American politics surance, and pressing forward! International affairs usually consist of shades of grey, but in Goldw: Britai d Eu- CITY EMERGENCY pe have tastends os + eats PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 they can view in stark terms of black and white. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 By ALAN HARVEY 'UGLY AMERICAN' For many Britons, he js the |"'Ugly American," a man whose over-simplified approach to for- jeign policy makes him seem the Europeans Horrified 'By Goldwater Tide biggest sick joke of them all,| Despite his quiet-spoken. charm, | he is Seen as representing an| upsurge of raw, raucous politi-| cal primitivism. So strong is the European| view that Robin Day, a careful| commentator, went on BBC tel-| evision the other night and said without qualification that Gold- water represented a victory for "ignorance and extremism." Such opinions, echoed in pubs| and clubs and in street-corner conversations, shows the inter- dependence of the Westérn world. When Uncle Sam sneezes, Europe catches cold, Just as the death of the late President: Kennedy produced a profound reaction in admiring Europeans, so Goldwater has a} reverse effect. Perhaps the! greatest fear is of a 'rampant, | irrational nationalism, stoking) an aggressive foreign policy| that would be worse than isola-| tionism or the "fortress Amer- ica" concept, | murder cases has been or dered released by a court from |Ohio Penitentiary after serving \nearly 10 years of a life term. 7 |But h st f new trial. | U.K. Mailmen | re ig the sctaor. oneal Q . only months away from possi- Stage Strike \ble parole, appears to have an- For A Day jother battle coming up even for jtemporary freedom pending the LONDON (Reuters) -- Mail sorting offices throughout Brit- \{new trial. | U.S. district court Judge Carl ain stopped work completely jtoday as the country's 125,000 A. Weinman in. Dayton ruled Wednesday that the. 40-year-old Sheppard was denied his con- stitutional rights in his 1954 postmen staged a one-day offi-|trial in Cleveland. The trial re- cial strike, the first in 73 years.|sulted in his conviction in the The country's mail services|bludgeon slaying of Marilyn already had been put in a/Sheppard.. Weinman said Shep- chaotic state by a series of wildcat strikes and overtime bans during the last week. Today's strike appeared to be pard's custody is "void'" and if Cuyahoga County or the state takes no action within 60 days almost 100-per-cent effective. Only a handful of men turned up for duty at London's. main the release becomes final. ny Weinman's 86 - page decision sorting office and they could make no impression on the denounced the coverage given mountains of mail which have the case by three Cleveland newspapers and also mentioned piled up over the past few days. Postmen planned demonstra- three well-known radio com- mentators and columnists. The judge, acting on a re- tions today in London and other centres in support of their claim for a 10%4-per-cent wage in- quest for a writ of habeas cor- pus, ordered Sheppard's release crease, The government has of- fered a four-per-cent raise, LATE NEWS FLASHES WILL SEEK STAY John Corrigan, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) prosecutor, Barry Picks Miller As Running Mate SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- U.S. Representative William FE. Miller of New York was named today as Barry Gold- water's choice for vice-president on GOP ticket in the Nov. 3 presidential election. for Britain to rely on her own questions, using word-for-word nuclear deterrent." the declaration of racial equal- ity submitted by Pearson. Debate was longest and hard- est over white-ruled Southern Rhodesia and on this issue Pearson, who took a key role, said substantial concessions were made by Britain on the one hand and by the African The 18 Commonwealth lead- ers expressed the view that a on Southern Rho- (Continued on Page 3) British Press comment, uni- versally critical, sees Goldwat- er's apparently unstoppable march as reflecting a_ signifi- cant switch in American power from the sophisticated eastern seaboard, traditional repository of Republican strength, to the frontier societies of the south and west, One result of Goldwater as- cendancy, it is argued, may be to'force Britain's opposition po- litical parties to reconsider their stands on nuclear defence. If the U.S. can't be trusted, - the! politicians may say, it behooves) Britain to look to its own de-| ences. lwp: ° ; oa further reaction in prit.| Whitby Restaurant Till Emptied ain involves a sharp devalua-) WHITBY (Staff) -- The cash register at the Golden tion in the reputation of former Gate Restaurant on Brock south was reported to have been president Eisenhower. On ce looted overnight. One unofficial source' said that as much as $400 ---the entire day's take -- was stolen. something of a British idol, he) is being portrayed here as an} . old 'man. {ull of fumble and Armed Men Loot Quebec Post Office indecision, who by his '"waf-| SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) -- Three armed men es- caped with a large quantity of mail from the main post- | office after tying up three overnight shift employees. fling" allowed the Goldwater| victory to happen. | Face Trial |who handled the state's case in |the trial 10 years ago, said he will ask for a stay of execution to prevent Sheppard's. release. Ohio Attorney-General William Saxbe said the decision would be appealed. "The state law says no ohe indicted for first-degree mur- der may be admitted to bail," Corrigan said in Cleveland. Sheppard was indicted on a first-degree murder charge but was found guilty Dec. 21, 1954, of murder in the second degree. He was sentenced to life but is eligible for parole this fall. Sheppard always has contended a "bushy haired intruder" killed his wife the night of July 4, 1954. Weinman said Sheppard's constitutional rights were vio- lated by these actions: --Failure of the trial judge to grant a change of venue for a continuance due to the great amount of publicity. --Inability of maintaining im- partial jurors. Failure of trial Judge Ed- ward Blythin, now dead, to disqualify himself although there was uncertainty as to his impartiality. --Improper introduction of lie detector evidence at the trial. -- Unauthorized communica- tions to the jury during de- liberations. RAPS PAPER "If ever there was 'a trial by newspaper, this is a perfect ex- jample,". Weinman said. The |judge said the Cleveland Press "took upon itself the role of ac- |cuser, judge and jury." "Suffice it to say that each of the three Cleveland news- papers repeatedly printed ma- terial which strongly suggested and, in fact; urged petitioner's guilt." The other newspapers were the Cleveland Plain Dealer and the now defunct Cleveland | News. Weinman said Blythin. erred "when he failed to question the jury regarding a broadcast by Robert (Bob) Considine which Weinman wrote 'announced over the radio a comparison between - petitioner and Alger cept second place on the ticket. But. he added that he is "fa- vorably inclined" toward the had heen informed Goldwater é Wil- support the ticket chosen by this convention." Former president Eisenhower commented that Scranton's call for party unity "has vastly in- creased our chances for victory in November." CALLED REBIRTH Michigan Governor Georg® Romney, withdrawing as a "fa- vorite son" candidate, said the delegates were wil rebirth of Americanism in Amoerioa." 8. To soften the bitter attacks they had made on him in the pre-convention campaign, New York Governor Nelson A. Rock- efeller and Scranton hur- ried to Goldwater's headquar- ters to talk with the winner. In Washington, democratic national Chairman John M. Bai- ley issued a statement saying that the Republican party "has been captured by a radical min- ority . . . completely divorced from the heritage and princi- ples of our nation:" In an obvious indication of upstate New York representa- tive. Miller said he thinks that after a meeting of Goldwater with state chairmen today some definitive announcement on the vice-presidential nomination -- which he said he would accept --would be forthcoming. The vice-presidential nominee will the kind of campaign the Dem- ocrats intend to launch against Goldwater, Bailey added: "That radica] minority' has dictated the choice of a candidate whose purpose is to divide rather than unify the country and whose philosophy has been described by his own party members as be formally elected at tonight's closing session. Miller, 33 and a Roman Ca- bring to the ticket a skilled campaigner noted for his rough- and ~ tumble political battling. Goldwater is an Episcopalian (Anglican). a menace to the peace and pro- gress of America." Goldwater told reporters he tholic, would be calculated to|accepted the nomination with humility. He referred to his grandfather, a Polish Jew who had emigrated to California to peddle wares more than 100 years ago. The family had gra- Thursday night's single roll dually built up a department call, pursued to the end in the'store fortune in Arizona End Ernie Pitts of the Win- nipeg Blue Bombers of the Western Football conference holds one corner of his new Hiss," Canadian citizenship papers NEW CANADIAN while his wife holds the other. - The University of Denver graduate received his citizen- ship from Judge George Chap- man, ~--CP Wirephoto