¥; JAPAN'S NEW PRIME MINISTER Social Security Meaures Oy pci gs pepe RO Py aprayes STL NR EE LER IR New Japanese PM 'Rudderless Says Dief By ED WALTERS HALIFAX (CP) -- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Satur- day the "rudderless" Liberal government of Prime Minister Pearson was accusing the Pro- gressive Conservative party of obstruction in an effort to cover up its own failures. Mr. Diefenbaker, speaking to more than 1,000 delegates of the Nova Scotia Progressive Con- servative Association's annual meeting here from Ottawa via closed circuit television and tel- ephone, said charges of obstruc- tion by the Liberals seem to House was a "very difficult Parliament because. the govern- ment doesn't know where it is going,"' he said. ur. Diefenbaker said import- ant legislation has been de- layed by the flag debate. The Opposition keeps asking the government to proceed with the important legislation, including the proposed pension plan and the redistribution bills, and the Liberals continue to call the re- quests "obstruction," he said. Mr. Diefenbaker said it now was being proved that Hal Banks, deposed head of the Sea- indicate they are laying the foundation for calling an elec-; tion. He said criticism of the gov- ernment was beginning to be felt and the Liberals were re- sorting to personal attacks against him. He said this was an indication that the govern- ment was realizing its failures. Mr. Diefenbaker, replying to ",|questions by phone from the floor as relayed by George Now- lan, Commons member for Digby-Annapolis-Kings and for- mer finance minister, said the general feeling across Canada was that the government was inept, | |SCORE IS HIGH : | "Our score is high across the country' because the people be- lieve that the government has too many people calling the sig- nals, including the New Demo- cratic Party, the Social Credit- ers and the Creditistes, he said. The current session of the farers' International Union, had been pampered by the Liberals. TRIED DEPORTATION He said his government had tried to deport Banks but was unable to do so because the for- mer Liberal government had given him larided immigrant status. Mr. Nowlan told the meeting there was "'no question of lead- ership being at stake in the Pro- gressive Conservative party." He said Mr. Diefenbaker Shag orgy. the Commons in a at no other Opposition leader has ever done." The party may have made mistakes in details and some may have criticized his tactics but "I have never known Mr. Diefenbaker to be wrong on fundamental mat- ters of principle," he said. Earlier in the day Dalton Camp, national president of the association, said the party's first task was to get rid of the government. Will 'Prime' WK. Voters |Ashes Of Jews LONDON (Reuters) --Britain faces the prospect of another general election by late spring or early summer next year, po- litical sources said Sunday. The sources said there are two main reasons for expecting a fresh contest then. First, general belief that La- bor Prime Minister Harold Wil- son wishes as soon as possible to get a much more solid man- date from the nation to carry out his full socialist program. Secondly, the sheer physical difficulty of keeping in opera- tion an administration backed by the shoestring over-all ma- jority of only five House of Commons votes. The Labor party ended the 13 years of Conservative rule in the Oct. 15 election when it won 317 seats in the 630-seat house. The Conservatives won 304 seats industry, a new and bitter par- speaker, a Conservative, does Inot vote except in the event of a tie. The sources said the govern- : ment, even with this tiny mar-| TORONTO (CP) -- Human gin over its rivals, can doubt-jashes, symbolic of the more less maintain its authority ovér|than 2,000,000 Jews who died in Parliament for the present by|the two major death camps in pushing through its priority|Poland, will arrive here today plans to cure the nation's eco-| The ashes, in two metal boxes nomic ills. each about 7 inches long, were And on its early moves to in-|taken from the furnace pits of crease pensions and other bene-|Majdanek and Belzec death fits under the social security|camps by Mendel Milstein of system and to end charges un-|Toronto. ae der the technically "free" na-| When Mr. Milstein returns tional health service the gov-jhere by train today, he will emment need fear no serious|turn the ashes over to a com- opposition threat. mittee that will plan a special rial service and burial, to But when--probably next Feb-|™°m0 , puary or Mar i it plunges into -- in a week or 10 the socialist "dynamite" of its) 'Tne ashes are being brought program, headed by legislation/nere pecause about 250 Jews to nationalize the iron and steel! who were interned gt the death camps, and escaped or were lib- and the Liberal party nine. The nn tary phase will begin. erated by Allied forces live in New Brunswick Elections By THE CANADIAN PRESS servative, and businessman Henry Landry of tions will be faced with some|Democratic Party. Voters in two federal byelec- familiar names when they enter ballot booths today. i The elections are being held in Westmoreland, where the death of Liberal Sherwood Ride- out caused a vacancy in that New Brunswick riding, and in Waterloo South. The Ontario rid- ing was left without a member due to the death of Progres- sive Conservative Gordon Chap- loo South is businessman M. S. the Toronto area. Almost every one of them saw relatives and friends led to the gas Ss and incinerators. REMAINED ON PITS The ashes have remained in Expected Today | While there he conceived the jidea of- bringing back some ashes of victims of the camps and convinced the Polish gov- ernment to give him permis- sion. The ashes will be transferred from the metal boxes to a cas- ket. After a memorial service, they will be buried in the Lub- liner plot of a cemetery here. Guelph To Study Trimester Plan GUELPH (CP)--The Univer- sity of Guelph is considering the first Ontario university to offer courses on a trimester or year-round basis. J. D. MacLachlan,. president of the university, said in an in- terview a final decision will be eeting made at a Dec. 8°m of the university senate. He added that if the program is adopted the furnace pits at the camp since the end of the war, un- touched and guarded by the Pol-| ish government. The camps} have been turned into atrocity |museums by the government. Mr. Milstein was 'sent to Po-| Hand by the Lubiner Society, (Max) Saltsman, 43, comprised of Jews who lived in| Lubin province and -were in-| SOCREDS STAY OUT jterned in the camps. He was to fourth in both ritings 'in 'heltve Woperiy in' Poland. oened n ing prope in Poland owne' 1963 general election, is not con-|pyr B dln whe fled from Nazi testing either byelection. persecution during the war. Today the New The NDP candidate in Water- to 7 p.m. In. a statement issued in rd-| the arts and science programs. | Guelph's other three colleges |i |--Macdonald Institute, the On- ta rio Agricultural College, and the Ontario Veterinary College --would probably offer the tra- ditional program. Dr. MacLachlan said the "aca-| jdemic advantage for students} land faculty members, not 'fi- nancial savings, must be the _--- |basis on which university de- cisions are made. | Says PM it will go into effect in 1965.|Prime Minister The trimester system would|Sunday India will not enter into llikely be introduced at the uni-|competition with other coun- versity's Wellington College in|tries in making atomic bombs. lin. Both are three-way fights.|Moncton Saturday, Mr. Murphy The Liberal candidate in West-|said a Conservative win would morland is Margaret Rideout,|"indicate to the do-nothing gov- widow of the former member, while James Chaplin, 31, is con- testing his father's former seat. The Liberal candidate in Waterloo South is. Roderick Stewart, 30, who ran in the 1963 election as.a New Demo- crat and switched parties prior to his nomination for this con- test. Other candidates in West- moreland are lawyer J. Ed- ward Murphy, Progressive Con- ernment in Ottawa that West- moreland is not satisfied with indecision and delay, -revision and retreat." His counterpart in Waterloo South, Mr, Chaplin, says Cana- dians are frustrated by the lack} of decision by the Liberal gOvr| ernment. Mr. Saltsman says voters are frustrated with both major parties and his party will bene- fit. WEATHER FORECAST Continuing Sunny, Mild, With Early Morning Fog 'TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Wanm weather is forecast to continue over the province today. However, a weak disturbance approaching Lake Superior is expected to move through central Ontario Tuesday with associated cloud cover and a few showers. This will lower temperatures in the central and northern regions Tuesday. Only slightly lower temperatures are forecast in southern localities. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- tario regions, Windsor London, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly sunny and mild except for early morning fog patches. Tuesday mostly cloudy and a little cooler. Winds light becoming southerly 15 Tuesday. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Killaloe, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly sunny and mild except for morning fog. Tuesday mostly cloudy with chance of| showers and a little cooler. Winds light. Algoma, White River regions: Increasing cloudiness and mild. Cloudy with a few showers to- night. Tuesday variable cloudi- ness and cooler. Winds light be- coming northerly 15 Tuesday. | } Sunny and mild clouding over by evening. Cloudy with chance of a few showers late tonight and Tuesday morning followed by partial clearing Tuesday afternoon. Winds light becom- ing northeasterly 10 to 15 Tues-| day. Western James Bay region: Variable cloudiness and cool with 'occasional snowflurries near the shoreline of Hudson Bay. Tuesday sunny with cloudy periods. Little change in tem- eae Winds westerly 10 to Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Tuesday: Windsor 4 5 St. Thomas.. London \the Montreal local. of the un- Timagami, Cochrane regions: 8 Polls are open from 8 a.m. Dockers Thieves Steal Down Hooks Hallowed Tome NEW YORK (AP) -- Two MONTREAL (CP) -- The In-|masked bandits smashed open ternational Longshoremen's As-|an armory display case Sunday sociation (CLC) announced to-jand fled with the bejewelled day that all loading activity|covers of a book hallowing the as stopped in the ports ofjnames of 1,000 American sol- Montreal, Trois - Rivieres andjdiers who died on the. battle- Quebec as a 24-hour protest|grounds of four wars. strike went into effect The loss was estimated at Adrien Lemoine, secretary of} $75,000 by Col. John J. Bellew, commanding officer of the 7th Regiment Armory. It was Manhattan's second big theft in nine days. The first netted more than $300,000 in precious stones from the Mu- 7 *jseum of Natural History, Three was the demand by the II.A for n have been charged with establishment of a retirement ithat crime but. the is aieaeee following an ear- ia ec a foot Gas, not ier work stoppage. ' ' The maiko which began at Taken in Suiiday's robbery a.m, EST today, was the third| Were the jewel-embedded cov- in a little more than a year in|¢tS Of the regiment's remam- 7 |brance book and a 24-inch gold the St, Lawrence ports. Whether the fongshoremen| Page-marker studded with jade. The book contains the names would return to work Tuesday| morning after the 94-hour pro-|of the regiment's' battle dead test period remained in doubt. |from the civil. war, Spanish- "We will see," said Gerard)American war and the two Tremblay, vice-president of the| world wars. ion, said he and other officials of the ILA were leaving for Ot- tawa to meet with Labor Min-| ister MacEachen, At issue in the action of the 3,500 Quebec waterside workers Two white leghorn roosters mix it up in early morning - DUEL AT SUNRISE 1h hours in a vacant lot on near- north side of Chicago. Noise DONATIONS 'IRRELEVANT Norris Says Justice T. G. Norris says at- tempts were made during his maritime inquiry to prove that the Seafarers' International Un- ion gave campaign funds to members of the Liberal party. But the government ap- pointed commissioner said Sat- urday he ruled them -- along with similar claims about the Canadian Labor Congress--irre- levant. The claims by the independ- ent SIU were an attempt to take the inquiry into SIU af- fairs off its course, said Mr. Justice Norris. No A-Bombs For India GUNTER, India (Reuters)-- Shastri said Liberal Payola Was Investigated VANCOUVER (CP) -- Mr.| "TI said that. I wasn't born yesterday. And I eaid that everybody knew that campaign funds were the order of the day in connection with elections." Hal Banks, then chief of the union, had tried to bring in evi- dence that the New Democratic Party was supported directly with money from the CLC, of which the rival Canadian Mar- itime Union was a member, said Mr. Justice Norris. "Banks was trying to divert that inquiry off its trus course in many ways. He wanted to evade me; to get me to take contempt of court proceedings. There were charges about com- munism, too. Everyone was supposed to be a Communist." Mr. Justice Norris was com- menting in an interview on a story in the 'Toronto Star say- ing the SIU gave campaign funds to the Liberal party. LAST APPEARANCE D, P. J, Kelly made his last appearance Friday as a trial judge on the Ontario Supreme Court. He is retiring after a 22- Shastri, who said he was mak- ng the statement after having given careful thought to the im- plications of China's first nu- clear test, added that not only is India wedded to a policy of non-alignment and peaceful co- existence, but making bombs is a tremendous economic burden which the country could not un- dertake. He took part in a discussion at a session of the ail-India committee (the ruling Congress party's parliament) which passed unanimously a resolu- tion expressing support for the government's policy of using atomic energy exclusively for peaceful purposes. An amendment calling on the government to reserve the right to make nuclear weapons was withdrawn. "India will pursue its policy of non-alignment,"' said Shastri. "We will try to eliminate the threat and terror of nuclear weapons rather than enter into competition with other coun- tries to make or produce atom bombs here." year judicial career at the man- datory retirement age of 75. of the amateur cockfight brought four police squad cars who, after considerable man- euvering, captured the com- batants and turned them over to the Anti-Cruelty Society. --AP Wirephoto TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's new premier, Eisaku Sato, com- pleted formation of -his cabinet tonight. Official sources said he retained ail the ministers in the government of his predecessor, ailing Hayato Ikeda. The new government also is expected to carry on Ikeda's age pro-Western foreign pol- Sato, 63, and an economics expert, formed his cabinet a few hours after Parliament elected him to succeed Ikeda. After four years in office, Ikeda resigned because of a throat tu- mor, But he and Sato are mem- bers of the ruling Liberal Dem- ocratic party. In the voting in the lower house of the Diet (parliament) Sato received 283 votes, Social- ist Jotaro Kawakami got 137, Suehiro Nishio of the Democra- tic-Socialists got 23, and Sanzo Nosaka, a Communist, got four. GIVEN MAJORITY The 250-member upper house, voting simultaneously, gave Sato 146 votes, a majority. Picks Cabinet Sato's election was assured earlier today when the Liberal Democrats nominated him for the post after a ed struggle within the party. State Minister Ichiro Kono,.and for- mer foreign minister Aiichiro Rujiyama also were contenders. Ikeda, who announced his re- tirement Oct. 25, settled the con- test with a note from his hospi- tal bed recommending Sato. Sato takes office at a time when, following Red China's atomic blast, pressures are mounting for a new look at re- lations with Peking. 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