Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 24 Apr 1961, p. 2

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HG. . wr np HEBERT TIES VENTURI HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -- Jay Hebert birdied three of the last four holes Sunday to tie Ken Venturi at 276--four under par --and sent the $40,000 Houston Golf Classic into a playoff. The 18 - hole playoff was scheduled !for today. Toronto's Al Balding was the only Canadian fo fin. ish in the money. He was far down the list with a 287, in an 11-way tie for 26th place, and collected $284.17. 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 24, 1961 Oshawa Male Nurses | JFK. Seeks Answers Seek Equal Rights On Invasion Flop TORONTO (CP) -- Equal; Another resolution established rights for male nurses were ap-|a special committee to look af- : proved in principle Saturday atter the social and economic/] WASHINGTON (AP)---Admin- the 35th annual meeting of the/welfare of Ontario's nurses.|istration sources say President Registered Nurses Association The committee will concentrate Kennedy and all his security ad- of Ontario. . -n salaries and working condi-|visers concurred in the Cuban A resolution asks the federal tions. invasion plahi, plan was said to Buvernment 10 Sauk equa) rank The meeting unanimously en-; =. "co tod a year ago in the dorsed recommendations for 1 Intelligence Agenc nurses. Female nurses at pres- Central Intelligence Ag y ent are given officer's rank higher salaries in 1962. An|during the Eisenhower adminis- while male nurses are not eight - per - cent increase to altration. The sources said Presi- given registered nurse status minimum of $3,900 annually|dent Kennedy's administration neal J, 'Gerrow,. chair. Vis recommended as a new|reviewed it and decided to go ; o> basic salary for first - level|ahead. formation Agency; and defence mobilizer Frank Ellis. The general idea was to have a landing by Cuban exiles to support and supply anti-Castro rebels already in the Cuban mountains and, hopefully, to set off such mass defections that Premier Castro himself would topple. TIMING DISPUTED The timing was an issue. tration, until exile forces be- came stronger and Castro's sup- pressions at home made the Cuban populace riper for revolt. Counger arguments prevailed. They were that the morale of the anti-Castro refugees might|s suffer if they were not allowed|§ FOR SALE 2 Small Kri Portraits easonable man of the RNAO's male nurs- ing committee, representing about 125 male nurses in the general staff nurses. A recommended increase in review of the intelligence work on the Cuban affair to find out Kennedy had ordered a broad| Some felt action should be post- poned, as it had been postponed prospective jet fighters woul make him much stronger against outside attack, that PHONE RA 5-6754 during the Eisenhower adminis- Longer Hours For Parliament OTTAWA (CP) -- Parliament will be asked today to agree to work longer hours. province, and Albert Wedgert, past chairman of the RNAO, backed the résolution. Accidental Death Toll Up Sharply | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Accidental deaths rose sharly during the weekend although two provinces reported none and Quebec recorded an unus- ual low for highway deaths. A survey conducted by The Canadian Press revealed a' to- tal of 36 deaths across Canada from 6 p.m. local times Friday to midnight Sunday, Twenty-six were from traffic mishaps, com- pared with 19 last weekend. The clear provinces were Newfound- land and Manitoba. Ontario led traffic fatalities with nine. British Columbia re- ported six, Alberta and Saskat- chewan three each, Nova Sco- tia two and Prince Edward Is- land, New Brunswick and Que- bec one each. There were three deaths re- sulting from fire in Ontario, two in Nova Scotia. Twp persons were drowned in Ontario. In Quebec one person was killed when a trailer slipped off its stand. In Ontario a man was crushed under his car. British Columbia reported one miscel- laneous death. | These figures discount nat-| ural deaths, known suicides or industrial accidents. The Ontario dead: Edward Britton, 47, of Tor-| onto crushed Saturday when a; block under his car slipped; Bernard Alvin Laveque, 25 of Harrowsmith and Howard Doug- las Storring, 29, Sydenham, the private duty nurse fee would add $1 to the present $16 {fee for eight - hour duty. Guatemala had ordered prepa- rations for an invasion from there stopped, and that / the strike would be undertaken be- fore heavy rains set in in May. shock to high Washington offi-| cials and showed up serious faults in "the intelligence esti- mates on which the go-ahead de- cision had been based. Castro, even without MiG jets, was far stronger than had been supposed. The hoped-for defections failed to take place. About 1,200 men, were said to have engaged in the abortive landing on the Cuban coast south=ast of Havana. They were never 'able to get a strong enough hold to let the Cuban population think they might have a chance of overthrowing Castro. The extent--if any--to which U.S. government funds, training and arms were supplied to the rebels remains undisclosed be- cause of the secrecy surround- ing cloak-and-dagger operations. what caused the setback. The president was said, however, to be looking for a factual review rather than action against in- telligence chief Allen Dulles or anyone else. Washington continues to be a fertile field for rumors about the Cuban undertaking and report- ers have a choice of a number of second-guessing explanations from different official quarters.| A motion to extend sitting |hours was scheduled to be U.S. POSITION _ |placed before the House by What appears to be the prin- prime Minis ter Diefenbaker. cipal 'administration a c ¢ 0 un | Notice of the motion was given boils down this way: {by the prime minister early last Contrary to published reports, week. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, 1 would be designed to ex- under-secretary Chester Bowles ,ogite the business of the and the joint chief of staff con-go ce which still has several [curred generally in the under-|ioces' of major legislation to taking. There have been reports|p nqie before prorogation can Kennedy went ahead over their|i yo place. objections. : Despite the fact that a fall Their general approval did not| accion was held -- something necessarily mean endorsement that had not taken place since of all aspects of the plan. Each|igsr the Commons is no far- agency has somewhat different|iyor ghead in its work than at ideas. ; this time last year. While Kennedy did not call 2 Prime Minister Diefenbaker paticus] SSCUFty council smoet: has indicated that if there is ing to approve the inv » 1€1still legislation pending at the checked the plan with all thelog he vo he Lath ri a six: members of this strategy groud| week adjourn ment until the except Secretary of the Treas: middle of August. tn 5 Bri i a OSHAWA Douglas Would SHOPPING [\ Head New Party X | OTTAWA (CP) -- Premier CAPSU day night. Douglas of Saskatchewan made (49.331]3 He was welcomed by about [(4:1147.\ it clear Saturday night he will be ready to run for the leader- 100 supporters waving banners with such slogans as: 'Look out OUTSTANDING SAVINGS ship of the New Party if his John . . . here comes Mr. Sas- Tues, Question: WHEN WERE YOUR RUGS CLEANED LAST? 01 Year [0 2 Years [0 3 Years [J Longer 1f you have checked any one of the above. it's time to "" RA 8.4681 NU-WAY RUG CLEANERS 174 MARY ST. "All work done in Oshawe by Qualified Oshawa Techni- clons" Ea:! Herbert Thibideau, 19, of Trowbridge, who died of injur- ies Sunday following a single- car crash Saturday night on Highway 23; Carol Ann Beelby, 4, of Green River, who suffocated Sunday in the bedroom closet in which she had hidden to escape a fire in her home; Mrs. Gofen Goldman, 52, who died in her wheel chair in the flame - filled kitchen of her su- burban Toronto home Sunday; Reginald Sovereign, London, Ontar., killed Saturday when his car hit a bridge abutment east of St. Marys; Mrs. Margaret Pace, 84, who died Sunday in the fire that de- stroyed a Hamilton store and her apartment above it; Gibson Williams, 56, feared drowned in a boating accident on the St. Clair River Sunday TANKER TURNS TURTLE from two stations took an hour to water down the oil on the street. perial Oil Company trailer truck overturned in downtown Montreal and spilled nearly 7,000 gallons of diesel oil on the street. Firemen called The trailer toppled over but the cab didn't and driver Gerard Tremblay, 29, of Mont- real, was not injured. The ac- cident occurred when the Im- Anti-Castro Fish' Ran Into Cuban Net MIAMI (AP)--"The fish are; The Castro government evi-| running," said the coded alert. dently had been expecting a It was beamed to tired, ragged counter - revolutionary move. resistance fighters hidden in|There had just been a wave of Cuba's Escambray Mountains. spectacular sabotage in Cuba. A message of hope. |And on Saturday, April 15, just The "fish" were on the move|before sunrise, at least three in the darkness of last Monday|Cuban air force pilots defected morning. |after bombing and straffing The "fish' -- a few hundred|three Cuban air bases. ' guerrillas--landed at a beach| About five hours after the in Cuba's southern Las Villas|/landing, exile sources were tell- province. They pushed on into|ing the world that this was the the murky swamps of the Za-|real thing, the beginning of the pata peninsula. {end for Fidel. From New York Their mission was to bring|came a Cuban exile's report supplies, equipment, food and|that provisional president Jose reinforcement to anti - Castro/Miro Cardona and his whole fighters, several thousand|revolutionary council had left strong. for Cuba and probably had ar- It was hardly an invasion. Tt | rived. --(CP Wirephoto) Richard H. Donald wishes tq announce/that he has opend an office for the Practice of Law 521/, Simcoe St. N. RA 8-2891 The cause was not hopeless because a battle seemed lost. Perhaps there would be more landings, more thrusts, bigger attempts to drive Castro out. Perhaps, on the credit side, the revolution had accomplished something if it had damaged Fidel Castro's status or caused him to be removed from or di-|killed when their car was minished in power. His complete| rammed by a 60-mile-an-hour silence during the week was|train at a level crossing Satur- astonishing. day; Littl Lloyd Middaugh, 38, of Little QUESTIONS ASKED |Current, killed Friday night But what happened last week|when his car left the road near had hurt. And it raised import-|his Manitoulin Island home; ant questions. | Alden Potter, 1, killed Satur- Can the revolutionary council|day when his car ided with expect to be truly effective when|a tractor -trailer in the Wood- it is divided dozens of ways on|stock area; politics, strategy and even| David Lamb, 19, of, Streets- and labor leaders in the capital Saturday after arriving late Fri- The Children's Aid Society of the County of Ontario and the City of Oshawa ANNUAL MEETING Thursday, April 27th provincial CCF party is "pre- katchewan." pared to release me." He told a dinner meeting that when he accepted the CCF| Mr. Douglas spent most of leadership in Saskatchewan in|Saturday in conference with 1943 "I entered into a compact|CLC officials headed by Vice- from which I can be released President Stanley Knowles, a former CCF member of Parlia- ment and a strong supporter of only with the advice and con- sent" of the provincial party. Mr. Douglas for the New Party leadership. RICE ON DATE Bf April 25th w He said a meeting of the pro- vincial council will be held late in May and "if they are pre- pared to release me, then I am DOVER'S I TORONTO (CP) -- Premier Tr could better have been de- CLAIMS WILD scribed as a commando infiltra- From other Cuban exile od it in Miami and New sources came extravagant York was the revolutionary claims: The invaders were any- council of exiled Cuban leaders, "here from 3,000 to 15,000 |strong, with more to come. BUILT TOO HIGH | Until the end the revolution A super-abundance of wishful|ary council did not report the thinking among exiled Cubans|nymber involved. But it failed longing to go hore, wild rumorsito correct the impression of a and uninformed guessing s00n|real invasion and by itself had the lonely expedition built|claiming that swarms of Cubans up to the proportions of a pow-|were or would be deserting Cas- erful invasion. tro and swelling the fogce of a The soasing expectations/huge liberation army. aroused by all this suffered a| Some exiles reported "large. disastrous letdown. Within 72|scale landings" in Matanzas hours the government of Fidel|province, heavy fighting with Castro triumphantly told the militia, big unopposed landings world it had crushed an invasion|in Santiago, in Pinar del Rio sponsored and supported by the|province. One reported all Pi- mighty Yankee colossus to the|nar del Rio had fallen, another north. And the Yankee colossus|that the Isle of Pines was taken had sustained a severe blow to|and all its 10,000 political pris- its prestige in the world. * loners liberated. Cuba's future? adventure, In the light of the first mis- how will potential defectors react to a new try? For Americans there was a similar question to ponder: Will those who might have fought to overthrow communism in Cuba place their ifaith in significant material support from the United States in the future? ville, whose car went out of control and hit a tree four miles west of Brampton, James Thibeault, 49, killed in a two - car crash near his Al- exandria home Saturday; Alexander Harvey, 71, who died when his car went out of control Saturday near Meaford; Peter Geddes, 3, drowned Sunday off St. Joseph Island near Sault Ste. Marie; 'Not A Nut, But... {spokesmen for the Sessors TORONTO (CP) -- W. E.| Mr. Williams participated in| Po pos Bank Chief Coyne Williams, president of Procter and Gamble of Canada, said Saturday Canadian living stan. dards would drop 45 per cent , [if Bank of Canada Governor James Coyne had his way. "I'm not saying he's a nut but he's the most illogical person I ever ran into," Mr. Williams told the Toronto and District Council of Young Progressive Conservatives. He said he formed his opin- ion after a discussion with Mr, Coyne. Mr. Williams said there would be higher unemployment, lower wages and a drastic drop in standards if the government followed Mr. Coyne's advice to stem United States capital in- vestment. He also suggested Prime Min-| ister Diefenbaker"s emergency| tax relief plan for depressed areas is a failure. | Referring to provisions in the "baby budget" for stepped - up depreciation allowances for in- dustries locating in depressed areas, Mr. Williams said: "None of the depressed areas lor integrated farms. employment Mr. gested a counterpart of the Ci- |vilian Conservation a panel on stimulating Can- ada's domestic economy. Mod- erator was Allan Lawrence, member of the Ontario legisla- ture for Toronto St. George, and other members were W. O. Twaits, president of Imperial Oil Limited; Federal Resources| Minister Walter Dinsdale; On-| tario Transport Minister Leslie| Rowntree and T. P. Wall, gen-| eral manager of the Rockwell Manufacturing Company of |Guelph. Mr. Twaits urged the govern-| ment to stop subsidizing "sub-| marginal" operations in agri-| culture. Mr. Dinsdale said the govern-| ment is trying to formulate a national agricultural policy. It realizes many farms are not operating effectively but it wants family farms, not factory| As a means of relieving un- Twaits sug- Corps, quite willing to serve whereve tives of our movement." support. resents the Saskatchewan con Commons. IRAPS PCs, LIBERALS Premier Douglas strongly at- tacked the Progressive Conser- vative and Liberal parties as {of special privilege and the owners of corporate wealth." Canada needed a party "which believes that through democratic planning the abun- dant resources of this land can be put to work for the Cana- dian people, not against them." Premier Douglas had a busy round of conferences with CCF our people feel that I can make the most usefui contribution in advancing the aims and objec- His statement was made at a banquet sponsored by the Ottawa committee for the New Party being formed with CCF and Canadian Labor Congress The only avowed contender for the leadership is CCF Leader Hazen Argue, who rep- stituency of Assiniboia in the Sunday Cuba has been forced into alliance with Russia be- cause of United States policy. President Kennedy's exten- sion of the Monroe doctrine last week was presumptuous, he added in an interview. "It's presumptuous of any na- tion in the Western Hemisphere to tell other 'countries what kind of government they should have." Canada should take the lead in persuading Cuba to become a Western ally, he said. It should join the Organization of American States and exert in- fluence. Mr. Douglas excused the Ken: Cuba on the grounds that the situation was inherited from the Eisenhower regime. U.S. policy in the Eisenhower regime "pushed Castro into the hands of Russia," said Mr. Douglas, in Toronto this week to discuss loans for government projects in his province with in- vestment officials. Crime Syndicates Working TORONTO (CP) -- Are sev" eral Canadian cities, from Mont- real to Vancouver, tied into a crime network run from the United States? The Toronto newspaper ran these stories Saturday: The Globe and Mail, from New York: Evidence collected in New York shows that mur- der, labor racketerring, bri- bery, corruption, narcotics traf- fic, prostitution and other crimes are being spawned by formed during the New Deal an alliance of Canadian and is going to gel any relief be- era in the United States. He|U.S. bookmakers and gamblers. Here? Senate committee which inves- tigated organized crime. The Telegram: Reporter Douglas Creighton writes that the U.S. justice department, the FBI and the U.S. Bureau of Narcotics "told me that Tor- onto, Hamilton, Montreal, Niag- ara Falls, Guelph, Windsor and Vancouver are among the Cana- dian links in the Mafia organiza- tion of international crime." MOVES INTO CANADA ternational organization which largely runs U.S. crime. It has (Douglas of Saskatchewan said nedy administration's part in last week's abortive invasion of The Mafia is the Sicilian in-| || height. SPECIAL . STRETCH SOCKS--- 69 | | 2 PAIRS for 1.30 Tamblyn Drugs GOLF BALLS-- 2 for ke SPECIAL DOZEN 5.29 CAVALIER GIFT SHOP Hanging Bird Cage WALL PLANTERS --Bross, copper = AT... St. Andrew's United Church 71 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA SPEAKER... MR. ERNEST MAJURY Manager of the Family end Children Services for Peel County Refreshment will be served ® EVERYONE WELCOME \ Black and White. end SPECIAL 2.95 up BATA SHOES Ladies' DRESS SHOES--Latest styles. Colors black and beige Golden Streak LAWN MOWERS ~--21" blade, four-cycle, 2 h.p. motors. Safe T-wind starter, ad- justable cutting 5, 95 . Ll DISC SHOP SPECIAL SALE -- Top-name artists. Reg. 3.98. 2 49 1) NOW ONLY [Rolo] Gi Jol 301,13 CAPSULE CLASSIFIED SPECIALS woh. A NONTUES WED AM. Now open every night until 9 (Saturday until 12 noon) Superior, the fastest growing all-Canadian loan Compay, now serves you even betier, with evening office hours for your con- venience. $50 to $5,000 without endorsers or bankable security Many plans and repayment schedules to fit your budget. Loans Life Insured. &= yPERIOR . NANCE 17 SIMCOE ST. N > 15 Offices in Ontario cause no manufacturer in his right mind would place a plant in a depressed area just for double depreciation for one year." The Star, from Washington: The Mafia is active in all of Canada's major cities, says a {former staff member of a U.S. suggested Canada's basic prob- lem was 'technological and economic illiteracy of a very high order." been only recently that reports have come out about its getting tentacles into Canadian opera-| tions. { CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO MERCHANTS SALE OF FIREWORKS | hereby give notice to all merchants of the City of Oshawe that By-Law number 3809 prohibits the sele of fireworks in the City from January Ist to May 9th inclusive and 'from June 1st to December 31st inclusive in any year. The by-law provides that anv person whe fails to comply with the pro- visions of the by-law shell be guilty of en offence and liable upon conviction to a penalty. HEAR CONVERTED PRIEST Rev. Henry G. Adams EX-MONK (Formerly Fr. Hilarion of Basilian Order) Spent 12 Years ina M tery 7:30 P.M. April 23rd through April 26th RITSON ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 480 RITSON RD. S. -- OSHAWA, ONTARIO SPECIAL -MUSIC NIGHTLY All Services in English except Sun. Morning and Tues. Night L. R. BARRAND, (IN UKRAINIAN) RA 3-3425 | City Clerk. Members of All Faiths -- Come, Hear, Learn : Roman Catholih Priests and Nuns are Especially Invited Director of the Evan- gelical Mission ".of Converted Monks and Priests. Editor . . . Converted Priests Evangel. sen pa top-notch technicians Our workman- ship is tops and our charges modest, We have up-to-the-minute knowledge, the latest equipment and top quality replacement parts to service your set. MORE CUBA SUPPORTERS These were among 75 dem- onstrators who peacefully picketed the United States Consulate in Montreal. 'The sign. at the left is in French and means "Hands off Cuba". U.S. Consul-General Jerome T. Gaspard called the dem- onstration '"'Artificially con- trived." | | MEAGHER'S | 5 KING ST. WEST 4 --(CP Wirephoto) | 2 AGATE Es in Tn I 3

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