Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 23 Aug 1961, p. 2

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4 -- 9 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 13, 1701 i Canada of | The 20-year-old Ottawa girl arrived on Parliament Hill at the head of an open-car pa- Ottawa's Miss 1961, Connie-Gail Feller, was | welcomed home by Prime Minister Diefenbaker Tuesday. | rade that brought her from | PM WELCOMES MISS CANADA | ||RCAF practice bombs 3 i A !|pulled Tuesday from the Des-|at the Canadian National Ex-| He . |jardins Canal near a spot that hibition -- but there'll be few can hold its own on the Ameri- # | disposal squad in Oakville t0- hderkirk of Medina, N.Y., won| ---------------- CanalLoot |Food, Merchants | Included Exhibition Day Live Bombs By JOHN VOJTECH with the automotive industry Canadian Press Staff Writer and then gradually be expanded HAMILTON (CP) -- Two live, TORONTO (CP) -- It's Food|to other segments of the econ- were Products and Merchants' Day omy. said Canadian industry has proved an underwater/free food samples given out in can market. He cited an ex- graveyard for stolen goods. the food building. However, injample where his own firm An amateur skindiver, hired the Food Building many firms bought crankshafts in Canada by an insurance adjuster, turned will be giving away some of and shipped them to Los Ange- z up three bombs, a bubble gunitheir products in lucky draws!|les, where, even after duty had the cost was still the been paid, than dispenser, three acetylene weld- and as spot prizes. ing tanks and a telephone re | [Last year Food Products Day cheaper ceiver today in three hours of enticed 227,500 into the CNE|product. diving. 3 grounds on a hot, humid 88-de- Cars and trucks, the main at- Two of the eight-pound bombs gree day. On Tuesday, Automo- traction, were doing well in were loaded. Ancaster Police tive Day, 168,000 attended, down|sales. One company reported it Chief John Tremblay said heitrom the 182,000 last year. had sold nine cars from its dis- will turn them over to an army| At the antique car rally Keith play. American day. the award for the best restored | Chief Tremblay received a 10 tor rot » telephone call during the week- model with his 1902 oldsmobile, Reduced Prices end fron 3 an who said he SUGGESTS STUDY stole a $1,000 silver tea service, At a luncheon of CNE direc T' Ge 0 d ~ from an Ancaster home last De- tors, Sherwood H. Egbert, presi-| 0 t | { er cember. He said he had dumped| gent of Studebaker-Corporati n h | poration,, TORONTO (CP)--Reform In- it in the canal, adding that the goin Bend, Ind., suggested that stitutions Mini ster Wardrope Golf Club NE WYORK (AP)--The 102- TV Sh for $65,000,000, effective Dec. ows by Robert Crown, as president nadian television advertisers to - Empire State | Wants More | = Sale Announced Canadian storey Empire State building, the world's tallest, will be sold 27, the owner said Tuesday. OTTAWA (CP)--The Board of The announcement was made Broadcast Governors wants Ca- of the Empire State Building|Pour more money into sponsor- Corporation, in a letter to its 900 ing Canadian shows. tenants. | Bc Andrew Stewart, BBG family gained|Chairman, announced Tuesday Bn on pin A the board proposes to assist Ca- in 1954, said the purchaser nadian TV stations increase So0k in Empire Hod Building| their Canadian program content Associates, an investment group by requiring an advertiser who headed by Lawrence A. Wien, BECIASCE. § ToCanadian pro New York lawyer. in a Canadian program. | He said a meeting of national | advertisers, advertising agen- cies and the CBC and new pri- |vate television network will be | Called next month to discuss the plan, The board Tuesday began a Boycott to Increase sponsorship of Ca. nadian programs would help TV stations meet the BBG requires ment that 55 per cent of their {programming be of Canadian content. However, although both the CBC and the new private net- {work had agreed to obtain from sponsors a commitment to | purchase comparable Canadian | program time before carryin {non-Canadian material, he sai {both networks are having trou- {ple selling time under this pol. cy. Mr. Jamieson expressed ob- jections to a BBG proposal lim- iting commercials to 20 per cent of the station's time between 6 lam. and midnight each day {with no more than 30 per cent {of any hour devoted to commer- !cial use. Baxter Ricard of CHNO Sud- bury urged a different formula for stations which broadcast only in daytime hours. The two daytime French - language sta- tions in Ontario, he said, can barely keep operating under {present conditions. week-long hearing on proposed new regulations it has drawn up to control radio broadcasting, including a new formula for broadcasting commercials. Proposed Request Report ' | dumping ¢% | could not be disposed of. '|spot was a favorite ome for|, soinuv.apnointed commission said Tuesday his department be set up to study "controlled has had to reduce the price of economic integration" between picnic tables made by inmates Canada and the United States.!of Ontario stolen goods which Skindiver Leonard Wade, in two hours of diving Monday, suburban Uplands Airport. She later was guest of honor at a | civic reception. | --(CP Wirephoto) Ransom Request Ask Better picked up five pieces of the sil-| ver set and other stolen goods| valued at more than $5,000. John Cappelli, an two countries unite economic-| adjuster who hired Wade, said €conomic integration with the bles to be used in provincia {his firm has paid on a claim removal of tariff barriers com- for $1,000 to the owner of the|pensated for by changes in con- tea service. He said it would tent requirements, should begin take about $250 to repair the set,|---- -- which would then be auctioned i ---- Investigate Life In Prison | 'For Murderer 42-Year-Old | \ " OTTAWA (CP)--A death sen- tence against Charles an en Rail Death Acheson, of Toronto, convicted] PEMBROKE (CP)--Informa- Mr. Sherwood suggested the|could get a government order. lally, leaving political considera-|ered for a lands and forests de- insurance tions aside. He said a controlled partment contract for 4,000 ta- t of murdering his wife, was com-| *& as - es {muted Tuesday to life imprison-|tion in a letter from Wawa has {ment in Kingston Penitentiary.|started an investigation into the WINDSOR (CP) -- The Wind- sor and District Labor Council it agreed Tuesday night to ask its affiliated locals and members 'not to patronize four area golf {clubs and two beaches accused of violating the Fair Accommo- | dation Practices Act. parks, but lost the order be-| Complaints against the recre-| cause of its bid of $17 each. The ational spots have been filed Brantford firm of Kne ch tel with the Ontario department of Brothers, with the lowest tender labor by the Ontario Labor Com- --$14.30--received the order. mittee for Human rights. Mr, Wardrope said his depart-, Alan Borovoy, a Toronto law- ment received an order for an yer who is the committee's ex- additional 4,000 tables when it ecutive secretary, told the labor institutions so He said his department tend- Don Jamieson, president o« On B mbi He Canadian Association of] 0 ngs roadcasters, told the hearing 5 radio stations will lose "hate if Taney a ay foun. regs of thousands of dollars"! pice commission report on an e proposed regulations on|j,vactigation into two bombing advertising content come into incidents involving members of effect. ; Local 508 of the International In another complaint, Bert- Union of Mine, Mill and Smel- rand Gagnon, president of the ter Workers (Ind.). Union des Artistes de Montreal,| The incidents which occurred called for regulations to prevent|jast May have so far been un- live Canadian talent disappear-| solved. ing entirely from radio at the| 'Have the police given up on expense of profit - making the investigation or are they "canned music." {still working on the case?" Dr. Stewart said the proposaliasked Alderman H. W. Moore. agreed to supply them for the councii that the labor depart. same price quoted by Knechtel! ment is trying to persuade op- Brothers. erators of the golf courses and A. B. Wheatley, parks chief beaches not to practice discrim- for lands and forests, said the ination. 4,000 tables ordered from the| He said that if some guaran- private firm will be utilized fortes js made that persons will the balance of this year and 1962 not be barred because of race, and the 4,000 from reform insti- i; a tutions for the balance of 1962 color, creed or ethnic origin, Gives False Hope MONTREAL (CP)--A note de- ransom raised momentary hopes/my daughter is still missing. for the safe return of 16-year-old i Denise Therrien during the/didn't even show up. weekend but the hopes were followed the note's instructions rese." without result. Denise, described by her fam-/first offered Denise the non-ex- {ly as "a quiet girl who wouldn't|istant job. run away," disappeared from y her Shawinigan South home MAY BE HOAX Aug. 8 when she went fo an. or it may be a hoax," said eQ-u swer a placement bureau ad for bec Provincial Police Inspector a $25-a-week baby sitter. The address given proved to be fic- titious and she has not been seen since. | Shawinigan is 75 miles north- east of Montreal. 2 : : |lippe Demers The hand - written note, in : i French and addressed to Henri SOuth publicly asked She ke Therrien, the missing girPs|aDper, § Luge 1 ' father, was received at the Ther- name his price. rien home by mail Saturday : Ig i morning. The letter was date. Ping came when Denise's 17 J. J. Fauthier. "At this stage we don't know. The investiga- tion, of course, is continuing." to be received since Mayor Phil- lined Montreal and the envelope ~ had a Shawinigan postmark. The note advised the family to pay "$5,000 in exchange for Denise." It said "she is well," and warned against involving the police; weekend, however, there had LEFT ON BRIDGE been no other word from the Mr. Therrien followed the in- supposed kidnapper although the structions and deposited the Therriens have been plagued by money, all in $10 bills, in a a number of calls from obvious package on the end of a Mont- cranks. real bridge. C n i He returned within the time undated with calls and their in- safely "if you keep the police out of this." Until the note appeared this return and found the money un- Montreal to North Bay, Ont, touched. Iwith no positive results. "I followed all the kidnapper's manding the payment of a $5,000 instructions," he said later. "But "This may be a legitimate bid 4; The police also have been in-| age its use for many summer allowed in the note for Denise's| vestigations have ranged from schools at present conducted in Relations BRACEBRIDGE (CP) -- The| "Apparently the kid na pper Ontario T ¢ a c h ers Federation voted Tuesday to ask the edu- The note was signed laude cation department to include a i vhen her father Marchand and my frien e- study of Oriental countries in gashed giickly Whe Claude Marchand was the curriculum of teachers' col- the name given by the man who leges. | The decision is an outgrowth of a 10-year project launched in 1956 by the United Nations Ed- ucational, Scientific and Cultu- Organization to improve East-West understanding. The federation's board of gov- ernors also set up a committee to study history and geography as taught in Ontario schools, fol- The ransom note was the first||owing a statement from F. J.| . . MacNamara, head of the history| Predicts Big n| of Shawinigan/ department of Sir James Dun Collegiate and Voca tional School in Sault Ste, Marie, Mr. MacNamara said Cana- The first indication of kidnap-| dian history should be Taught as| rT NDSOR en i an entity--unrelated to that of(0! Canada officials Tuesday pre-|; i i |Potn-old sister, Micheline, Te.| other countries--to contribute o| dicted stable employment and a| 5 °° his body contained only |ceived an anonymous telephone a national culture. 1 | call the day after the disappear-| ance from :a man who said the stryctie.shesd be re-examined. | 8an missing girl would be returned yoTES FOR SITE | He also thought geography in- The board also voted to spend $20,000 during the next five years to develop a site in Parry Sound district as a teachers' recreation and training area. The 1,200-acre site is planned as a vast education centre rival- ling Geneva Park on Lake Cou-| chiching, the meeting was told. Long - range proposals envis- universities and for conferences and conventions. Hiab CLOUDY WITH SHOWERS WEATHER FORECAST Still Unsettled Across Ontario Official forecasts issued injtemperature. Winds light today, Wingham ..... Toronto at 5 a.m. EDT east 15 Thursday. Synopsis: Unsettled weather | continues across Cochrane, White River, Al- Ontario today goma, Timagami, Sault Ste. Ma-| Toronto with variable cloudiness over!rie, northern Georgian Bay re- Peterborough He was s 1 death 42 years ago of Michael and 1963. ® wat scheduled to be hanged yours oe Mr. Wheatley said it was de- Aug. 29. (Mick) Legge. : 3 : S The cabinet action was an-| The body of the 54 - year. cided this year to give private nounced hy the office of the so- old Pembroke tobacco store firms the opportunity to tender on park tables, formerly all made by the reforms institu- tion brings to 44 the number of morning of July 8, 1919, on the Ja Sonyjeled mu Fler ers whose tracks of the Canadian Pacific To {natitulions last 'vez eath sentences have been com-'pajiway It had been cut to rm inshlulions jas, year muted to life imprisonment pieces by a passing train charged $15 a table, unfinished. since the Progressive Conserva- ® The $17 quotation this year was tive government took office in, Newspaper files of the time (4 include finishing. licitor - general. The commuta- owner was found in the early | the committee will not pursue the matter. If no guarantee is made, the committee would pro- secute. Mr. Borovoy said he came to Windsor two weeks ago at the request of several Windsor Ne- groes who had complained about being barred from so-called pub- lic beaches and golf clubs. June, 1957. There have been 12 reported a coroner's jury ver. -- executions in this period. dict of accidental death. Legge | Acheson, 23, was convicted of operated a tobacco store on the murder in Toronto June 1 in the/town's main street, He was re- death of his wife, Audrey, 23 [ported to have closed his store on Feb. 17. The jury recom-|at 11 p.m. July 7, 1919, and had mended mercy. The conviction been seen talking to an uniden- was not appealed. tified man at midnight. The -- watch found on his body had stopped at 1:10 a.m. A copy of the Pembroke Ob- iserver published at that time {said there were many rumors Year In Cars of foul play. Although Legge | was reputed to have carried WINDSOR (CP) -- Chrysler|jarge sums of money, the cloth- {10 - per - cent sales increas saz Aric las firm's 1962 ES a ass| Police Inspector Bert Dickie rolling off production lines.|Would not release the name of The company expects to man-/the man who signed the letter ufacture more than 50,000 autos received by police here Monday in 1962. President Ron Todg- and would not make any further |ham said Chrysler has com-|statement on its contents. Pro- |pleted the most extensive and vincial police have been ad- expensive plant modernization vised. program since the model year| ynspector Dickie said Tuesday Prices and design changes in|ight he plans to go to Wawa the 1962 Chrysler products have today to discuss the case with not been disclosed. Iprovincial police. INTERPRETING THE NEWS | Guiana Attitude Mother and daughter (Mau- reen O'Hara and Hayley technicolor comedy, "The Par- | ent Trap,' starting today at Mills) evesdrop on father in | this scene from Walt Disney's | JUNIOR SANDMAN washable corduroy the Regent Theatre. "The Par- | ent Trap" stars Miss O'Hara, Brian Keith and Hayley Mills as identical twins and prom- ises to be an entertainment treat for the entire family. Sizes 6-3. Could Irk U.S. Congress, also a left-wing group. Canadian Press Staff Writer Forbes Burnham, the PNC Washington's patience willlleader, was Jagan's associate likely be tested to the limit as before breaking away in 1955. British Guiana goes through its| The third party -- the right-| final stage of change from a wing United Force led by Peter colony into an independent Com- |Daguiar--got little support des- monwealth country. |pite backing by U.S. money. | This final stage was set in| Both the PPP and the PNC| motion with the first general iggy they have no plans for im |election under the country's|mediate socialization. Jagan,| {new constitution. The new gov-|whose party speaks for the In-| |ernment, to be formed by theldian rice farmer and the field dominant People's Progressive workers on the sugar estates, | |Party, will lead British Guiana denjed specifically that his! {to internal self-rule. |party is planning to nationalize Dr. Cheddi Jagan, a Chicago-|sugar estates now controlled by trained dentist heading the PPP two British companies. has indicated he will .demand| But he promised to buy land immediate full independence|ty get up independent sugar) within the Commonwealth and|tarmers on a co-operative basis Britain has agreed in principle and stressed the need for friend- to independence within 12/ghip with Cuba and closer links By BORIS MISKEW Oshawa's ONLY Q AUGUST FUR SALE 75 KING EAST -- Opposite Genosha Hotel cuff and tiny golden of tiny air bubbles ¢ UALITY Fur Store Sizes 11-3. AI b These gaily-patterned slippers take plenty of wear. Elastic side-bands insure perfect fit. There's carefree comfort in the bouncy "bubble-rubber'" midsoles, and the leather outsoles won't mark floors. Sizes 6-3. JUNIOR ROGUE Made of durable corduroy in colours and patterns youngsters like, Just toss these slippers in the washer when they get soiled! Foam rubber soles are welded on, can't come loose. Non-marking leather outsoles are quiet round the house, $2.98 MISSES PLAYGIRL Little girls will love these slippers of sweater knit fabric with stylish crown at side. Millions ushion the soles of the feet, give that "walk-on-air" feeling, Wide | choice of fashion colours, all washable. The secret of Kaufman "Foamtreads" comfort and long wear months. |with Venezuela and Brazil. 110 knots becoming northeast to| east 10 to 15 Thursday morning | Variable Thursday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, | Windsor ... 6 72 {St. Thomas . 60 72 London ...... 58 70 Kitchener . «0 58 70 sens 55 70 Hamilton ......... 58 #40 St. Catharines .... 58 70 seersessnee 38 70 seen 35 70 southern regions and mainly gions, North Bay, Sudbury: Trenton .......e... 55 70 cool, clear weather in the north. Sunny with cloudy periods and Killaloe Cloudy weather' with scattered a few scattered evening thunder-| Muskoka ...... in store for showers today and Thursday. North Bay ... showers seems Southern Ontario Thursday. Not much change in tempera Sudbury ..... Continuing mainly sunny ture, light winds. sessses 50 72 70 . 78 . 78 Earlton ... 78 Kapuskasing 78 cloudiness. , Showers tory. The attitude of the neigh- |boring South American States | ASK YOUR Canadian Pocific C AGENT ABOUT... ® Scenic-Dome rail travel High Thursday: .. 60 TOUGH PERIOD This period could be the most .|tricky in British Guiana's his-| as well as that of the United | States may have a bearing on| the country's future political de-| velopment. | Jagan has stated that he will | seek U.S. financial aid under a plan agreed to earlier this month at the Inter - American Economic Conference at Punta del Este, Uruguay, But he has also said he will accept aid from | the Soviet Union, | Will the - Americans be able | to stomach British Guiana's| {dealings with Communist -coun-| |tries? Or will they make it] necessary for the emerging na- tion to choose between Com- B® All-inclusive fares (including meals, berth, etc.) Wm Group discount fares ® Overseas Steamship services Wm Greot Lakes and Alaska cruises Wm Hotels and resorts across Canada B Airline service across Canada-linking 5 continents NO CEMENT | NO NAILS NO STITCHING CRAFTED BY KAUFMAN OF KITCHENER Makers of Snowbelles, Kingtreads and waterproof footwear 3 MODEL SHOE STORE 18 SIMC 55 KING ST. EAST 725-1521 (Corner of Albert) -- OSHAWA BURNS Ty TWA OWNTOWN KING AT SIMCOE 725-4611 DANCEY'S weather is expected in the north. Haliburton region: Sunny with| wit River... 75 (munist and Western association. BW Mediterranean Cruise--1962 725-1833 <> a' shatter OE ST. S. Southern Georgian Bay, Lake cloudy periods today, increasing yoosonee esrrenss] I a ---- Ontario regions, Toronto: Vari. cloudiness Thursday. Not muc able cloudiness today. Mainly change in temperature. cloudy with a few showers, Marine forecasts valid until| Thursday, not much change in|11 a.m. Thursday: temperature. Winds light today, east 15 Thursday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia- Partly cloudy gara regions, Hamilton, Wind- sor, London: Variable a few showers tonight and this evening and tonight. Georgian Bay, Lake Huron: Winds variable 10 to 15 knots. teachers, Lake Erie: Winds northeast to cloudi- east 10 knots increasing to 15 ness today. Mainly cloudy with tonight. Mainly cloudy. Shower VALUABLE COURSE | HADASHVILLE, Man, (CP)-- {A total of 1,553 students and 56 mostly from the Greater Winnipeg area attended recent classes in the Manitoba Forestry Association's woods conservation training area near|the second Thursday, not much change in! Lake Ontario; Winds variable here. | To force the issue could drive {Jagan and his followers--some are described as pure Com- | munists--away from the West- ern bloc, or even result in a| Cuba-type thorn in the side of| {the U.S. TWO LEFT-WING PARTIES . There is little difference pol- itically between the PPP and most important People's National! RAILWAYS « STEAMSHIPS « AIRLI Iparty, the Information and reservations from | H. G. Davidson 11% King Street East Telephone 723-2224 The World's Most Complete Transportation System INES » HOTELS « COMMUNICATIONS « EXPRESS « TRUCKING « PIGGYBACK DAVIDSON'S 31 SIMCOE ST. N. 725-3312 "Goods Satisfactory or Man~ev Refunded" OPEN FRIDAY EVENING TILL 9 P.M, fii oqo og

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