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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Sep 1965, p. 3

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i i } i * to use force to make them quit, Biggest Test Of UN Power WASHINGTON (AP) -- The 20-year-old United Nations has faced some tough ones, but never one like this Indian-Pak- istan-Chinese hodge-podge. The Security Council by a 10 to 8 vote demanded that In- dia and Pakistan stop their war by Wednesday. If one of them says no, it isn't clear what the council will do. it might, but this isn't posi- tive, try to compel a ceasefire by using UN force to make In- dia and Pakisian listen. But even if they quit fighting, or even {f the council is willing this is only part of the problem. The 'council doesn't know as of this moment whether China will begin a war of its own Wednesday against India, even if India and Pakistan stop their conflict. The Chinese have given India until Wednesday to dismantle some of its fortifications on China's border or face 'grave consequences." And Peking has followed this ultimatum with a charge that Indians had fired on a Chinese border guard. In turn India's Prime Minister Shastri charged China with fir-| @ ing the first shots across the In- dian border in a campaign to dominate all Asia. But if China attacks India-- whether or not the Indian-Pak- istan war halts -- the Security Council must consider the ques- tion of using force against China. That would mean war. It could mean world war. Ontario CS Pensions In Canada Plan TORONTO (CP)--All Ontario government - operated pension pians are to be integrated with the Canada Pension Plan, Pre- mier John Robarts announced Monday. He said this will raise retire- }ment-benefits for civil rpg teachers and employees of gov- ernment agencies with about the same premium costs. The premier said an agree- ment. will he reached with the federal government to. bring provincial civil servants under the Canada Pension Plan. This means the province will match Ficivil service contributions, starting Jan. 1, 1966. The agreement is needed since the federal government, under the constitution, cannot force the provincial . govern- ment to make any payments for provincial civil servants. Mr. Robarts said legislative amendments will be made to the public service superannua- tion plan, the teachers' super- ; sal is SIKKIM For, while Russia--joined in demanding an Indian - Pakistan ceasefire, it doesn't follow Rus-| sia would vote with the' big Western powers to use force) against neighbor. The UN Security Council in) 1950--but only because Russia} was sulking and didn't attend the meeting--voted to use troops from UN member nations to stop North Korea's attack on South Korea. But this time, if the council had to consider the question of force against China, it's a cinch that Russia wouldn't be absent, even though the Chinese have treated the Russians with con- tempt in an ever-widening split. | But this, too, is only part of the problem. Pakistan stop fighting and pull back their troops to where they, George Mercieca, of Simcoe/husband's pleaded not guilty to althe house. She heard him shout- get his son away. charge of wilful also denied a further charge of} The next thing she heard was her husband banging at the rear He was fined $10 and costs|door. He had no luck there and ful dam-jc were before the conflict began} "steps could be taken to assist toward a settlement of the po-| litical problems underlying the trouble." | This might be a hint the coun-/and 15 days on { eil would try to satisfy the de-|age charge and put on a bond/the door down. its big Communist The 163,000 people who scratch out a living in tiny Sikkim, like this roadside vendor and his wife in the capital city of Gangtok, ge PEOPLE -CAUGHT BETWEEN GIANTS are -canght-in the middie.of a Red Chinese sqheeze Play that threatens to explo into another bokder--war with India. A mere 70 miles BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Husband-Busts In Door Trying To See His Son An Oshawa man broke the door of. a house to get his 11- year-old son away from his. es- tranged wife, Magistrate Harry|she said, The council said if India and Jermyn was told in Magistrate's when she heard a banging at the'age figure at over $50. Court here yesterday, st. &., damage. He threatening behavior. mands that Pakistan has been|for $200 on the threatening be- making more than 15 years: /havior charge, That the people of. disputed whether they want to be part of India or Pakistan. Oh, If Only Mr. Sevigny Had Known MONTREAL (CP) ~ Sevigny, former associate fence minister, said Monday he would have delayed publication of his book on his political ex periences if he had known Prime Minister Pearson planned to call a federal elec- tion Nov. 8. He said the book's publication time--scheduled for October-- was planned by the publishers prior to the election announce- ment. It will be run off the presses in English and French. Mr. Sevigny's resignation from the then prime minister Diefenbaker's cabinet was over the nuclear arms issue and this matter is dealt with in the book, which covers his experiences from 1956. to 1963. There have been reports that the work, published at election time, would cause the conserv- ative party embarrassment but Mr. Sevigny said last week that he attacks no one in his vol- ume for the purpose of "delib- erately destroying reputations." He said Monday no one in the conservative party has pressed him about the work and that it was not affected his own political planning. WON'T WHIE-TWASH "The book will attack no one but neither has it the purpose of white-washing Mr. Diefen- baker," the former cabinet minister said. He was speaking, to university students in Mont-) Pierre real. Asked about the retirement) from federal politics of Leon Ralcer, once regarded as Mr. Diefenbaker's Quebec lieuten- Mrs. Evelyn Mercieca told the ~ Marcoux Promises Book 'On Socred-Support Affair QUEBEC Marcoux, (CP) -- Dr. Social Credit Guy | day he will publish a book on} the "exact role' of Quebec! Credit MPs." He was referring to six Social away. Joseph Blake, a tenant.in the Kashmir be allowed to vote on\court that she separated from'downstairs part of the house, her husband living at 639 Cubert, st. | On the night of September 4,| she was sleeping door. She got up and saw her) truck parked outside ing to her but did not let him in. ound the front and. broke He got in and took his son! | | independent in the Nov. 8 elec mem-| tions, said the book 'will show that night and asked him to get ber for Quebec-Montmorency in| the people how persons in high|him away from his mother. the last Parliament, said Mon- places have been able to ridi-|She had been beating him, he cule democracy." Darabaner is before the de.|Dusinessman Moise Darabaner|courts on charges of fraud and|threatening Merceica denied the jin "the affair of the six Social! arson Dr, Marcoux said Darabaner "presided in Quebec on _ the! iphone call annuation plan, the pension plans for the Ontario North- land Transportation Commis- sion, Workmen's Compensation Board and the Ontario munici- '/pal employees' retirement sys- ltem, to integrate them with the Canaia Pension Plan. In the case of- the teachers' %\superannuation plan and the |municipal employees' plan, lo- cal school boards and munici- al governments will have to |match the premium contribu- | tions of their employees. plans will be reduced so the added premiums-of-the Canada Pension Plan will not put an extra burden on the contribu- tors. However, pension benefits should increase in most cases for substantially the same pre- miums. No Socreds 'Run In P.Q. MONTREAL (CP)--The So- jcial Credit party will not put said he was not at home when,up any candidates in Quebec Merceica came, When he arriv-|for the forthcoming federal ed back he found both doors/elections, party leader Robert badly damaged. He put the dam- Thompson said Monday night, Four of the five Social Credit Merceica, in the witness box,|members from Quebec who sat said that all he wanted was to|in the last Parliament decided that "survival is still the first the|law of nature," Mr. Thompson 11-| said "They believe that, if they stand in the election on a non- partisan basis, they can return to Ottawa," in---length,__Sikkim's few good roads lead to the stragetic Himilayan passes now being contested by India and China (AP) He claimed that under separation agreement the year-old son should have been in his custody. He went on to say that on the night he had gone to his wife's) home he had received a tele-| The four recently announced from his son. their change to independent His son had said that his mo-| status for the forthcoming elec- ther was beating him and wasj\tion, set for Nov. 8 threatening to put him in a\ A fifth Social Credit member shelter. from Quebec, Jean-Louis Fren- He had been angry. When hejette (Portneuf), said last week go to the home his wife would|he will try for the Liberal nom- not open the door so he broke ination in his constituency it down. Mr. Thompson, addressing a Giving unsworn evidence the suburban service club, said he son, Tony, said that his father's| was sorry that the five had: de- story was correct. cided to leave the party. He He had telephoned his father| still hoped, however, that they jwould return to Parliament. It is clear that, in this election, parties will be much less im- portant than individuals, he said said, On. the further charge of Manufacturing Co., was fined $19 and costs or three days in jail evidence of his brother-in-law, Laley Galas. Galas claimed that Merceica, | Credit MPs who decided to sup-| night of April 11, 1963, when the on two occasions, had threaten- port the Liberal party following|six Social Credit MPs signed"|ed him with personal injury.| Twe Oshawa women were both the 1963 general election. The|their promise of support to the|Merceica admitted that he had/found guilty of shoplifting at the six have since become Credi-! tistes. Dr. Marcoux said in a tele- phone interview that his 50-page book will be published in about! two weeks and that it will con-| Liberals. Asked whether he has|tenced yesterday on his §2nd documents! had a reply to the request, Dr.|conviction of break, enter and in| Marcoux said he does not be-/theft. tain the text of "which have accumulated files since April 1963." Liberal party. Dr. Marcoux has urged the federal government to inquire into Darabaner's role in the MPs' decision to support the lieve the request will be met had words with his brother-in-\Qshawa Shopping Centre. wa but he had never threatened) © yy,< Kaleryna Swonarow, of ares Sherwood ave., pleaded guilty to S i stealing perfume, negligee, @ A 58-year-old man was sen-\qrecs and a pencil set from the \T. Eaton Company. She was fined $100 and costs or 15 days Mrs. Dora Humphreys plead Rudolph Frank, of no fixed ad-| a4 guilty to stealing a $1 ring Dr. Marcoux, who recently) because "the affair strikes the dress, was sentenced to four! trom the Fairweather store. She announced he will run as ani Both Sides Charge 'Stall' In New York NEW YORK (AP) -- Peace,on to keep both sides from be-|tY to a charge of drunk driv- talks in the New. York Times|coming "too firm and frozen." ing and was sentenced to seven! strike Monday were recessed until Wednesday morning after the newspaper and the AFL- of the strikebound Times, ex-|Puntus, of 488 Cromwell ave., ClO American Newspaper Guild accused each other of}termed the slow negotiating im 4 collision with a car on} Stalling. Mediator Theodore Kheel an- nounced the temporary suspen- sion of negotiations. He said a cooling-off period was. decided Gordon Seeks | CDC Directors OTAWT A (CP) -- Finance heart of the Liberal party." Times Talks Earlier, Arthur Ochs Sulz- berger, president and publisher! pressed dismay at what he! pace of the Guild. In reply, Thomas J. Murphy, executive vice-president of the local Guild, claimed it was The Times that was dragging its feet. He said the union only! now was beginning to get data) 'had admitted the break, enter) years in jail at Kingston Peni-/was fined $100 and costs, or 15 tentiary. days At an earlier hearing Frank/---- and theft charge. He broke into} an Oshawa home and stole bread, milk, a pair of gloves and a flashlight. An Oshawa man pleaded guil-| days in jail. Before the court was Walter who admitted that he had been Stevenson rd. n. and that drink! had been the cause. For failing to file sales tax re-! turns for the month of July) Charles G. Norris, of the Crystal to which it was entitled and) which it had asked of The! | Times nine months ago. The Guild went on_ strike against The Times last Thurs-| day in a deadlock over automa- tion and other issues. The Pub- ant, Mr. Sevigny said he dis-| Minister Gordon indicated Mon-|lishers Association of New Yor agreed with the former trans-|day night he has started look-' then closed six other major po port minister's action. jing for candidates to serve as) lies in sympathy. Only the eve- Mr. Balcer, in announcingjdirectors of the government's|ning New York Post has con- his retirement last week, said|proposed Canada Development| tinued to publish. there is no place in the Con-| servative party for a French- Canadian. Said Mr. Sevigny: "On the contry, we must re- cruit people here in Quebec--, men who can express them-) selves vigorously on the Ot- tawa stage." He said later that he has a number of invitations from Con- servative organizers in various) Quebec constituencies to run in| their districts but he has not yet decided whether he will be a candidate in the Nov. 8 elec- tions. He was defeated in Lon- gveuil, Que., in 1963. ' Corp., which would raise Individuals er Groups tor St. John Ambulance Junior and Senior First Aid and Home Nursing Courses Phone 668-4666 Evenings 725-4197 Mrs. Evelyn Cassel has re cently joined the friendly and courteous staff of Guide Realty Ltd She is fully licensed and has ] successfully completed all required by the Osh- awa and District Real courses Estate Board, which, quolifies her to $1,000,000,000 for industrial in- vestment. Speaking to a meeting of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries, the finance minister repeated the outline of the CDC that he unveiled in his April 26 budget speech. ' He added two additional de- tails. First, CDC shares may be offered to the public at! either $5 or $10 each. (The! budget speech mentioned only| $5.) Second, individual buyers would be expected to buy minimum amount, probably $190 worth a CHAMPI DEVELO port owners end charter mem Ready to start. Replies will be GOLF COURSE Require 60 eppliconts with $10,000.00 te invest and become WRITE: GOLF COURSE e/e POST OFFICE, BOX 706, OSHAWA render and in all professional con- ONSHIP scientious service Reol Estate Oshawa's most quoted Real Estate Office Call her at GUIDE REALTY LTD. 723-5281 matters in PMENT bers. Land already purchased, notified of first meeting. Contributions to the existing | THES. Tete 'SOMETHING'S COOKING IN CUBA' -- EXILES WASHINGTON (AP) -- Many Cuban exiles who once dreamed' of toppling Fidel Castro by in- vading their homeland now say it is Castro's own military that will. turn on-and destroy him. There seems to be a new feel- ing of hope among Cuban exiles in .Washington, Miami, New York and elsewhere. "Algo se esta cocinando en Cuba," they say--Something is cooking in Cuba. Castro was hailed as a con- quering hero when his revolu- tion swept him into power in January, 1959, but now grum- bling is audible at times when he makes his three - hour Speeches. : The bearded Communist men- tions with increasing frequency and bitterness the problem of guerrillas inside Cuba. And he insists they have been stamped out. Another problem to which he refers obliquely at times is that Imprisonment, firing - squad executions and other measures) aimed at stamping out dis- senters are producing addi- tional defections throughout all elements of the population. --Grumbling against rationing, shortages and repressive meas- ures is widespread, One report says that when Castro told people in the vicinity of Nue- vitas, a key port city on Cuba's north coast, that they were better off than ever before, the crowd chorused -denials so ve- hemently they drowned out the loudspeakers. The next day army men moved into the town, confiscated dozens of businesses, dragged off dozens of prisoners. : Despite Castro's claims, it is prudent to assume he has not eliminated all anti-government guerrilla groups. These are not large in numbers, their activi- ties are restricted by fear of repressive measures, but they operate all over Cuba except of the loyalty of his army and militia forces. Experts here say disaffection has increased enor-| perhaps in Havana itself. 'Army Will Turn On, Destroy Castro' on Cuba, but no permission for exiles to from. U.S. soil. Exiles say guerrilla forces are operating now in at least seven| areas of Cuba and that the ¥ launch their rajds Castro government knows they are there, Castro, an unruly figure in the Communist world, is caught up in the struggle between Moscow --which props up Cuba's secur- ity, economy and military might at an estimated cost of $1,000,000 a day--and Peking, whose more belligerent ideology Castro prefers, be There have been increasing, signs that Nikita Khrushchev's. successors in the Kremlin, with 'problems of their own, are im- patient with Castro. So far, there have been no signs of co-ordination in 4nti- Castro guerrilla activities, in strategic sabotage or in plans for any general uprising against the Havana regime. U.S. policy, meanwhile, re- mains the same: Economic, moral and diplomatic pressure) PANITI 1) PAULIIUE OLD WORLD TF LONDON CREAM LONDON © ONTARIO Canape NEW WORLD PERFECTION mously within these forces in| recent months with the spread of disconten: among Cubans a their plight under Communist masters. } | Castro still controls Cuba His military forces and sophis-| jticated weapons, are the most} |powerful in all Latin America.) |The great hope of the exiles is} that this power will be turned! jon the Castro government, Some exiles insist there have, been at least three attempts in} recent months to assassinate) the Cuban premier. U.S. offi-| teials say-they--have nothing to 'eonfirm such reports. 1 | Exiles and U.S. officials often) have disagreed about some as-| pects of the situation inside| Cuba. Cuban refugees concede they may be influenced at times \by wishful thinking, but say U.S. jintelligence in Cuba has been) deficient at times--as in the) jmissile crisis of 1962. | But there are a number of DOWN TO SEA IN MATRIMONY DETROIT (AP) '-- Fish- ing guide Henry Bradley embarked on the sea of matrimony Sunday on a charter boat. The veteran Lake St. Clair boatman was married aboard the craft while horns and sirens of sur- rounding boats replaced the Wedding March. Bradley and Miss Rol- latde Gouin of Belle River, Ont., were wed by St. Clair Shores. Judge Herman L, Brys Bradley, 42, said he de- cided to marry on. the lake 'because I'm on it all the time anyway." He said he and his bride planned to spend their honeymoon fish- ing. 4% 1 Year to 4 Year Guaranteed Investment Certificates, 5 year to 10 year 4% G.1.C.'s -- 534% SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Interest calculated and paid quarterly things on which U.S, experts and the Cuban exiles agree: | ---Cuba's economy and interna-| tional finance is in chaos. --Castro's theory that below- cost prices for Cuba's bumper sugar crop will be offset by) profits in other production is) nonsense. ~The Cuban army and peo-) ple's militia is heavily infil-| trated by anti-Castro forces.) There have been numerous purges and arrests of military men and weapons have been taken away from various units. Hatred for the Communist regime is spreading among the SERVICE CALL... DIXON'S FOR OIL FURNACES FUEL OIL AND HEATING SERVICE SERVING THE PUBLIC OVER 50 YEARS 313 ALBERT ST. 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