Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 3 Aug 1960, p. 14

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(secretary, Mrs. K, C. Hopkins; | Bowmanville; Miss Frances Bon- wick will conduct study group of WMS Auxiliary. Mrs. K. A. Mellow, Kingston, Mission Circle group; Mrs. Har- oid Giffin, Carleton Place, CGIT 'group; Rev. Catherine McKeen, The first group from some 200] ' signallers and 50 headquarters staff being assembled at Kingston ea ers 1% (o]®) will leave from the RCAF Trans- port Command base at Trenton 14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Yearesser; August 3, -- ; i 'Canadian Given | | Congo Air Task [Esa 1g gohaduled | OTTAWA (CP) -- Group Capt. of the RCAF's best-known pilots. ¢ "RCAF North Star transports Bill Carr, commander of 412 He was at the controls on the poi, go t 5 f " g 3 , $ al ) ying cargo to the Congolese] By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT Theme, "Into All the World : Transport Squadron, Ottawa, has round-the-world flights made by capital of Leopoldville from the] BROOKLIN -- The 27th cae " Gots aud speakers 5 Charles Hadden, Lindsay, been given the job of organizing Prime Minister Diefenbaker in UN supply base at Pisa, Italy, so Whine my 2 Si 8 Tog ar San {and Mis. Ocand Bertrand. Belle: i A es aes that they can assist in the ferry-|o inte Conference Branch WMS idinde: dns. ie ey TY will lead Explorers and I a t tty ol |the Queen and other distinguished "5. of Canadian troops. of United Church of Canada will| Collins, Angola, West Africa: Mission Band; Mrs, George S. | Group Capt. Carr is-in charge "i€¢ oy TE an. The RCAF itself will event Nally To oo Coins, Angola, S| ried; 1M pad Ms of a six-officer RCAF party which Visitors while thoy Were i a1 pave some 100 personnel in the 2 ied § fC QUATD Lac id Rev, E. E. Long, BA, BD, DD, Young, ant ¢ 2 ) Ay 2 2 left Tuesday for He Congo to set la My a native o rand congo, including 50 air an [Cees ny, : jpocretety OX coragrel bl ii HowTo Trolley hop Pr up an operational -headquarte-s. y 4 . d w for the four North = if ithe Unite urch o anada; | 4 vart. 1 2 2 2 Found tre This is a scnool for leaders and|Mrs. B. H. Soper, Smith's Falls,|will be Dr. S. L. Osborne, prin- ; ---- Meanwhile, informants said \.c/ One of his first tasks ai...|Stars now there and at least 22| ir and ground crew for four young women, 16 years and over, President of Bay of Quinte Con-|cipal of the college, RCAF is expected to begin air- arriving in Leopoldville will be|air i h ny ; lifting Canadian troops to the'to make arrangements for the| Caribou transports being obtained |to derive incpiration, leadership ference Branch; Mrs. J. H. Mc-| Registration must be made be- Congo later this week. airlift of Congo-bound Canadian from de Havilland Aircraft Lim-| training, and understanding of kinney, Brooklin, past president|fore August 5 to Mrs. Charles work of WMS. 'of Conference branch; literary Dowdall, Carleton Place, Ont. | At 37 Group Capt. Carr is one troops. ited, Downsview, Ont. | prs a le i LE Tn END OF A GUN BATTLE ~~ | i 5 A i i 7 to Cornelius Ross, 35, convicted | dead in gutter after trying | tin, who fired fatal bullet in dope pusher about to be ques- | shoot it out with police in East exchange of gunfire, holds tioned in murder case, lies | Baltimore apartment develop- | pistol at right. AP Wirephoto BOOK CORNER re Canadian Describ Urgency Of Africa THE BOOK CORNER By THE CANADIAN PRESS As Canada prepares to assist in the United Nations emergency operation in the strife - stricken infant Congo Republic, a Cana- dian's first-hand discerning look at modern Africa makes a timely arrival on the bookstands. Not Tomorrow--Now Ryerson Press) is an account of a recent trip to the Middle East and Af- rica by Rev. A.C. Forrest, edi- tor of the United Church Ob- server, Its stimulating content has the same urgency as the title implies. "Africans, who have waited so long and have travelled so far in these past few years, are reach- ing out for the future they be- lieve God has for them," writes Mr. Forrest. "They don't want to wait. They are on the road, and they say 'Not tomorrow, now.' "' In visiting 22 countries in a few weeks, Mr. Forrest makes no claim to solving today's burning issues of conflicting nationalism, racialism '(black and white), re- ligion. He observes and records, but adds his comments as a Ca- nadian. PROTESTANT VIEW Raised on a farm at Maple, Ont., and an ordained minister of the United Church, Mr. For- rest to some extent imparts the viewpoint of the Protestant Church, but he also writes in the capacity of a journalist. rticles for 11 daily newspapers, includ- ing the ttawa Journal 'and Hamilton Spectator, paid for his trip, and press credentials opened doors for him He attended Par Ghana, met governm in South Africa Burketon ament in officials novelist Alan Paton in Natal, and| hotel porters one year and cab- of Dr, Albert Schweitzer at his Lambarene medical mission in equatorial Africa. But perhaps the most moving and construc- tive chapters are on his visits to a remote Canadian mission in Portuguese Angola and to the Northern Rhodesian copperbelt, where he had direct contact with Africans "This is chiefly a story as it unfolded for me from the lives of ordinary struggling people caught up in the great mid-20th century revolution," he writes "The people 1 saw long for op- portunity for themselves and their children . . They are weary of being poor, tired of be- ing pushed about." | The author divides his book into two sections. The first is a description of what he saw in| Israel, Jordan and Egypt. The| principal criticism of this might be its brevity. Again the most vivid impressions are those of an inet ministers the next, there may be some problems, al- though many African porters and cab-drivers are very intelligent and many new cabinet ministers do a very good job." But Mr. Forrest underlines that the African revolution is in full swing, with Ghana the pace- setter and model of the new era. The mood is one of impatience --for tomorrow now. Minister of Death, the story of Adolph Eichmann, will be published in Canada in September by the Macmil- Jan Company. The book about the former Nazi re- cently kidnapped in Argen- tina by Israeli underground forces and taken back to Is- rael to stand trial for war crimes, is based on material supplied by two Israeli jour- nalists, Ephraim Katz and Zwy Aldouby. Actual writing is by Quentin Reynolds. Israeli kibbutz (co - operative FOOTHILLS HISTORY farm) and the plight of the Arab refugees in Jordan. It IMPATIENT MOOD Alberta Revisted (Ryerson) is he third book by Calgary news- |paper man Ken Liddell, follow- his previous works on Al- ing The longer second part is de- perta and British Columbia. This voted to Africa. He writes dis- yolume records the history of passionately and tries to give a ¢ he foothills province. from its balanced picture of South Af- early days of frontier posts and rica's racial problems, is not un- pioneer settlers by the use of critical in his appraisal of the stories and anecdotes. work of various church missions, and does not gloss the difficul- ties facing newly - independent states. "Wise men, of course, know it is to the African's advantage to secure self government grad- ually as he is prepared for it," he says. "It is so apparent that it scarcely needs comment that WA Plans Meeting BURKETON -- The Burketon WA will meet on Wednesda evening August 10 in the chu hall at 8 p.m. All ladies are most welcome to att Church wor d Sunday School will be c d now un til Sunday, September 4. Mr. and Mrs. L. R family attended a fam at Peterboro on Sunday Mr. and Mrs and family spen weekenc vith relatives in Cornwall. Mr. and Mrs. A Ribey spent the weekend with relatives in Baltimore. y Dean spent Sunday vith relatives in Ajax. Mrs. Beatrice Taylor an ley attended a family of the Stark family Stark homestead, C Mr. and Mrs. Orillia, spent a few Mr. and Mrs. K. G. Re week. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grace and family attended the H picnic at Bowmanville on Sunday 2 Women, Boy Dead In Crash LA PURTE, Ind. (AP)--Twc Canadian women and a young boy were killed Tuesday car and two t busy highway rsection abou 18 miles southwest of here Killed were Mrs. Lina Detor rice, 49, and Mrs. Assanta Orso ini, 35, both of Toronto. Mrs. Orsolini's son, Cesape, ? died two hours later in hospi In satisfactory condition were the husbands, Peter P. Orsolini 40, and Ferdinado Detorrice, 52 nd another Orsolini child, Ada 7. State police said Orsolir ing east on U.S, 30, t the path of an oncoming driven by Philip oom, 31, o Youngstown, Ohio. The car, hi Jue and reunion + 'Marchand _ Mrs. Tom Smith returned home on Friday from Memorial Hos- *h pital, Bowmanville. A large gathering attended the miscellaneous shower at Devitt's Hall on Friday evening for Mr and Mrs. Donald Larmer. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Smith and family are visiting relatives in Smith's Falls Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lowrey and { family are spending a few days with relatives in Trenton. Mr. and Mrs. George Allison and family spent the weekend with rélatives in Barrie Mrs. Celina Lavery, Toronto,' (1, Mrs. Celina Lavery, Toronto, ther Carnochan. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Taylor and family were Sunday guests of Mrs. Beatrice Taylor and Stan- > ley and also called on Cyrus Ashton and Roy. Master Fred Taylor is holi- i dayind in Cookstown with Mr. 1 and Mrs. B. Powers and family | Airman Recovers Price Of His Car OTTAWA (CP)--An RCAF air- man has been paid $464 for the > destruction of his 1954-model car --hauled away from the RCAF Uplands parking lot in April on s orders from. the station com " mandant The car was among some 30 on The story from dinosaurs to modern oil derricks, from blan- kets and beads to remittance men and cowboys, from' the early explorers and missionaries to bush pilots and business mag- nates, is a vivid history. Mr Liddell believes that to be an Al- bertan is a state of mind, not a matter of boundaries. "There is 2 Senators Oppose Troop Use OTTAWA (CP) -- The Senate endorsed Tuesday the dispatch of Canadian troops to the Congo over the objections of two of its members Senator Arthur Roebuck (L-- Ontario) said he would not vote against the resolution, passed animously Monday in the Com- mons, but spoke out against hav- ing Canadian troops enter an in ternal rebellion for any longer than is necessary to restore or der. Senator Jean-Francois Pouliot Quebec), who opposed send- ing Canadian troops 'to Korea in 1950, took the same position with regard to the Congo. He called "on division" when the motioa passed, recording his objection but not forcing a recorded vote. Senator Walter Aseltine, gov. ernment leader in the Senate and sponsor of the resolution, said success of the United Nations ac- tion in the Congo "may lay the |grounds for many other United Nations operations in Africa, especially the peaceful parts of the program' of bringing inde- pendence to African nations. Success "'might establish the United Nations as » strong agent for peace in the world," he added. Failure "might lead to the destruction" of the United Na- tions. Senator W. Ross' Macdonald, opposition 'leader, endorsed the resolution and said UN Secre was the guest of when men are taxi-drivers and no other province quite like the property when an order was tary-General Dag Hammarskjold ssued for the owners either to ha shown 'dynamic and out- license them properly or have standing" leadership airman had not been advised personally of the order because , the car was without registration papers and it was removed to a government dump The damages were paid by the into own in an out-of-court seftle truck nt, it became known today f The ire agreed t 1 was the t purchase price of $499 less $35 broadside, then rammed into a obtained for scrap. The airman pickup truck. was not identified. 1.|them removed from the lot. The "But when I read that little Ireland was sending a force to Africa, I asked myself what is Canada going to do. Little Ire- land sent 650 troons a week ago I almost gave up hope . . . while waiting for our government to make up its mind." Senator Byron® Horner (PC Saskatchewan), of Irish descent himself, quipped 'some may doubt the wisdom of sending any Irishmen to make peace," THE RECOGNIZED ADVERTISING MEDIUM IN OSHAWA AND DISTRICT REASONS THE TIMES ADVERTISING WILL REACH MORE PEOPLE REASONS Why... FACTS Every day 889% of the nation's families get one or more newspapers. Over 16 million people, 12 years of age or older, read at least one news- paper every day. 'The TIMES' Advertising Gives More for Every Advertising Dollar... ADVANTAGES Because of the high readership in Oshowe and district. Your Times newspaper advertises ment can be seen by more people . . . far more than can be hed by other thod: THE TIMES ADVERTISING WANTED BY MORE PEOPLE People want newspaper advertising end have said so. Surveys usually show well over 80% in favor of newspaper advertising. The Times Advertising's first job is to win @ friendly feeling for your product. It stands te reason you will win more friends where ad- vertising is wanted by more people. THE TIMES ADVERTISING READERS "READY-TO-BUY"" The Times readers are attracted to your ad be- cause it interests them-----they are more apt to believe "'ready-to-buy" prospects. Live prospects are easier to sell--they wont te be sold, and ere looking for information to help make a buying decision, THE: TIMES ADVERTISING PROMPTS BUYING ACTION More action results from The Times advertising because of the atmosphere of believability. You've heard people say, "I know it's true, it's in the paper." The printed word has always been accepted as more honest and binding. Newspapers report facts; other media offer en- tertainment. Advertising in en atmosphere of believability is bound to induce more "'want-to- buy action" than thot framed in fiction or en- tertainment. MAKES FOR PIN-POINTED MARKETING FLEXIBILITY " Province or county lines don't define markets-- markets are people. And markets of people can be more perfectly pin-pointed by newspaper ad- vertising than by any other. The Times Advertising can be scheduled exactly for market potential end sales opportunit to bolster weak and protect strong items. A Times , Advertisement permits perfect co-ordination with sales and merchandising effort, THE TIMES ADVERTISING MEANS MORE FLEXIBILITY FOR SELLING COPY NEEDS Availabilities from an inch to a double spread-- or section. You can use a single word or a thou- sand. Words, pictures, illustrations can be dis- played in unparalleled variations-- Wide physical flexibility permits budgeting to fit purse and purpose. An overpowering single shot -- i hedule--y after year pres- tige and soles-building paig you can tail- or The Times Advertisement flexibility to your needs. THE TIMES ADVERTISING MEANS MORE EFFECTIVE RETAIL MERCHANDISING The "Times" is the iler's own ad medi The ck of the newspaper and Local advertisers invest more dollars annually in this newspaper than in all other medio combined. g more local tie-in and merchandising support--no other ad ising begins to Pp with newspaper potential for local market co- operation with nationel advertising. THE TIMES ADVERTISING IS A SAFER INVESTMENT The Times advertising is- always ready to meet the time, place and pl of the no built-in variables present as in other media The Times circulation and reader interest are the most consistent and constant of all. The Times is always selling; every day -- all doy. When you want your advertising to reach the ponsive, sales-producing newspaper eud- ience, you can be sure it will. THE TIMES ADVERTISING WILL BRING MCRE SALES PER ADVERTISING DOLLAR 1 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 Advertising cost combines two t:ic_ --cost of reaching a prospect and cost of making the sale. The best figures available indicate that news- popers can reach prospects at a cost at least as low as that of other media. Review the 9 points above to see why The Times can guarantee more sales action per message delivered--why The Times will give you more for your advertising doller. MORE THAN 16,000 HOMES EVERY DAY

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